I'm trying to write a script that checks the DTS of a file the compares it to the current time. If greater that 60 mins has gone by and the file has not been written to alert.
So far I have the time pulled from the file but I dont know how to compare the times against a 60 min difference.
... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
Wondering if there is have a date added at the end of a test string. I have a hypothetical text file day one:
John
Paul
George
When the file day one is output, I'd like it to read something like this:
John 101406
Paul 101406
George 101406
Day two, when the same text file... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am using the below copy command, to copy the file sbn to sbn1,
cp sbn sbn1
but its changing the date stamp of file sbn1, but i dont want to change the date stamp of sbn1.
Could you please help me out in this. (3 Replies)
I need some help recovering from a "slight" screwup. We just moved 3 TB of data from one RAID Array to another. Low lever archive files. This was done with a regular cp (for some reason) and now we have lost all the timestamps on the files, and we urgently need to get the timestamps back on these... (7 Replies)
hi everyone
i am facing a strange problem here
suppose content of my file is
a=1,2,3
b=2,3,4
c=4,5,6
time=
now the problem is i want to add value in front of time variable
and the value should be i format only "HHMMSS"
so it should be like this
a=1,2,3
b=2,3,4
c=4,5,6... (3 Replies)
Here is two time I have:
Jul 12 16:02:01
Jul 13 01:02:01
and how can I do a simple match to get difference between two time which is 09:00:00
Thanks in advance. (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am facing small problem.
i want to print file time stamp on which date file has placed in the server.
i have given some code but its not giving the year.
any help appreciated.
regards
rajesh. (4 Replies)
On Solaris 10 server the system date won't match with the timestamp on files created by a cron jobs, Please help
here is what i get when i check for system date
infodba-ie10ux014:/tcpdv1_ie10/tcadmin/bin\n\r-> date
Tue Apr 24 15:27:43 GMT 2012at same time i executed a cron job, and checked... (4 Replies)
Hi !
I try to change a time-stamp hh:mm:ss allways to full ten-minutes.
example: 12:51:03 to 12:50:03
sed 's/::/:{0-5}0:/g' file.txt
but it will not work propperly, because the minute-decade will be replaced with the bracket-term {0-5}. Can someone please give me a hint?
Thanks in... (6 Replies)
I am creating log monitoring script and stuck up to get the logs between two time stamp.
can you please help me to create the script to get the logs between two time stamp, for example, I need the complete logs between # Time: 150328 1:30:10 and # Time: 150328 19:10:57
OS : Cent OS 6.x... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: zenkarthi
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PLAN9
ls
LS(1) General Commands Manual LS(1)NAME
ls, lc - list contents of directory
SYNOPSIS
ls [ -dlnpqrstuF ] name ...
lc [ -dlnqrstuF ] name ...
DESCRIPTION
For each directory argument, ls lists the contents of the directory; for each file argument, ls repeats its name and any other information
requested. When no argument is given, the current directory is listed. By default, the output is sorted alphabetically by name.
Lc is the same as ls, but sets the -p option and pipes the output through mc(1).
There are a number of options:
-d If argument is a directory, list it, not its contents.
-l List in long format, giving mode (see below), file system type (e.g., for devices, the # code letter that names it; see Intro(4)),
the instance or subdevice number, owner, group, size in bytes, and time of last modification for each file.
-n Don't sort the listing.
-p Print only the final path element of each file name.
-q List the qid (see stat(2)) of each file.
-r Reverse the order of sort.
-s Give size in Kbytes for each entry.
-t Sort by time modified (latest first) instead of by name.
-u Under -t sort by time of last access; under -l print time of last access.
-F Add the character / after all directory names and the character * after all executable files.
The mode printed under the -l option contains 11 characters, interpreted as follows: the first character is
d if the entry is a directory;
a if the entry is an append-only file;
- if the entry is a plain file.
The next letter is l if the file is exclusive access (one writer or reader at a time).
The last 9 characters are interpreted as three sets of three bits each. The first set refers to owner permissions; the next to permissions
to others in the same user-group; and the last to all others. Within each set the three characters indicate permission respectively to
read, to write, or to execute the file as a program. For a directory, `execute' permission is interpreted to mean permission to search the
directory for a specified file. The permissions are indicated as follows:
r if the file is readable;
w if the file is writable;
x if the file is executable;
- if none of the above permissions is granted.
SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/ls.c
/rc/bin/lc
SEE ALSO stat(2)mc(1)LS(1)