And what about calling this on a month's first short after midnight? Or on 1. Jan ?
If you have bash and GNU date, try
On (Free)BSD, try
In either case, you lose the split seconds...
hi,
from a shell script I am copying 2 different set of files in 2 different directories and then it ftp the same set files to another server 2 different
directories.
the dest directories where it is copying the files own by a different user
and required permission is there... (0 Replies)
Hi all.
I have the following code:
#include<stdio.h>
#include<time.h>
int main()
{
struct tm tm;
time_t time = 1262322000; /*Jan, 01, 2010*/
char temp;
int i = 0;
while(i < 4)
{
memset(temp, 0, 128);
localtime_r(&time,... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to insert a timestamp after all the file names in a folder,after the timestamp is created in the filename the file size is becoming zero bytes.
please tell me where I am doing it wrong.
I have declared the variable in starting of my script.
timestamp=`date... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I am new to unix programming. I am trying for a requirement and the requirement goes like this.....
I have a test folder. Which tracks log files. After certain time, the log file is getting overwritten by another file (randomly as the time interval is not periodic). I need to preserve... (2 Replies)
I need to be able to identify files with file timestamps greater than a given timestamp.
I am using the following solution, although it appears to compare files at the "seconds" granularity and I need it at the milliseconds. When I tested my solution, it missed files that had timestamps... (3 Replies)
I have a date/timestamp problem I can't figure out. I have an Oracle table with a column DEL_TIMESTAMP defined as a NUMBER. The min and max values in the column are:
6.3417E+17
6.3470E+17
the bottom value is: 634700000000000000
Is this the time since the epoch? How does this represent... (2 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I have the following logfile. Currently time in india is 07/31/2014 12:33:34 and i have the following content in logfile. I want to display only those entries which contain string 'Exception' within last 3 hours. In this case, it would be the last line only
I can get the... (12 Replies)
Hello ,
I am working on AIX. I have to convert Unix timestamp to normal timestamp. Below is the file. The Unix timestamp will always be preceded by
EFFECTIVE_TIME as first field as shown and there could be multiple EFFECTIVE_TIME in the file : 3.txt
Contents of... (6 Replies)
So basically I have a log file and each line in this log file starts with a timestamp:
MON DD HH:MM:SS
SEP 15 07:30:01
I need to grep all the lines between last hour timestamp and current timestamp. Then these lines will be moved to a tmp file from which I will grep for particular strings. ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nms
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
time::ctime
Time::CTime(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Time::CTime(3pm)NAME
Time::CTime -- format times ala POSIX asctime
SYNOPSIS
use Time::CTime
print ctime(time);
print asctime(localtime(time));
print strftime(template, localtime(time));
strftime conversions
%% PERCENT
%a day of the week abbr
%A day of the week
%b month abbr
%B month
%c ctime format: Sat Nov 19 21:05:57 1994
%d DD
%D MM/DD/YY
%e numeric day of the month
%f floating point seconds (milliseconds): .314
%F floating point seconds (microseconds): .314159
%h month abbr
%H hour, 24 hour clock, leading 0's)
%I hour, 12 hour clock, leading 0's)
%j day of the year
%k hour
%l hour, 12 hour clock
%m month number, starting with 1, leading 0's
%M minute, leading 0's
%n NEWLINE
%o ornate day of month -- "1st", "2nd", "25th", etc.
%p AM or PM
%r time format: 09:05:57 PM
%R time format: 21:05
%S seconds, leading 0's
%t TAB
%T time format: 21:05:57
%U week number, Sunday as first day of week
%v DD-Mon-Year
%w day of the week, numerically, Sunday == 0
%W week number, Monday as first day of week
%x date format: 11/19/94
%X time format: 21:05:57
%y year (2 digits)
%Y year (4 digits)
%Z timezone in ascii. eg: PST
DESCRIPTION
This module provides routines to format dates. They correspond to the libc routines. &strftime() supports a pretty good set of coversions
-- more than most C libraries.
strftime supports a pretty good set of conversions.
The POSIX module has very similar functionality. You should consider using it instead if you do not have allergic reactions to system
libraries.
GENESIS
Written by David Muir Sharnoff <muir@idiom.org>.
The starting point for this package was a posting by Paul Foley <paul@ascent.com>
LICENSE
Copyright (C) 1996-2010 David Muir Sharnoff. Copyright (C) 2011 Google, Inc. License hereby granted for anyone to use, modify or
redistribute this module at their own risk. Please feed useful changes back to cpan@dave.sharnoff.org.
perl v5.12.3 2011-05-12 Time::CTime(3pm)