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Full Discussion: What does this mean?
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting What does this mean? Post 302866005 by manands07 on Monday 21st of October 2013 05:54:37 AM
Old 10-21-2013
What does this mean?

Hello all,
I am a newbie in shell scripting.
I want to know what does the below text means?


Code:
6.355u 1.679s 0:12.68 63.2% 0+0k 0+0io 0pf+0w


I am getting this line (on terminal) after every successful execution of my script.

Thanks in advance . . Smilie

-MD

Last edited by Scrutinizer; 10-23-2013 at 04:12 AM.. Reason: Make it more readable . .; code tags
 
TIME(2) 						     Linux Programmer's Manual							   TIME(2)

NAME
time - get time in seconds SYNOPSIS
#include <time.h> time_t time(time_t *t); DESCRIPTION
time returns the time since the Epoch (00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970), measured in seconds. If t is non-NULL, the return value is also stored in the memory pointed to by t. RETURN VALUE
On success, the value of time in seconds since the Epoch is returned. On error, ((time_t)-1) is returned, and errno is set appropriately. ERRORS
EFAULT t points outside your accessible address space. NOTES
POSIX.1 defines seconds since the Epoch as a value to be interpreted as the number of seconds between a specified time and the Epoch, according to a formula for conversion from UTC equivalent to conversion on the naive basis that leap seconds are ignored and all years divisible by 4 are leap years. This value is not the same as the actual number of seconds between the time and the Epoch, because of leap seconds and because clocks are not required to be synchronised to a standard reference. The intention is that the interpretation of sec- onds since the Epoch values be consistent; see POSIX.1 Annex B 2.2.2 for further rationale. CONFORMING TO
SVr4, SVID, POSIX, X/OPEN, BSD 4.3 Under BSD 4.3, this call is obsoleted by gettimeofday(2). POSIX does not specify any error conditions. SEE ALSO
ctime(3), date(1), ftime(3), gettimeofday(2) Linux 2.0.30 1997-09-09 TIME(2)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:00 AM.
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