Hi All,
I want to find out the time before 30 minutes. I am able to do with in hours limit.
date
Fri Aug 21 06:50:00 BST 2009
TZ=CST+1 date
Fri Aug 21 04:50:02 CST 2009
Can any one please help me (6 Replies)
Hi
i want to print the time of a process in hours only..(or) in minutes only.Is there anyway to print the process such like that
when i give the commnand like following
#ps -eo pid,time
PID TIME
412 01:49:32
481 00:03
it shows in HH:MM:SS format:
Could anyone... (1 Reply)
i have the time 20100421043335 in format (date +%Y%m%d%H%M%S),and i want to be able to get the previous time 2 minutes ago,which is
20100421043135 (9 Replies)
In Redhat it is easy....
date --date="60 minutes ago"
How do you do this in Solaris?
I got creative and got the epoch time but had problems..
EPOCHTIME=`truss date 2>&1 | grep "time()" | awk '{print $3 - 900}'`
echo $EPOCHTIME
TIME=`perl -e 'print scalar(localtime("$EPOCHTIME")),... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I need to subtract 5 minutes from the date. Example
$date +"%Y-%m-%d-%H.%M.%S" displays 2014-06-26-06.06.38
I want to show it as 2014-06-26-06.01.38 (5 mins are subtracted from date)
Any help would be appreciated. I am currently on AIX version 6.1
-Vrushank (10 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I have a text file that has only time in the format HH:MM:SS like seen below.
21:36:17
23:52:08
I need to find the difference in minutes alone from this text file so the result would be 136.
Thanks
Jay (11 Replies)
Hello all,
Info:
System RedHat 7.5
I need to create a script that based on the creation time,
if the file is older then 5 minutes then execute some stuff, if not exit.
I thought to get the creation time and minutes like this.
CreationTime=$(stat -c %y /tmp/test.log | awk -F" " '{ print... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: charli1
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
pmdate
PMDATE(1) General Commands Manual PMDATE(1)NAME
pmdate - display an offset date
SYNOPSIS
pmdate [ offset ... ] format
DESCRIPTION
pmdate displays the current date and/or time, with an optional offset.
An offset is specified with a leading sign (``+'' or ``-''), followed by an integer value, followed by one of the following ``scale'' spec-
ifiers;
S seconds
M minutes
H hours
d days
m months
y years
The output format follows the same rules as for date(1) and strftime(3).
For example, the following will display the date a week ago as DDMMYYYY;
pmdate -7d %d%m%Y
PCP ENVIRONMENT
Environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize the file and directory names used by PCP. On each installation, the
file /etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for these variables. The $PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative configura-
tion file, as described in pcp.conf(5).
SEE ALSO date(1), strftime(3), pcp.conf(5) and pcp.env(5).
Performance Co-Pilot PCP PMDATE(1)