Dear UNIX Folks,
I guess everyone of us like to know what sysadmin typically do during his free time.
Not what he/she likes as an hobbies.. but what activities does he/she often indulge in other than facing the monitor.
Maybe we can come up this a better stereo-typed for sysadmin.
I... (8 Replies)
hi ,
I would like to ask how to get past 5 minutes system time and date, if i have following to get current time.
# get current time
($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year) = localtime(time);
$year = $year + 1900;
$mon = sprintf ("%02s",$mon+1);
$mday = sprintf ("%02s",$mday);
$hour =... (1 Reply)
Hello
I have a question that may sound stupid after and maybe it is.
We are syncing our sytem time via ntp from a reference time server. all works quite well
but due to a mall applikation which not accepts timestamps from our servers that in the future,
and if it even was 1 ms, we have to... (1 Reply)
Hi guys,
Im trying to subtract time in ksh script. i.e. basically im querying a database and i want to get the time 10mins before hand..(from)
in ksh
CurrMin=$(date "+%M")
from=`expr $CurrMin - 10`
to=$CurrMin
however if i run this i say at 2 or 3 mins past the hour, i.e.... (7 Replies)
Hey everyone,
I need to select all files that were added to a specific directory in the past 5 mins and copy them over to a different directory. I am using HP-UX OS which does not have support for amin, cmin, and mmin. B/c of this, I am creating a temp file and will use the find -newer command... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
I would like some help with a sendmail problem:
We have a new system comprising of 4 T7-1 servers, each hosting 5 LDOMs, all domains running Solaris 11.3
All emails sent from every one of these domains (including the control domains) sit in the queue for 3 mins 11 secs (sometime 3m 12s,... (11 Replies)
Dears,
I am looking for a script which will work as a watch directory.
I ha directory which keep getting files in every 10 mins and some time delay.
I want to monitor if the directory getting the files in every 10 mins if not captured the last received file time and calculate the delay.
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sadique.manzar
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
audio::mpd::common::time
Audio::MPD::Common::Time(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Audio::MPD::Common::Time(3pm)NAME
Audio::MPD::Common::Time - class representing time of current song
VERSION
version 1.120881
DESCRIPTION
Audio::MPD::Common::Status returns some time information with the "time()" accessor. This information relates to the elapsed time of the
current song, as well as the remaining and total time. This information is encapsulated in an Audio::MPD::Common::Time object.
An Audio::MPD::Common::Time object does not update itself regularly, and thus should be used immediately.
Note: one should never ever instantiate an Audio::MPD::Common::Time object directly - use the mpd modules instead.
ATTRIBUTES
$time->time;
The time passed to the constructor, used to compute all others values (see methods). It is the time value (on the "time" line) of what the
MPD server returns to the status command. Defaults to "0:0".
METHODS
my $str = $time->sofar;
Return elapsed $time ("minutes:seconds" format).
my $str = $time->left;
Return remaining $time ("minutes:seconds" format).
my $str = $time->left;
Return total $time ("minutes:seconds" format).
my $percent = $time->percent;
Return elapsed $time (percentage, 1 digit).
my $secs = $time->seconds_sofar;
Return elapsed $time in seconds.
my $secs = $time->seconds_left;
Return remaining $time in seconds.
my $secs = $time->seconds_total;
Return total $time in seconds.
my $mins = $time->sofar_mins;
Return minutes part of elapsed $time.
my $secs = $time->sofar_secs;
Return seconds part of elapsed $time.
my $mins = $time->left_mins;
Return minutes part of remaining $time.
my $secs = $time->left_secs;
Return seconds part of remaining $time.
my $mins = $time->total_mins;
Return minutes part of total $time.
my $mins = $time->total_secs;
Return seconds part of total $time.
AUTHOR
Jerome Quelin
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2007 by Jerome Quelin.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-04-01 Audio::MPD::Common::Time(3pm)