Wildly guessing and assuming a) your file is <TAB> delimited, b) your date version accepts the -d opton, c) you're using a decently recent shell, I imagine this could be of some help
login: TEST7
TEST7's Password:
Your password will expire: Wed Feb 19 14:28:08 2003
How can I the same information become in a script (as example
in the .profile)?????????
My login starts with .profile. These File is a menue with 24 lines and the message " Your password ....." disappear
to... (8 Replies)
Hi,
Is there any way to find out the UNIX user's password expire date?. It'll we helpful to inform the users to change the password before it get expires.(FYI - I am not having only admin previlege.) (1 Reply)
Hello
I want to set the password for user never expire through the command line. For your information the box is running under Solaris 8 platform. (2 Replies)
Hi
when i do a swlist on my HP-UX machine it displays the software packages ..How do i know whether those packages are licensed or freeware
can any 1 help me
best Regards
vasanth (0 Replies)
Hi ,
I am trying to execute the ipl file as below :
my $user="iwadmin";
chomp $user;
system("passwd -x 29 $user");
The ipl file executes with out any issues when i have logged in as root in solaris .but when when i try to execute the same file with other user id ie iwadmin ,it says... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have Solaris 9 and there is user created in that server called appuser
That user should to be never expire..
can anyone advice me how can I modify that user to be never expire thru the command line without using GUI tool. (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have a XML file : System.xml in which I want to update the license tag with the new data from file licence.xml.
The content of files is in following format:
System.xml:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE Configuration SYSTEM "SystemVariables.dtd">
<usageConfiguration... (2 Replies)
I have a program that outputs a file on the number days left before software license expired. It reads in a text file name expiredt.txt.
expiredt.txt contents are as follows:
EM software 30NOV2015 11/30/2015
ABM software 30NOV2015 11/30/2015
ABM software ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dellanicholson
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
timetrans
TIMETRANS(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation TIMETRANS(1p)NAME
timetrans - Converts time into time
SYNOPSIS
timetrans [units-options] [-count]
DESCRIPTION
timetrans converts time from one type of unit to another. If any of the units options are specified, then timetrans will convert those
time units into the number of seconds to which they add up. If given the count option, timetrans will convert that number of seconds into
the appropriate number of weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds. The converted result is printed out. Units options cannot be
specified in the same execution as the count option, and vice versa.
timetrans is intended for use with DNSSEC-Tools, for calculating a zone's expiration time.
OPTIONS
Units Options
The converted value of each unit is totaled and a single result printed.
-seconds seconds
Count of seconds to convert to seconds.
-minutes minutes
Count of minutes to convert to seconds.
-hours hours
Count of hours to convert to seconds.
-days days
Count of days to convert to seconds.
-weeks weeks
Count of weeks to convert to seconds.
Count Option
The specified seconds count is converted to the appropriate number of weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds.
-count seconds
Count of seconds to convert to the appropriate set of units.
Other Options
timetrans has the following miscellaneous options.
-Version
Displays the version information for timetrans and the DNSSEC-Tools package.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Converting 5 days into seconds
$(42)> timetrans -days 5
432000
Example 2: Converting 2 weeks into seconds
$(43)> timetrans -w 2
1209600
Example 3: Converting 8 days and 8 hours into seconds
$(44)> timetrans -d 8 -hours 8
720000
Example 4: Converting 1 week, 1 day, and 8 hours into seconds
$(46)> timetrans -w 1 -days 1 -h 8
720000
Example 5: Converting 14 weeks, 4 days, 21 hours, 8 minutes, and 8 seconds into seconds
$(47)> timetrans -w 14 -d 4 -h 21 -m 8 -s 8
8888888
Example 6: Converting 720000 seconds into time units
$(48)> timetrans -c 720000
1 week, 1 day, 8 hours
Example 7: Converting 1814421 seconds into time units
$(49)> timetrans -c 1814421
3 weeks, 21 seconds
Example 8: Converting 8888888 seconds into time units
$(50)> timetrans -c 8888888
14 weeks, 4 days, 21 hours, 8 minutes, 8 seconds
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2004-2012 SPARTA, Inc. All rights reserved. See the COPYING file included with the DNSSEC-Tools package for details.
AUTHOR
Wayne Morrison, tewok@tislabs.com
SEE ALSO zonesigner(8)Net::DNS::SEC::Tools::timetrans.pm(3)perl v5.14.2 2012-06-21 TIMETRANS(1p)