You have prevented interpolation of $LAST_LOGIN in the Perl call and so it sees it as an undeclared perl variable to be autovified to null, "" oe 0 depending on how it is accessed, try calling the following with the LAST_LOGIN value set in the shell rather than substituting the value.
Does anyone know of an easy way to convert regular time 08/21/2002 @ 8:21:21 pm to ctime. I need this to complete a script that I am writing.
Your expertise and help would be amost appreciated. Please note - I am not a programmer so c-code etc will not help. A utility that can be run from a... (9 Replies)
Hi All,
This Monday 15th March 2010, i have faced a weired issue with my Perl script execution, this script is scheduled to run at 1 minute past midnight on daily basis ( 00:01 EST ) generally for fetching previous business date , say if it is Monday it should give last Friday date, for Tuesday... (0 Replies)
Hi
I need help to do some calculation in script.
I have a monitor program (munin) that I would like to log uptime information from a server.
The script looks like this (not complete):
#!/bin/sh
# server_uptime
### Config Start
# Reads the server parameters using the HTTP port with... (7 Replies)
Hi,
Thanks bartus11 yesterday's code worked fine for me.
In meantime I've found another "issue".
As you can see highlighted, the time format in my original input in case of two rows which should be duplicited ,is differentwhat I need to do is to convert to this format "20110607-08:03:22"... (4 Replies)
I can not find a working script or way to do this on sun solaris , can someone please guide me?
e.g 1327329935 epoch secs = 012312 (ddmmyy)
thanks (5 Replies)
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)
# date +%s -d "Mon Feb 11 02:26:04"
1360567564
# perl -e 'print scalar localtime(1360567564), "\n";'
Mon Feb 11 02:26:04 2013
the epoch conversion is working fine. but one of my application needs 13 digit epoch time as input
1359453135154
rather than 10 digit epoch time 1360567564... (3 Replies)
I have a Raspberry Pi that logs some temperatures using Onewire. Data is collected with RRDTool.
The command sudo rrdtool fetch ute_temp.rrd AVERAGE -s -1h > ./test.log
and then cat test.log gives the result
1388608500: 2.3579639836e+00
.
How do I write a script that converts the Epoch time... (4 Replies)
I have a list of time spans in seconds, and want to compute the time span
as hh:mm:nn
I am coding in bash and have coded the following. However, the results are
wrong as "%.0f" rounds the values.
Example:
ftm: 25793.5
tmspan(hrs,min,sec): 7.16 429.89 25793.50
hh: 7
mm: 10
ss:... (2 Replies)
Hello,
How can we convert date like format 20181004171050 in seconds ?
I can able to convert till date but failing for HHMMSS.
date -d "20181004" "+%s" output as 1538596800 .
But when i add hhmmss it is failing date -d "20181004172000" "+%s" result Invalid date
Kindly guide.
Regards (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: sadique.manzar
16 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
env
Env(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Env(3pm)NAME
Env - perl module that imports environment variables as scalars or arrays
SYNOPSIS
use Env;
use Env qw(PATH HOME TERM);
use Env qw($SHELL @LD_LIBRARY_PATH);
DESCRIPTION
Perl maintains environment variables in a special hash named %ENV. For when this access method is inconvenient, the Perl module "Env"
allows environment variables to be treated as scalar or array variables.
The "Env::import()" function ties environment variables with suitable names to global Perl variables with the same names. By default it
ties all existing environment variables ("keys %ENV") to scalars. If the "import" function receives arguments, it takes them to be a list
of variables to tie; it's okay if they don't yet exist. The scalar type prefix '$' is inferred for any element of this list not prefixed by
'$' or '@'. Arrays are implemented in terms of "split" and "join", using $Config::Config{path_sep} as the delimiter.
After an environment variable is tied, merely use it like a normal variable. You may access its value
@path = split(/:/, $PATH);
print join("
", @LD_LIBRARY_PATH), "
";
or modify it
$PATH .= ":.";
push @LD_LIBRARY_PATH, $dir;
however you'd like. Bear in mind, however, that each access to a tied array variable requires splitting the environment variable's string
anew.
The code:
use Env qw(@PATH);
push @PATH, '.';
is equivalent to:
use Env qw(PATH);
$PATH .= ":.";
except that if $ENV{PATH} started out empty, the second approach leaves it with the (odd) value "":."", but the first approach leaves it
with ""."".
To remove a tied environment variable from the environment, assign it the undefined value
undef $PATH;
undef @LD_LIBRARY_PATH;
LIMITATIONS
On VMS systems, arrays tied to environment variables are read-only. Attempting to change anything will cause a warning.
AUTHOR
Chip Salzenberg <chip@fin.uucp> and Gregor N. Purdy <gregor@focusresearch.com>
perl v5.12.1 2010-04-26 Env(3pm)