Have you considered getting the year & month from the date command and forcing the day as a literal?
I'm not really clear what you are trying to achieve, but would this help?
If you are actually trying to use find, then if you can get the date in the correct format, then you can create a reference file to work from. Have a look at this and see if you can adjust it to your needs:-
I hope that this ends, but my apologies, sir/madam, if I've completely got confused.
Robin
HI ,
I have a list1 which consists of data that i have to search and a list2 which has the files that need to be searched .So basically i am using list1 on list2 to see if list1 data is present if found replace it .I have written the code using foreach loop for each list .This is taking the... (1 Reply)
Dear experts,
I have an epoch time input file such as : -
1302451209564
1302483698948
1302485231072
1302490805383
1302519244700
1302492787481
1302505299145
1302506557022
1302532112140
1302501033105
1302511536485
1302512669550
I need the epoch time above to be converted into real... (4 Replies)
Hi ,
I am trying to :wall: my head while scripting ..I am really new to this stuff , never did it before :( .
how to find cpu's system high time and user time high in a script??
thanks , help would be appreciated !
:) (9 Replies)
Hi
I have an ftp script which works fine when i execute through a test scheduler(UC4), but when i run it through the prod scheduler(UC4), it hungs indefinetely, when we cancel the job and re-run it it works perfectly fine. here is the code,, any idea why this is happening ????
... (1 Reply)
HI,
I have a file serverlist in that all host names are placed.
i have written a small script
#./testping
#! /bin/bash
for i in `cat serverlist`
do
ping $i >> output.txt
done
so now it creates a file output.txt till here fine..
now each time i run this script the output file... (4 Replies)
I want to create a script which calls another script with certain interval.
Script "A" should call script "B" every 60 seconds.
Script "A" should also be able to call other scripts such as "C", "D", etc. at an interval of 60, 120, 180 seconds respectively.
Basically script A should take two... (1 Reply)
I have the following code which i'd like to rewrite in a way that it can be used on all unix systems. meaning, i want it to be portable:
# turn seconds into real measurable time
num=$1
min=0
... (11 Replies)
I have bash shell script which is internally calling python script.I would like to know how long python is taking to execute.I am not allowed to do changes in python script.Please note i need to know execution time of python script which is getting executed inside shell .I need to store execution... (2 Replies)
Hello experts,
we have input files with 700K lines each (one generated for every hour). and we need to convert them as below and move them to another directory once.
Sample INPUT:-
# cat test1
1559205600000,8474,NormalizedPortInfo,PctDiscards,0.0,Interface,BG-CTA-AX1.test.com,Vl111... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: prvnrk
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
calendar
CALENDAR(3) BSD Library Functions Manual CALENDAR(3)NAME
easterg, easterog, easteroj, gdate, jdate, ndaysg, ndaysj, week, weekday -- Calendar arithmetic for the Christian era
LIBRARY
Calendar Arithmetic Library (libcalendar, -lcalendar)
SYNOPSIS
#include <calendar.h>
struct date *
easterg(int year, struct date *dt);
struct date *
easterog(int year, struct date *dt);
struct date *
easteroj(int year, struct date *dt);
struct date *
gdate(int nd, struct date *dt);
struct date *
jdate(int nd, struct date *dt);
int
ndaysg(struct date *dt);
int
ndaysj(struct date *dt);
int
week(int nd, int *year);
int
weekday(int nd);
DESCRIPTION
These functions provide calendar arithmetic for a large range of years, starting at March 1st, year zero (i.e., 1 B.C.) and ending way beyond
year 100000.
Programs should be linked with -lcalendar.
The functions easterg(), easterog() and easteroj() store the date of Easter Sunday into the structure pointed at by dt and return a pointer
to this structure. The function easterg() assumes Gregorian Calendar (adopted by most western churches after 1582) and the functions
easterog() and easteroj() compute the date of Easter Sunday according to the orthodox rules (Western churches before 1582, Greek and Russian
Orthodox Church until today). The result returned by easterog() is the date in Gregorian Calendar, whereas easteroj() returns the date in
Julian Calendar.
The functions gdate(), jdate(), ndaysg() and ndaysj() provide conversions between the common "year, month, day" notation of a date and the
"number of days" representation, which is better suited for calculations. The days are numbered from March 1st year 1 B.C., starting with
zero, so the number of a day gives the number of days since March 1st, year 1 B.C. The conversions work for nonnegative day numbers only.
The gdate() and jdate() functions store the date corresponding to the day number nd into the structure pointed at by dt and return a pointer
to this structure.
The ndaysg() and ndaysj() functions return the day number of the date pointed at by dt.
The gdate() and ndaysg() functions assume Gregorian Calendar after October 4, 1582 and Julian Calendar before, whereas jdate() and ndaysj()
assume Julian Calendar throughout.
The two calendars differ by the definition of the leap year. The Julian Calendar says every year that is a multiple of four is a leap year.
The Gregorian Calendar excludes years that are multiples of 100 and not multiples of 400. This means the years 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100 are
not leap years and the year 2000 is a leap year. The new rules were inaugurated on October 4, 1582 by deleting ten days following this date.
Most catholic countries adopted the new calendar by the end of the 16th century, whereas others stayed with the Julian Calendar until the
20th century. The United Kingdom and their colonies switched on September 2, 1752. They already had to delete 11 days.
The function week() returns the number of the week which contains the day numbered nd. The argument *year is set with the year that contains
(the greater part of) the week. The weeks are numbered per year starting with week 1, which is the first week in a year that includes more
than three days of the year. Weeks start on Monday. This function is defined for Gregorian Calendar only.
The function weekday() returns the weekday (Mo = 0 .. Su = 6) of the day numbered nd.
The structure date is defined in <calendar.h>. It contains these fields:
int y; /* year (0000 - ????) */
int m; /* month (1 - 12) */
int d; /* day of month (1 - 31) */
The year zero is written as "1 B.C." by historians and "0" by astronomers and in this library.
SEE ALSO ncal(1), strftime(3)STANDARDS
The week number conforms to ISO 8601: 1988.
HISTORY
The calendar library first appeared in FreeBSD 3.0.
AUTHORS
This manual page and the library was written by Wolfgang Helbig <helbig@FreeBSD.org>.
BUGS
The library was coded with great care so there are no bugs left.
BSD November 29, 1997 BSD