Hello,
I am inside a awk script on AIX, I am feeding to awk ls -luNR
i need to convert ls -u time format "month day h:m/yr" to Unix epoch time, POSIX time, or aka unix timestamp
I do not have strftime funk in my awk, and i have to do this fast meaning that I cannot do a system call in the... (1 Reply)
Hello,
Did anyone know how to use script (e.g. perl) to conver Unix Timestame to real timestame in GMT+8 ?
1245900787 file:/tmp/a/Test/.txt.swp has created
1245900988 file:/tmp/a/Test/.txt.swp has changed
Thu, 25 Jun 2009 11:33:07 GMT+8 file:/tmp/a/Test/.txt.swp has created
Thu, 25 Jun... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a string like below.
"Mar 31 2009" .
I want to convert this to unix time .
Also please let me know how to find the unix time for the above string minus one day. For Eg. if i have string "Mar 31 2009" i want to find the unix time stamp of "Mar 30 2009".
Thanks in advance,... (11 Replies)
Hello,
How do I convert unix timestamp value to 'normal' date format - to get year month and day values ?
Looks like it's easy to do using GNU date (linux systems). But how do I do tthis on AIX ?
I don't want to write C program, any ways to do that using unix shells ?
thanks (1 Reply)
hello,
i have an AIX5.3 machine and i am writing a script to display some processes.
inside the script i want to get the time that the process starts and convert it to a unix timestamp.
is there a command that i can use to do that? i search the web but all i found is long scripts and it does... (4 Replies)
I need to compare a R$Timestamp field sql within a Unix Shell Script.
In straight SQL the following code works fine:
Table Name: LL_UNIT_TRANSACTION UT
Field: R$Timestamp
Where TRUNC(UT.R$Timestamp) >= TRUNC(SYSDATE -7)
the following returns no data within the Unix Shell Script... (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 have a file : file1.txt with the below contents :
237176 test1 test2 1442149024
237138 test3 test4 1442121300
237171 test5 test7 1442112823
237145 test9 test10 1442109600
In the above file fourth field represents the timestamp in Unix format.
I found a command which converts... (6 Replies)
Hello All,
I have a date in DD/MM/YYYY format. I am trying to convert this into unix timestamp. I have tried following:
date -d $mydate +%s
where mydate = 23/12/2016 00:00:00
I am getting following error:
date: extra operand `+%s'
Try `date --help' for more information.
... (1 Reply)
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 LINUX
pam_timestamp_check
PAM_TIMESTAMP_CHECK(8) Linux-PAM Manual PAM_TIMESTAMP_CHECK(8)NAME
pam_timestamp_check - Check to see if the default timestamp is valid
SYNOPSIS
pam_timestamp_check [-k] [-d] [target_user]
DESCRIPTION
With no arguments pam_timestamp_check will check to see if the default timestamp is valid, or optionally remove it.
OPTIONS -k
Instead of checking the validity of a timestamp, remove it. This is analogous to sudo's -k option.
-d
Instead of returning validity using an exit status, loop indefinitely, polling regularly and printing the status on standard output.
target_user
By default pam_timestamp_check checks or removes timestamps generated by pam_timestamp when the user authenticates as herself. When the
user authenticates as a different user, the name of the timestamp file changes to accommodate this. target_user allows to specify this
user name.
RETURN VALUES
0
The timestamp is valid.
2
The binary is not setuid root.
3
Invalid invocation.
4
User is unknown.
5
Permissions error.
6
Invalid controlling tty.
7
Timestamp is not valid.
NOTES
Users can get confused when they are not always asked for passwords when running a given program. Some users reflexively begin typing
information before noticing that it is not being asked for.
EXAMPLES
auth sufficient pam_timestamp.so verbose
auth required pam_unix.so
session required pam_unix.so
session optional pam_timestamp.so
FILES
/var/run/sudo/...
timestamp files and directories
SEE ALSO pam_timestamp_check(8), pam.conf(5), pam.d(5), pam(8)AUTHOR
pam_tally was written by Nalin Dahyabhai.
Linux-PAM Manual 06/04/2011 PAM_TIMESTAMP_CHECK(8)