I am setting TZ=EST5EDT,M3.2.0/02:00:00,M11.1.0/02:00:00
Then Setting the date to Mar 14 01:40 EST
date 0314014010
Sun Mar 14 01:40:36 EDT 2010
Note that it show it EST. According to my TZ variable 01:40 Should be in EST only.
On executing date command once again it shows
date
Sun Mar... (4 Replies)
Currently whenever i run date command output is shown like
Mon Apr 12 05:17:21 IST 2010
When its 17:17 Here.
How would i change it so that it should show.
Mon Apr 12 17:17:21 IST 2010 (8 Replies)
OK, I am by no means a programmer...
I have been given the task to do some automation scripts. I have got most of it working from snippets I have found on the Web.
One requirement has me stumped.
The initial timing file created by the user is a comma delimited in the following format.... (4 Replies)
I'm trying to do some simple math on a 24 hour time base.
The time is in the format of HM (HoursMinutes)
For example:
2330 #23:30
1800 #18:00
730 #07:30
my problem is with the single-digit hours. If the time is 2200, I use this code:
baseTime=2200
minutes=${baseTime:2:3}... (3 Replies)
Hi,
The timestamp is June 06 2011 11:05AM
i need 2 results.
first, an hour added to it, June 06 2011 12:05AM
second, a minute added to it, June 06 2011 11:06AM
How can i do this?
Also when it reaches 12:59, it needs to start from 1 again without giving the output as 13:00. it... (17 Replies)
Hi all,
I need your help to increment a time by one hour.
The difficulty is the time is in a string format and not a value
cat file | awk '{print $1,$2}'
09/02/2011 20:11
09/03/2011 20:11
I want to change the time to be as follows
09/02/2011 21:11 or even 09/02/2011 20:21
Can... (2 Replies)
This is a new one on me. We upgraded a system from AIX 5.3 TL 7 to 6.1 TL 7 yesterday. The app people notified us that their cron jobs weren't running at the right time. So I made a test cron entry and here's what I've found:
# crontab -l
* * * * * /usr/bin/date > /tmp/test.log 2>&1
# cat... (2 Replies)
Hello All,
Is there any *easy* and efficient way to add "one hour" to few fields in a file? . I have done this using a python script and it has hit with performance issues.
I have around 200mi of records, which I need to modify and send across in one hour.
sample input:
'2012-10-17... (2 Replies)
Time on unix server shows 8:00a CST
Time on Windows 7 Box shows 8:00a CST
However when you access an NFS share the time stamp on the files show an hour ahead? Talking about a newly created file shows an hour ahead so at 8:00a the file will show a time stamp of 9:00a CST
the problem it... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Paul Standley
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
tart-custom
tart-custom(5) LinuxTaRT template format tart-custom(5)NAME
tart-custom - Template format for LinuxTaRT
DESCRIPTION
LinuxTaRT can use a user defined template file to generate the signature. The name and location of this file can be specified in
~/.tartrc, but defaults to the following location:
~/.tart-custom
PARAMETERS
LinuxTaRT recognizes the following directives in the template and replaces them with the corresponding values:
%c1 - CustomText1 from .tartrc
%c2 - CustomText2 from .tartrc
%tg - tagline
Randomly selected from the tagline database.
%hr - horizontal line
%dt - todays date
In the format: Monday, February 25, 2002
%12 - current hour
12-hour format
%24 - current hour
24-hour format
%mn - current minutes
%ap - AM / PM
%ut - system uptime
For RiscOS or systems with the sysinfo function.
%ib - time in ibeats
%vi - LinuxTaRT version string
%% - the percent symbol (%)
Any other characters in the template are copied to the signature as is.
EXAMPLES
The following template:
LinuxTaRT - The Automatic Random Tagline
%hr
/dev/random says:
%tg
http://mycompany.com
%hr
Generates the following signature:
LinuxTaRT - The Automatic Random Tagline
-------------------------------------------------------
/dev/random says:
Best way to dispose of the Borg: Give them Windows 3.1.
http://mycompany.com
-------------------------------------------------------
FILES
~/.custom
SEE ALSO tart(1)tartrc(5)tartdates(5)Mark Veinot 1.0.0 tart-custom(5)