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Full Discussion: Is It Time for BSD?
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Is It Time for BSD? Post 37626 by BSeanD on Tuesday 24th of June 2003 07:36:53 AM
Old 06-24-2003
It's always BSD time! Smilie
 

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for all you unix/linux interested heres an online book for free that covers the basics of BSD SysV Unix commands and applications . giving the average linux user a perspective on the differences in context of the two operating systems and for BSD users covers material as a refernce guide. ... (0 Replies)
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ZDUMP(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						  ZDUMP(8)

NAME
zdump -- timezone dumper SYNOPSIS
zdump [--version] [-v] [-c [loyear,]hiyear] [zonename ...] DESCRIPTION
The zdump utility prints the current time in each zonename named on the command line. The following options are available: --version Output version information and exit. -v For each zonename on the command line, print the time at the lowest possible time value, the time one day after the lowest possible time value, the times both one second before and exactly at each detected time discontinuity, the time at one day less than the high- est possible time value, and the time at the highest possible time value, Each line ends with isdst=1 if the given time is Daylight Saving Time or isdst=0 otherwise. -c loyear,hiyear Cut off verbose output near the start of the given year(s). By default, the program cuts off verbose output near the starts of the years -500 and 2500. LIMITATIONS
The -v option may not be used on systems with floating-point time_t values that are neither float nor double. Time discontinuities are found by sampling the results returned by localtime at twelve-hour intervals. This works in all real-world cases; one can construct artificial time zones for which this fails. SEE ALSO
ctime(3), tzfile(5), zic(8) BSD
June 20, 2004 BSD
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