Hi all,
Iam writing a script, which will extract all the files from Start_Date to End_Date. Files are date stamped as YYYYMMDD. For ex:
Start_Date='20051001'
End_Date='20060331'
extract files such as........
ramp_20050810.rpt
ramp_20050915.rpt
ramp_20051001.rpt
ramp_20051010.rpt... (2 Replies)
Ez all!
I have a question how to decrypt text uses letter frequency analysis. I have code which count the letters, but what i need to do after that. Can anybody help me to write a code. VERY NEEDED! My code now:
#!/usr/bin/awk -f
BEGIN { FS="" }
{
for (i=1; i <= NF; i++) {
if ($i... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I need to search email files by date & time range in email files.
The timezone is not important.
Can someone plz advise how i can do this ?
For e.g A user can specify only
A single date
A date range
date & time range
Below is part of the email file. (4 Replies)
I would like to write a shell script that calculated the time difference bettween the log entries. If the time difference is higher as 200 sec. print the complette lines out.
My Problem is, i am unable to jump in the next line and calculate the time difference.
Thank you for your Help.
... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
Can anybody help me out a Shell script which pulls the files based on date range
Example
./test.sh start_date End_date (20110901 20110930)
or
./test.sh ( if we don't provide any input)
it should take sysdate-1 ( yesterdays date)
it should have both conditions
Plzz help me... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am trying to grep out a date range in an access log file. I defined the date like so;
DATE1=$(date --date '1 hour ago' '+%m/%d/%y:%H:%M:%S')
DATE2=$(date '+%m/%d/%y:%H:%M:%S')
Then I just used cat to get the hits to the url into a results.txt;
touch /tmp/results.txt
cat... (7 Replies)
how can i grep a range?
i have a text file with the following text:
result.log.00:2012/01/02 12:00:07.422 LOG STARTED HERE
N6Kashya29MemoryShieldScheduler_AO_IMPLE, pid=8662/8658,
config=(alertThreshold=10,alertLevel=0,killThreshold=7200,coreThreshold=0,full=1),
deltaTime=0,... (1 Reply)
i need to run one script inside of other, and there is some terms
- main script in scheduled in cron for everyday runing every 5min
- i need to run /tmp/script2.sh after first 3 days in month
- i need to run /tmp/script2.sh from 7-9AM, main script is runining all day
all recommendations are... (1 Reply)
I'd like to convert a date string in the form of sun aug 19 09:03:10 EDT 2012, to unixtime timestamp using awk.
I tried
This is how each line of the file looks like, different date and time in this format
Sun Aug 19 08:33:45 EDT 2012, user1(108.6.217.236) all: test on the 17th
... (2 Replies)
I want to check given time stamp is between the given time stamp or not. I am using AIX.
YYYYMMDDHHMMSS
abc.csv
START TIME, END TIME
20130209018000,20130509022000
20120209018000,20130509022000
20120209018000,20130509022000
Script will check given time stamp is between above two range or... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vegasluxor
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
convdate
CONVDATE(1) InterNetNews Documentation CONVDATE(1)NAME
convdate - Convert to/from RFC 5322 dates and seconds since epoch
SYNOPSIS
convdate [-dhl] [-c | -n | -s] [date ...]
DESCRIPTION
convdate translates the date/time strings given on the command line, outputting the results one to a line. The input can either be a date
in RFC 5322 format (accepting the variations on that format that innd(8) is willing to accept), or the number of seconds since epoch (if -c
is given). The output is either ctime(3) results, the number of seconds since epoch, or a Usenet Date: header, depending on the options
given.
If date is not given, convdate outputs the current date.
OPTIONS -c Each argument is taken to be the number of seconds since epoch (a time_t) rather than a date.
-d Output a valid Usenet Date: header instead of the results of ctime(3) for each date given on the command line. This is useful for
testing the algorithm used to generate Date: headers for local posts. Normally, the date will be in UTC, but see the -l option.
-h Print usage information and exit.
-l Only makes sense in combination with -d. If given, Date: headers generated will use the local time zone instead of UTC.
-n Rather than outputting the results of ctime(3) or a Date: header, output each date given as the number of seconds since epoch (a
time_t). This option doesn't make sense in combination with -d.
-s Pass each given date to the RFC 5322 date parser and print the results of ctime(3) (or a Date: header if -d is given). This is the
default behavior.
EXAMPLES
Most of these examples are taken, with modifications from the original man page dating from 1991 and were run in the EST/EDT time zone.
% convdate '10 Feb 1991 10:00:00 -0500'
Sun Feb 10 10:00:00 1991
% convdate '13 Dec 91 12:00 EST' '04 May 1990 0:0:0'
Fri Dec 13 12:00:00 1991
Fri May 4 00:00:00 1990
% convdate -n '10 feb 1991 10:00' '4 May 90 12:00'
666198000
641880000
% convdate -c 666198000
Sun Feb 10 10:00:00 1991
ctime(3) results are in the local time zone. Compare to:
% convdate -dc 666198000
Sun, 10 Feb 1991 15:00:00 +0000 (UTC)
% env TZ=PST8PDT convdate -dlc 666198000
Sun, 10 Feb 1991 07:00:00 -0800 (PST)
% env TZ=EST5EDT convdate -dlc 666198000
Sun, 10 Feb 1991 10:00:00 -0500 (EST)
The system library functions generally use the environment variable TZ to determine (or at least override) the local time zone.
HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net>, rewritten and updated by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu> for the -d and -l flags.
$Id: convdate.pod 8894 2010-01-17 13:04:04Z iulius $
SEE ALSO active.times(5).
INN 2.5.2 2010-02-08 CONVDATE(1)