Hello, using date, we can easily get today's date
$ date +%y-%m-%d
06-12-08
is it possible for me to get yesterday's date using 'date', if not, is there any quick and easy way to do that?
Thanks! (1 Reply)
I am not using GNU nor BSD. On AIX, how do you return yesterday in the format of i.e. "May 09" with a space.
# `TZ=y380 date +%h""%d`
>> May09
# `TZ=y380 date +%h" "%d`
>> May
I appreciate your help in advance.
thx (3 Replies)
I haven't been using linux very long( and when I say that its only been about 1 week for me) I was told to do the following:
Create a Bash script that will copy all the files and subdirectories in one directory to a newly created directory. You may name the receiving directory anything you like.... (4 Replies)
I am currently running the following Korn shell script which works fine:
#!/usr/bin/ksh
count=`db2 -x "select count(*) from schema.tablename"`
echo "count"
I would like to add a "where" clause to the 2nd line that would allow me to get a record count of all the records from schema.tablename... (9 Replies)
I was playing to find a simple way to get yesterday's date, and came up with this (on an AIX 5.2 box):
$ date
Thu Feb 19 11:21:26 EST 2009
$ echo $TZ
EST5EDT
$ yesterday=`TZ=$(date +%Z)+24 date`
$ echo $yesterday
Wed Feb 18 16:21:52 GMT 2009
Why it is converted to GMT instead of... (2 Replies)
HI All,
I am trying so long to find the yesterday's date to run a script but i failed
kinldy share the command to find yesterday's date in ksh
i tried with
date --date='1 day ago'
but it displaying error
your help will highly apeerciated.
Thanks (7 Replies)
hi guys
i want to know how can i insert in a variable yesterday for example :
today=`date +%Y%m%d`
yesterday =???
thanks a lot
Please use CODE tags as required by forum rules! (4 Replies)
HI Team,
I am trying to create a shell script to generate a yesterday and today report to compare and email in daily basis. can you please help me on the same.
#!/bin/bash
#Author: *******************
#Description: This script will return the following set of system information:
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mi4304
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT POSIX
securetty
SECURETTY(5) Linux Programmer's Manual SECURETTY(5)NAME
securetty - file which lists terminals from which root can log in
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/securetty contains the names of terminals (one per line, without leading /dev/) which are considered secure for the transmis-
sion of certain authentication tokens.
It is used by (some versions of) login(1) to restrict the terminals on which root is allowed to login. See login.defs(5) if you use the
shadow suite.
On PAM enabled systems, it is used for the same purpose by pam_securetty(8) to restrict the terminals on which empty passwords are
accepted.
FILES
/etc/securetty
SEE ALSO login(1), login.defs(5), pam_securetty(8)COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Linux 2015-03-29 SECURETTY(5)