Corrected format. Translated days into a two-digit number, hours from 12 to 24 hour format and removed nanoseconds and all that at the end
formats of compared values
Last edited by nezabudka; 02-12-2019 at 03:40 PM..
Any time you're trying to compare dates as strings you're doomed to failure if your strings contain a year that is not in the high order position, a month that is an abbreviated English month name instead of a month number, and/or days of month that are sometimes one digit and sometimes two digits. You need to be comparing date strings that in the same format and contain the same number of characters (unless you're going to convert everything to Seconds since the Epoch and perform a numeric comparison). The optimum string comparison format until the year 10000 is: YYYYmmddHHMMSS. You could try adding milliseconds to the end of that if you want to, but I don't think GNU date will give you anything other than 0 for milliseconds if you ask it to give you a date and time that is 1800 seconds ago. (And, if you tell it to give you a date and time that is 30 minutes ago, it will probably also give you 0 for the seconds part of your timestamp.
Note that I'm guessing on that, I don't have access to a GNU date utility. I do have access to a ksh version 93u+ which has a printf statement of the form:
that will give me date and time strings from 30 minutes ago (where GNU_date_format_string is a GNU date format string without the leading <plus-sign> character.
The following script seems to do what you want using the Korn shell on macOS Mojave version 10.14.3 to create a test log file with timestamps from 1900 seconds ago up to 1700 seconds ago in 15 second intervals to verify that it is converting dates so it starts printing records from the log file that are no more than 30 minutes old. If you comment out the printf statements that are printing dates and uncomment the date commands that are currently commented out, this code should work with either bash or ksh on a Linux system with a GNU date utility installed.
If you invoke this script with an argument (any argument), the awk script will print out debugging information showing how the split() function split up the lines in the date format you want to process until it finds a timestamp that meets your criteria.
Running this script a few minutes ago produced the following output:
Maybe this will give you something you can build on.
Last edited by Don Cragun; 02-15-2019 at 06:12 AM..
Reason: Add LC_ALL=C where missing in some of the GNU date utility invocations.
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
Based on Don Crugun's comments, I'll just fix my script. Thanks
formats of compared 2019021212:26:55
Hi nezabudka,
Note that although the above code will work in many cases, there are a few issues that will cause it to fail intermittently:
First, the command in the command substitution:
You may have noticed that when I used a similar construct in the code I suggested in post #9 (correctly in all the ksh93printf calls and sometimes correctly in the GNU date invocations [all have now been fixed]) that I used LC_ALL=C instead of LANG=C. These environment variables (along with other LC_* variables for the various locale categories have a hierarchy that determines which variable controls the operation when more than one of them are found in the environment. For example, if I run the command RudiC mentioned in post #11 to get a locale's abbreviated month names with the three variables that control the strings used to define a locale's month names all set to different values: LC_ALL=ru_RU specifying a Russian locale for all locale categories no matter what other locale variables are set, LC_TIME=it_IT specifying an Italian locale for time related strings defined by the standards, and LANG=C specifying the locale to be used if none of the other locale environment variables are set, we see that if LC_ALL is defined on the command line (or in your environment) it overrides all of the other locale variables:
which gives us the abbreviated month names in Russian. If we drop the setting for LC_ALL (and don't have LC_ALL set in the environment), the command:
which gives us Italian abbreviated month names. So, if you want to want to guarantee that the date utility will English names for things like "minutes" and "seconds" when using date -d time_base or date --date time_base, you need to use LC_ALL=C or LC_ALL=POSIX instead of LANG=C or LANG=POSIX. Note that I don't have a GNU date utility installed on my system and I don't know which locale category it uses to match the time period strings in -d option-arguments. I would guess that they are controlled by LC_TIME, but they could also be controlled by LC_MESSAGES. Either way, setting LC_ALL will override it and give you what you want.
Second, in the awk statement:
you only get the results you want because the variable s is not defined in your script. To reduce confusion and protect against a user invoking your awk script with a defined s variable, change the last argument in that function call to just ":" instead of ":" s.
Third, the expression in the awkif statement:
can't ever yield a true result. In this script, $5 on the lines you're processing will always be of the form hh:mm:ss,sss where hh is the hour in 12-hour clock format (01-12), mm is the minute (00-59), and ss,sss is the seconds (00-60) and subseconds apparently consisting of 1 to 3 decimal digits representing tenths, hundredths, or thousandths of a second. There is no way that a string representing a clock for the current time in the above form will ever be the string 24, nor even start with that string. Presumably you want to determine if the hour portion of the time field is 12 and, if it is, reset it to 00 (which will be the correct 24-hour clock hour field if the AM/PM indicator is AM and will later be incremented back to 12 if the AM/PM indicator is PM. I would guess that you would get what you had intended to do if you change the two lines in your code:
to:
or to:
If you run into issues similar to these in the future, I hope these comments will help you understand some of the pitfalls you have to watch out for when writing code to deal with various date and time formats.
Cheers,
Don
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
Thank you very much for the comments. All the above I be taken into account for the future.
And in the last remark. This is my carelessness and bug. The order of the expressions was violated.
Apparently I wanted to make something like that.
Thanks to @RudiC. There are no options in the man page on this issue:
Thank you for teaching, it was very informative.
...
@RudiC. There are no options in the man page on this issue:
...
Aren't there?
Quote:
man 5 locale
.
.
.
LC_TIME
The definition starts with the string LC_TIME in the first column.
The following keywords are allowed: abday followed by a list of abbreviated names of the days of the week. The list starts with the first day of the week as specified by week (Sunday by default). day followed by a list of names of the days of the week. The list starts with the first day of the week as specified by week (Sunday by default). See NOTES. abmon followed by a list of abbreviated month names.
.
.
.
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