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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Compare the system date with date from a text file Post 302992008 by drysdalk on Monday 20th of February 2017 02:15:04 PM
Old 02-20-2017
Hi,

(Edit: I'd initially typo'd the "2 days" as "2 months" in the output routine. Fixed now, sorry.)

I think I have a solution for you. The script is:

Code:
#!/bin/bash
file_string=`/bin/cat date.txt | /usr/bin/awk '{print $5,$4,$7,$6,$8}'`
file_date=`/bin/date -d "$file_string"`
file_epoch=`/bin/date -d "$file_string" +%s`
now_epoch=`/bin/date +%s`

if [ "$file_epoch" -gt "$now_epoch" ]
then
        #let difference=$file_epoch-$now_epoch
        difference=`/usr/bin/expr $file_epoch - $now_epoch`
elif [ "$now_epoch" -gt "$file_epoch" ]
then
        #let difference=$now_epoch-$file_epoch
        difference=`/usr/bin/expr $now_epoch - $file_epoch`
else
        let difference=0
fi

if [ "$difference" -ge "172800" ]
then
        echo "More than 2 days between $file_date and now"
else
        echo "Less than 2 days between $file_date and now"
fi

You'll notice that above the 'eval' lines (a command I'm using to do the arithmetic here) there are also commented-out lines using Bash's own built-in 'let' command, which can also do arithmetic. If you don't have 'expr' on your system, then you can comment out or remove the 'expr' lines and go with the 'let' lines instead. I've tested it with both, and (for this one single test input file, it must be noted) all was well.

Here is a transcript of a sample session, using the exact test date string you provided as the input in 'date.txt'.

Code:
$ cat date.txt
Not After : Jul 28 14:09:57 2017 GMT
$ ./script.sh
More than 2 days between Fri 28 Jul 15:09:57 BST 2017 and now
$

Hope this helps.
This User Gave Thanks to drysdalk For This Post:
 

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DP(8)                                                                [nmh-1.5]                                                               DP(8)

NAME
dp - parse dates 822-style SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/mh/dp [-form formatfile] [-format string] [-width columns] [-version] [-help] dates ... DESCRIPTION
Dp is a program that parses dates according to the ARPA Internet standard. It also understands many non-standard formats, such as those produced by TOPS-20 sites and some UNIX sites using ctime(3). It is useful for seeing how nmh will interpret a date. The dp program treats each argument as a single date, and prints the date out in the official 822-format. Hence, it is usually best to enclose each argument in quotes for the shell. To override the output format used by dp, the -format string or -format file switches are used. This permits individual fields of the address to be extracted with ease. The string is simply a format string and the file is simply a format file. See mh-format(5) for the details. Here is the default format string used by dp: %<(nodate{text})error: %{text}%|%(putstr(pretty{text}))%> which says that if an error was detected, print the error, a `:', and the date in error. Otherwise, output the 822-proper format of the date. FILES
$HOME/.mh_profile The user profile PROFILE COMPONENTS
None SEE ALSO
ap(8), Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages (RFC-822) DEFAULTS
`-format' default as described above `-width' default to the width of the terminal CONTEXT
None BUGS
The argument to the -format switch must be interpreted as a single token by the shell that invokes dp. Therefore, one must usually place the argument to this switch inside quotes. MH.6.8 11 June 2012 DP(8)
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