hello everyone. im sure someone has run into the problem of timestamping files and end up haveing 2 files with the same name thus over writeing one of them.
In my application i am trying to get a timestamp w/ milliseconds but i am haveing no luck and finding an answer in the man pages.
I know... (3 Replies)
I use something like this in perl to get the date and time:
use Time::localtime;
use Time::gmtime;
$tm = gmtime;
$time_str = sprintf "%04d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02d",
$tm->year + 1900, $tm->mon + 1, $tm->mday,
$tm->hour, $tm->min, $tm->sec;
It gives me something like this:
2010-08-26... (1 Reply)
Hey everyone,
I'm coming from Linux where the top command gave me lots of process
info (particularly CPU time in milliseconds) and I'm trying to find
similar info in Solaris.
So far I've looked at prstat and ps but neither give cpu time in
milliseconds, both seem to have 1 second... (2 Replies)
I need to put a small delay into a shell script. I'm looking for something smaller than "sleep" - a second is way too long. I want to sleep something like 10 milliseconds. I've tried "usleep" and "nanosleep", but the script doesn't recognize them.
I'm using the bash shell but I'm willing to... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I need to find the difference between 2 dates in SunOS 5.10
input will be in(yyyymmdd)
date1: 20131011
date2:20131012
my output shold be diff between two dates i.e 0,1,2,3 date2 is always greater than date1.
if it handles even leap year then it wil be more helpful.
thank u... (2 Replies)
while I load the value using sqlldr the millisecond values not stored in oracle table.
Value:
'26-OCT-17 08.59.50.916000000 AM'
CTL field:
SRC_SYS_CRT_TS Position(23:48) "decode(:SRC_SYS_CRT_TS,null,sysdate-1,to_timestamp(:SRC_SYS_CRT_TS,'yyyy-mm-dd.hh24.mi.ss.FF'))",
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: priya1987
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
set_color
set_color(1) fish set_color(1)NAME
set_color - set_color - set the terminal color
set_color - set the terminal color
Synopsis
set_color [-v --version] [-h --help] [-b --background COLOR] [COLOR]
Description
Change the foreground and/or background color of the terminal. COLOR is one of black, red, green, brown, yellow, blue, magenta, purple,
cyan, white and normal.
o -b, --background Set the background color
o -c, --print-colors Prints a list of all valid color names
o -h, --help Display help message and exit
o -o, --bold Set bold or extra bright mode
o -u, --underline Set underlined mode
o -v, --version Display version and exit
Calling set_color normal will set the terminal color to whatever is the default color of the terminal.
Some terminals use the --bold escape sequence to switch to a brighter color set. On such terminals, set_color white will result in a grey
font color, while set_color --bold white will result in a white font color.
Not all terminal emulators support all these features. This is not a bug in set_color but a missing feature in the terminal emulator.
set_color uses the terminfo database to look up how to change terminal colors on whatever terminal is in use. Some systems have old and
incomplete terminfo databases, and may lack color information for terminals that support it. Download and install the latest version of
ncurses and recompile fish against it in order to fix this issue.
Version 1.23.1 Sun Jan 8 2012 set_color(1)