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Operating Systems AIX AIX - find command with mtime Post 302959186 by MadeInGermany on Thursday 29th of October 2015 04:15:35 PM
Old 10-29-2015
I did not find a HP-UX command that shows the exact file time.
Here perl is used to print the full Unix time,
followed by a loop that compares it with the required reference time:
Code:
nowtime=`date +%s`
reftime=$(( nowtime - 3600 ))
find /path -type f -exec perl -le 'for (@ARGV) {print join " ",(stat($_))[9],$_}' {} + |
while read -r ftime fname
do
  if [ $ftime -lt $reftime ]
  then
    echo "$fname"
  fi
done

 

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FTIME(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							  FTIME(3)

NAME
ftime - return date and time SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/timeb.h> int ftime(struct timeb *tp); DESCRIPTION
Return current date and time in tp, which is declared as follows: struct timeb { time_t time; unsigned short millitm; short timezone; short dstflag; }; Here time is the number of seconds since the epoch, millitm is the number of milliseconds since time seconds since the epoch, timezone is the local time zone measured in minutes of time west of Greenwich, and dstflag is a flag that, if nonzero, indicates that Daylight Saving time applies locally during the appropriate part of the year. These days the contents of the timezone and dstflag fields are undefined. RETURN VALUE
This function always returns 0. BUGS
This function is obsolete. Don't use it. If the time in seconds suffices, time(2) can be used; gettimeofday(2) gives microseconds; clock_gettime(3) gives nanoseconds but is not yet widely available. Under libc4 and libc5 the millitm field is meaningful. But early glibc2 is buggy and returns 0 there; glibc 2.1.1 is correct again. HISTORY
The ftime() function appeared in 4.2BSD. CONFORMING TO
BSD 4.2, POSIX 1003.1-2001. SEE ALSO
gettimeofday(2), time(2) Linux 2001-12-14 FTIME(3)
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