Hi,
I'm trying to accomplish the following and would like some suggestions or possible bash script examples that may work
I have a directory that has a list of log files that's periodically dumped from a script that is crontab that are rotated 4 generations. There will be a time stamp that is... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Is it possible to set the two time formats in a single machine. My machine time is in EST and the logs are in PST. What would be the issue, and how to make change of this.? (5 Replies)
Hi there, am trying to parse an Apache 'server' config file. A snippet of the config file is shown below:
.....
ProxyPassReverse /foo http://foo.example.com/bar
.....
.....
RewriteRule ^/(.*) http://www.example.com/$1
RewriteRule /redirect https://www.example1.com/$1
........ (7 Replies)
Hello,
I have a log file for the year, which contains lines starting with the data in the format of YYYY-MM-DD. I need to get all the lines that contain the DD being 04, how would I do this? I tried using grep "*-*04" but it didn't work.
Any quick one liners I should know about?
Thank you. (2 Replies)
I was looking at this script which outputs the two lines which differs less than one sec.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use warnings;
use Time::Local;
use constant SEC_MILIC => 1000;
my $file='infile';
## Open for reading argument file.
open my $fh, "<", $file or die "Cannot... (1 Reply)
Greetings
I have a file formatted like this:
rhino grey weight=1003;height=231;class=heaviest;histology=9,0,0,8
bird white weight=23;height=88;class=light;histology=7,5,1,0,0
turtle green weight=40;height=9;class=light;histology=6,0,2,0... (2 Replies)
Hello All,
Below is the excerpt from my Informatica log file which has 4 blocks of lines (starting with WRITER_1_*_1). Like these my log file will have multiple blocks of same pattern.
WRITER_1_*_1> WRT_8161
TARGET BASED COMMIT POINT Thu May 08 09:33:21 2014... (13 Replies)
I am developing one script which will take log file name, output file name, date, hour and minute as an argument and based on these inputs, the script will scan and capture all the error(s) that have been triggered from a given time. Example: script should capture all the error after 13:50 on Jan... (2 Replies)
I am trying to do a comparison of files based on their last modified date.
I am pulling the first file from a webapp folder using curl.
curl --silent -I http://localhost:8023/conf/log4j2.xml | grep Last
Last-Modified: Tue, 22 Mar 2016 22:02:18 GMT
The second file is on local disk.
stat... (2 Replies)
The below perl script parses a variety of formats. If I use the numeric text file as input the script works correctly. However using the alpha text file as input there is a black output file. The portion in bold splits the field to parse f or NC_000023.10:g.153297761C>A into a variable $common but... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
gmmktime
GMMKTIME(3) 1 GMMKTIME(3)gmmktime - Get Unix timestamp for a GMT dateSYNOPSIS
int gmmktime ([int $hour = gmdate("H")], [int $minute = gmdate("i")], [int $second = gmdate("s")], [int $month = gmdate("n")], [int
$day = gmdate("j")], [int $year = gmdate("Y")], [int $is_dst = -1])
DESCRIPTION
Identical to mktime(3) except the passed parameters represents a GMT date. gmmktime(3) internally uses mktime(3) so only times valid in
derived local time can be used.
Like mktime(3), arguments may be left out in order from right to left, with any omitted arguments being set to the current corresponding
GMT value.
PARAMETERS
o $hour
- The number of the hour relative to the start of the day determined by $month, $day and $year. Negative values reference the hour
before midnight of the day in question. Values greater than 23 reference the appropriate hour in the following day(s).
o $minute
- The number of the minute relative to the start of the $hour. Negative values reference the minute in the previous hour. Values
greater than 59 reference the appropriate minute in the following hour(s).
o $second
- The number of seconds relative to the start of the $minute. Negative values reference the second in the previous minute. Values
greater than 59 reference the appropriate second in the following minute(s).
o $month
- The number of the month relative to the end of the previous year. Values 1 to 12 reference the normal calendar months of the
year in question. Values less than 1 (including negative values) reference the months in the previous year in reverse order, so 0
is December, -1 is November, etc. Values greater than 12 reference the appropriate month in the following year(s).
o $day
- The number of the day relative to the end of the previous month. Values 1 to 28, 29, 30 or 31 (depending upon the month) refer-
ence the normal days in the relevant month. Values less than 1 (including negative values) reference the days in the previous
month, so 0 is the last day of the previous month, -1 is the day before that, etc. Values greater than the number of days in the
relevant month reference the appropriate day in the following month(s).
o $year
- The year
o $is_dst
- Parameters always represent a GMT date so $is_dst doesn't influence the result.
Note
This parameter has been removed in PHP 7.0.0.
RETURN VALUES
Returns a integer Unix timestamp.
CHANGELOG
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+
|Version | |
| | |
| | Description |
| | |
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+
| 7.0.0 | |
| | |
| | $is_dst parameter has been removed. |
| | |
| 5.1.0 | |
| | |
| | As of PHP 5.1.0, the $is_dst parameter became |
| | deprecated. As a result, the new timezone han- |
| | dling features should be used instead. |
| | |
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+
EXAMPLES
Example #1
gmmktime(3) basic example
<?php
// Prints: July 1, 2000 is on a Saturday
echo "July 1, 2000 is on a " . date("l", gmmktime(0, 0, 0, 7, 1, 2000));
?>
SEE ALSO mktime(3), date(3), time(3).
PHP Documentation Group GMMKTIME(3)