Yes, it is less durable than the archive bit in Windows, and so of little use. Most practical apps use the date modified, to control backup and archiving. For casual use, "find -mtime -<days>" is good, but for precise set definition you need something like:
---------- Post updated at 12:19 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:15 PM ----------
Yes, it is less durable than the archive bit in Windows, and so of little use. Most practical apps use the date modified, to control backup and archiving. For casual use, "find -mtime -<days>" is good, but for precise set definition you need something like:
You need to bracket your files with two dates in the past. If you start in th current second, you might miss files modified later in that second. A second is a long time for a modern computer !
Hi,
I have a file which is a result of a script running every two minutes. What I wanted to do is to grep a specific date and time (hour and minute) from the file and then count the occurance of 201. I need to get the result of occurance of 201 every 5 minutes. What should I include in my... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to accomplish the following and would like some suggestions or possible bash script examples that may work
I have a directory that has a list of log files that's periodically dumped from a script that is crontab that are rotated 4 generations. There will be a time stamp that is... (4 Replies)
I've seen several examples of grep showing the filename the string was found in, but what I really need is grep to show the file details in long format (like ls -l would).
scenario is:
grep mobile_number todays_files
This will show me the string I'm after & which files they turn up in, but... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a log file without date/time, and I want that everytime tail|grep find something it displays the date/time and the line. I have tried something like this command but without any luck to display the date/time:
tail -F catalina.out | sed "s/^/`date `/" | egrep ... (6 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)
hi experts,
my requirement is like this i need to develop a shell script to update date part with new incremental date time in file some 'X' which is kept at some server location incrementing every two hours.as i am new to this scripting i need support from u people,thanx in advance (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Need a small help. I have a log file which keeps updating for every Minute with multiple number of lines. I just want to grep few properties which has latest Date and Time to it. How do i do it?
I wanted to grep a property by name "Reloading cache with a maximum of" from the... (4 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)
hey guys.
the following line is a line taken from apache's access_log
10.10.10.10 - jdoe "GET /images/down.gif HTTP/1.1" 304
I'm concerned about the field that has the date and time in it.
if assuming the delimiter in the file is a space, then the fourth field will always have the date... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
dnssec-settime
DNSSEC-SETTIME(8) BIND9 DNSSEC-SETTIME(8)NAME
dnssec-settime - Set the key timing metadata for a DNSSEC key
SYNOPSIS
dnssec-settime [-f] [-K directory] [-P date/offset] [-A date/offset] [-R date/offset] [-I date/offset] [-D date/offset] [-h] [-v level]
[-E engine] {keyfile}
DESCRIPTION
dnssec-settime reads a DNSSEC private key file and sets the key timing metadata as specified by the -P, -A, -R, -I, and -D options. The
metadata can then be used by dnssec-signzone or other signing software to determine when a key is to be published, whether it should be
used for signing a zone, etc.
If none of these options is set on the command line, then dnssec-settime simply prints the key timing metadata already stored in the key.
When key metadata fields are changed, both files of a key pair (Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.key and Knnnn.+aaa+iiiii.private) are regenerated.
Metadata fields are stored in the private file. A human-readable description of the metadata is also placed in comments in the key file.
OPTIONS -f
Force an update of an old-format key with no metadata fields. Without this option, dnssec-settime will fail when attempting to update a
legacy key. With this option, the key will be recreated in the new format, but with the original key data retained. The key's creation
date will be set to the present time.
-K directory
Sets the directory in which the key files are to reside.
-h
Emit usage message and exit.
-v level
Sets the debugging level.
-E engine
Use the given OpenSSL engine. When compiled with PKCS#11 support it defaults to pkcs11; the empty name resets it to no engine.
TIMING OPTIONS
Dates can be expressed in the format YYYYMMDD or YYYYMMDDHHMMSS. If the argument begins with a '+' or '-', it is interpreted as an offset
from the present time. For convenience, if such an offset is followed by one of the suffixes 'y', 'mo', 'w', 'd', 'h', or 'mi', then the
offset is computed in years (defined as 365 24-hour days, ignoring leap years), months (defined as 30 24-hour days), weeks, days, hours, or
minutes, respectively. Without a suffix, the offset is computed in seconds. To unset a date, use 'none'.
-P date/offset
Sets the date on which a key is to be published to the zone. After that date, the key will be included in the zone but will not be used
to sign it.
-A date/offset
Sets the date on which the key is to be activated. After that date, the key will be included in the zone and used to sign it.
-R date/offset
Sets the date on which the key is to be revoked. After that date, the key will be flagged as revoked. It will be included in the zone
and will be used to sign it.
-I date/offset
Sets the date on which the key is to be retired. After that date, the key will still be included in the zone, but it will not be used
to sign it.
-D date/offset
Sets the date on which the key is to be deleted. After that date, the key will no longer be included in the zone. (It may remain in the
key repository, however.)
PRINTING OPTIONS
dnssec-settime can also be used to print the timing metadata associated with a key.
-u
Print times in UNIX epoch format.
-p C/P/A/R/I/D/all
Print a specific metadata value or set of metadata values. The -p option may be followed by one or more of the following letters to
indicate which value or values to print: C for the creation date, P for the publication date, A for the activation date, R for the
revocation date, I for the inactivation date, or D for the deletion date. To print all of the metadata, use -p all.
SEE ALSO dnssec-keygen(8), dnssec-signzone(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual, RFC 5011.
AUTHOR
Internet Systems Consortium
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2009, 2010 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
BIND9 July 15, 2009 DNSSEC-SETTIME(8)