Date comparisons


 
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# 1  
Old 03-05-2013
Date comparisons

Hi,

I want to perform a simple date comparisons, i.e. select all files modified after a certain date (say 12-feb-2011)

I do not have the option of creating a file and using find's -newer option.

Any simple way to do this? I can do this by reading the stat command's output and comparing that to a literal string... but there may be an easier way.
# 2  
Old 03-05-2013
Please explain why you can't create a file in your home directory or in /tmp.
# 3  
Old 03-05-2013
touch -t is not allowed.
# 4  
Old 03-05-2013
"Not allowed" is a peculiar way to put it. Why not? If you have stat you almost certainly have touch -t. Even if you don't have stat, you almost certainly have touch -t.

If you have stat though, that opens up other options. Date strings in "YYYY/MM/DD" order can be compared alphabetically; later times will be greater than earlier times.

Code:
if [ "2011-02-01" ">" "2011-02-02" ]
then
        echo "Greater"
else
        echo "Less than or equal"
fi

# 5  
Old 03-06-2013
Well, it is indeed peculiar. I did ask why it was not enabled... And the response I got was it is "not allowed". When I asked why, I got the cryptic answer "for security purposes"... But that is an altogether different story Smilie

Since the script I am creating is most probably a one time , use and throw script, I have hard coded the date I want to compare against (5-mar-2012) and used stat to get timestamp of the files I want to check. My question however was : isn't there a way to do the equivalent of sysdate - 365 (sql) in unix... Or even simply get a value of the date time as it is actually stored (i read somewhere that it is stored as the number of seconds since 1970). That would help too
# 6  
Old 03-06-2013
Isn't it possible to use some option for find, such as:

-ctime
-mtime
-cmin
-mmin

I'm not sure which would be best for your case.
But couldn't one of these work to find all files modified after some date?
# 7  
Old 03-06-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by jawsnnn
My question however was : isn't there a way to do the equivalent of sysdate - 365 (sql) in unix... Or even simply get a value of the date time as it is actually stored (i read somewhere that it is stored as the number of seconds since 1970). That would help too
That's a blind spot. It's sad to say it, but the only truly portable way to do date math in UNIX is Perl.

GNU date is fantastic if you have it:

Code:
$ date -d "today - 1 day" +%Y-%m-%d

2013-03-05

$

...but on AIX or Solaris or anything-but-Linux that's a third-party utility. It's such an obvious feature to put in the date command that people who script in Linux often assume it's everywhere, but it's not. GNU awk has some extended date features too.

Last edited by Corona688; 03-06-2013 at 06:42 PM..
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