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Full Discussion: Script to adjust system time
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Script to adjust system time Post 302500075 by xaiu on Saturday 26th of February 2011 06:37:29 PM
Old 02-26-2011
KevinGB is on the right track - the script isn't meant to adjust the system time to a reference time source to keep it accurate. I have an application that references the system time and I want to run that application for a set period of time, from say 12:00:00 to 12:05:00, tabulate the output, and then reset the system clock to 12:00:01 and run the application from 12:00:01 to 12:05:01 and compare the output to the previous run.

Actually, since I originally posted I realized that I don't need to query the current time at all. Instead I can just pass a clock time, wait period (in seconds), next cycle increment (in seconds), and an exit time into the script. This should get me around quite a number of the problems I was initially having and will hopefully simply the script down to something I can muddle my way through. Anyhow, I could do something like:

> script 12:00:00 300 1 12:00:05

which would hopefully:

- set the system time to 12:00:00
- wait for n seconds
- increment the input system time by increment (in this case 1 second)
- compare the result to the end time (passed in from script) and if new system time is less end time
- reset system time and loop to wait for n seconds

so in this scenario I should get 5 cycles that lasted for 5 minutes each and my timestamp on the data that is being collected would show:

1st cycle: 12:00:00 - 12:05:00

2nd cycle: 12:00:01 - 12:05:01

3rd cycle: 12:00:02 - 12:05:02

Thanks for your responses!

Last edited by xaiu; 02-26-2011 at 07:49 PM.. Reason: address additional comments left by another response
 

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INITTODR(9)						   BSD Kernel Developer's Manual					       INITTODR(9)

NAME
inittodr -- initialize system time SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/systm.h> void inittodr(time_t base); DESCRIPTION
The inittodr() function determines the time and sets the system clock. It tries to pick the correct time using a set of heuristics that examine the system's battery backed clock and the time obtained from the root file system, as given in base. How the base value is obtained will vary depending on the root file system type. The heuristics used include: o If the battery-backed clock has a valid time, it is used. o If the battery-backed clock does not have a valid time, the time provided in base will be used. Once a system time has been determined, it is stored in the time variable. DIAGNOSTICS
The inittodr() function prints diagnostic messages if it has trouble figuring out the system time. Conditions that can cause diagnostic mes- sages to be printed include: o The battery-backed clock's time appears nonsensical. SEE ALSO
resettodr(9), time(9) BUGS
On many systems, inittodr() has to convert from a time expressed in terms of year, month, day, hours, minutes, and seconds to time, expressed in seconds. Many of the implementations could share code, but do not. Each system's heuristics for picking the correct time are slightly different. The FreeBSD implementation should do a better job of validating the time provided in base when the battery-backed clock is unusable. Cur- rently it unconditionally sets the system clock to this value. BSD
March 22, 1997 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:57 AM.
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