4.) Bakunin yes the %T Option available for the date Format on my very old AIX , but i need the time in seconds
Actually this is a solution:
This removes the necessity to use an external program (nawk, perl) and makes only use of standard (ksh-)features. Anyways, i am glad you have a solution that works.
hi all UNIX Gurus,
this is my first post...so i posting this with great expectations:o...hoping to get the similar replies...
my question is....
need to get timestamp with millisecond in UNIX. Date command gives Year,month day, hour,minute and second but it does not give millisecond.
Any... (5 Replies)
Hi,
In unix the command "date +%s" displays the date-time in seconds since â00:00:00 1970-01-01 UTCâ (a GNU extension)
when executed on unix:
-sh-2.05b$ date +%s
1152092690
I tried with all the format control output but unable to display the date-time in seconds i,e as in unix format. Can... (6 Replies)
It is required to calculate time difference in seconds between epoch time (19700101 00:00:00) and any given date time (e.g. 20010214 14:30:30).
Is there any command in unix to get it? Thanks in adv. (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Cany any one help me in solving this..
Problem statement: I have a requirement to find the time from which there are no files created in a given directory. For this I am assuming that I need to get the file creation time in seconds, then the current time in seconds using `date +%s`.... (7 Replies)
hi guys,
i need to know how to get the current date/time in seconds and i want to be able to do this in a one liner. like say for instance, if want to get what the time is right now, i'll issue a command like this:
## perl -e ' print scalar(localtime(time + 0)), "\n"'
Tue Jul 13 17:45:50... (4 Replies)
I am trying to get the ellapsed time in seconds in the body of the awk script. I use unix date to get the time. It works in BEGIN {} but not in the body {} of awk. Any ideas?
$ cat a
BEGIN {
"date +%s" | getline x
print x
}
{
"date +%s" | getline y
print y
}
$ echo "one line" |... (3 Replies)
I use this command to get the time elapsed for a process
ps -eo pid,pcpu,pmem,user,args,etime,cmd --sort=start_time | grep perl
It gives in format
19990 0.0 0.0 user /usr/bin/php 5-09:58:51 /usr/bin/php
I need in seconds.
Please use CODE tags for sample input and output as well... (2 Replies)
I have a list of time spans in seconds, and want to compute the time span
as hh:mm:nn
I am coding in bash and have coded the following. However, the results are
wrong as "%.0f" rounds the values.
Example:
ftm: 25793.5
tmspan(hrs,min,sec): 7.16 429.89 25793.50
hh: 7
mm: 10
ss:... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kristinu
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
datetime
datetime(3) Library Functions Manual datetime(3)NAME
datetime - convert between TAI labels and seconds
SYNTAX
#include <datetime.h>
void datetime_tai(&dt,t);
datetime_sec datetime_untai(&dt);
struct datetime dt;
datetime_sec t;
DESCRIPTION
International Atomic Time, TAI, is the fundamental unit for time measurements. TAI has one label for every second of real time, without
complications such as leap seconds.
A struct datetime variable, such as dt, stores a TAI label. dt.year is the year number minus 1900; dt.mon is the month number, from 0
(January) through 11 (December); dt.mday is the day of the month, from 1 through 31; dt.hour is the hour, from 0 through 23; dt.min is the
minute, from 0 through 59; dt.sec is the second, from 0 through 59; dt.wday is the day of the week, from 0 (Sunday) through 6 (Saturday);
dt.yday is the day of the year, from 0 through 365.
The datetime library supports more convenient TAI manipulation with the datetime_sec type. A datetime_sec value, such as t, is an integer
referring to the tth second after the beginning of 1970 TAI. The first second of 1970 TAI was 0; the next second was 1; the last second of
1969 TAI was -1. The difference between two datetime_sec values is a number of real-time seconds.
datetime_tai converts a datetime_sec to a TAI label.
datetime_untai reads a TAI label (specifically dt.year, dt.mon, dt.mday, dt.hour, dt.min, and dt.sec) and returns a datetime_sec.
SEE ALSO now(3)datetime(3)