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Operating Systems HP-UX awk command in hp UNIX subtract 30 days automatically from current date without date illegal option Post 303027818 by vgersh99 on Tuesday 25th of December 2018 10:01:18 AM
Old 12-25-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by Scrutinizer
Yes, but +%s is GNU and BSD date only.
So IMO on HP-UX the best bet appears to be perl again:
Code:
perl -le 'print time'

Oh, I didn't know that.
Then another alternative with awk:
Code:
echo '2012-07-26 15:00:00' | awk -F'[- :]'  '{srand();now=srand(); timeE= $2*2629743 + $3*86400 + ($1-1970)*31556926 +$4*3600 +$5*60+$6; printf("%d - %d=%d\n", now, timeE}'

 

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RAND(3) 						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						   RAND(3)

NAME
rand, rand_r, srand, sranddev -- bad random number generator LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <stdlib.h> int rand(void); int rand_r(unsigned *seed); void srand(unsigned seed); void sranddev(void); DESCRIPTION
These interfaces are obsoleted by arc4random(3). The rand() function computes a sequence of pseudo-random integers in the range of 0 to RAND_MAX (as defined by the header file <stdlib.h>). The srand() function sets its argument seed as the seed for a new sequence of pseudo-random numbers to be returned by rand(). These sequences are repeatable by calling srand() with the same seed value. If no seed value is provided, the functions are automatically seeded with a value of 1. The sranddev() function initializes a seed, using the random(4) random number device which returns good random numbers. However, the rand() function still remains unsuitable for cryptographic use. The rand_r() function provides the same functionality as rand(). A pointer to the context value seed must be supplied by the caller. SEE ALSO
arc4random(3), random(3), random(4) STANDARDS
The rand() and srand() functions conform to ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (``ISO C90''). The rand_r() function is as proposed in the POSIX.4a Draft #6 document. BSD
May 25, 1999 BSD
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