I have a simple question here.
I have an input date with time of 05:21, but it could be any arbitrary 24 hour time.
I add 1 minute to it using the date command. date then outputs 17:22!!
I need the output format to be 24 hour because that's what the input format is, and what is required.
How do I tell date to stop messing with the times?
I'm very close to just using substr to extract the minutes, and then adding 1, and then adding a check to see if >59 and if so, value = 0 and substr the hour value out, then add 1 to that, because at this point it seems simpler.
end='12-02-2018 17:01'
test=$(echo $end | sed -re 's#(..)-(..)-(....) (..:..)()#\3-\2-\1 \4#') ;
add=$(date +"%d-%m-%Y %H:%M" --date="$test + 1 minute") ;
echo $test --- $add
2018-02-12 17:01 --- 13-02-2018 05:02
Related
I have a log file abc.log in which each line is a date in date +%m%d%y format:
061019:12
062219:34
062319:56
062719:78
I want to see the all the logs between this date range (7 days before date to current date) i.e (from 062019 to 062719 in this case). The result should be:
062219:34
062319:56
062719:78
I have tried few things from my side to achieve:
awk '/062019/,/062719' abc.log
This gives me correct answer, but if i don't want to hard-code the date value and try achieving the same it does not give the correct value.
awk '/date --date "7 days ago" +%m%d%y/,/date +%m%d%y' abc.log
Note:
date --date "7 days ago" +%m%d%y → 062019 (7 days back date)
date +%m%d%y → 062719 (Current date)
Any suggestions how this can be achieved?
Your middle-endian date format is unfortunate for sorting and comparison purposes. Y-m-d would have been much easier.
Your approach using , ranges in awk requires exactly one log entry per day (and that the log entries are sorted chronologically).
I would use perl, e.g. something like:
perl -MPOSIX=strftime -ne '
BEGIN { ($start, $end) = map strftime("%y%m%d", localtime $_), time - 60 * 60 * 24 * 7, time }
print if /^(\d\d)(\d\d)(\d\d):/ && "$3$1$2" ge $start && "$3$1$2" le $end' abc.log
Use strftime "%y%m%d" to get the ends of the date range in big-endian format (which allows for lexicographical comparisons).
Use a regex to extract day/month/year from each line into separate variables.
Compare the rearranged date fields of the current line to the ends of the range to determine whether to print the line.
To get around the issue of looking for dates that may not be there, you could generate a pattern that matches any of the dates (since there are only 8 of them it doesn’t get too big, if you want to look for the last year it might not work as well):
for d in 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
do
pattern="${pattern:+${pattern}\\|}$(date --date "${d} days ago" +%m%d%y)"
done
grep "^\\(${pattern}\\)" abc.log
I have script to generate two dates in the format YYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS from the given date(YYYY-MM-DD):c
#!/bin/bash
test=$(TZ=America/New_York date -d "$1 00:00:00")
date_diff=1
startDate=$(date --date="${test} -${date_diff} day" "+%Y-%m-%d %T")
echo $startDate
date_diff=0
enddate=$(date --date="${test} -${date_diff} day" "+%Y-%m-%d %T")
echo $enddate
Now I need to subtract n seconds from $enddate. I tried converting time to a long number and do subtraction and convert back to original format. Is there any easy way to do this?
I don't think I have clear what you mean with date_diff for startDate...
Anyway date can grab and give dates in epoch format, so it should be easy for you to add or subtract some seconds.
Just for a poc, try something like that:
date=$(date +%s) ### now
offset=300 #five minutes in seconds
newdate=$((date + offset)) ### added 300 seconds
date=$(date --date="#$newdate" "+%Y-%m-%d %T") ### got the new date in whatever format I chose.
I want to convert date and month as integers.
for example.
if the current date as per the command "Date +%m-%d-%y" output, is this
09-11-17
Then I am storing
cur_day=`date +%d`
cur_month=`date +%m`
the $cur_day will give me 11 and $cur_month will give me 09.
I want to do some operations on the month as 09. like i want to print all the numbers up to 09.
like this 01,02,03,04,05,06,07,08,09
Same way I want to display all the numbers up to cur_day
like 01,02,03,04,05,06,07,08,09,10,11
Please tell me how can i do it.
Thanks in Advance.
For months:
$ printf ',%02d' $(seq 1 $(date +%m)) | sed 's/,/like this /; s/$/\n/'
like this 01,02,03,04,05,06,07,08,09
For days:
$ printf ',%02d' $(seq 1 $(date +%d)) | sed 's/,/like /; s/$/\n/'
like 01,02,03,04,05,06,07,08,09,10,11
printf will print according to a format. In this case, the format ,%02d formats the numbers with commas and leading zeros.
The sed command puts the string you want at the beginning of the line and adds a newline at the end.
I have date and time printed in log files as "14:09:49.922 UTC 12.08.2015"
To analyze the logs in few instances I have to grep for next X seconds from this date and time in the logs.
Note : Time Zone might vary.
I have used grep along with for loop to iterate the seconds or minutes or hours depending upon the give time.
The help I am looking for is the options in the date command to increment seconds so that if I ad x seconds to the given time stamp, then date, month year, hour, minute and second should be updated accordingly.
Eg : 23:59:59 UTC 31.12.2015" + 1 seond should return "00:00:00 UTC 01.01.2016".
Basically I am looking for options in date command instead of me manually checking if seconds crossed 59 then increment minute and so on.
How to achieve this in a shell script using date utility?
Date command doesn't support "14:09:49.922 UTC 12.08.2015" format.
So I converted to "14:09:49.922 UTC 08/12/2015" and then used date utility as below
DATE="14:09:49 UTC 12.08.2015"
NEXT_DATE=`echo $DATE | awk '{ split($3,a,"."); print $1" "$2" "a[2]"/"a[1]"/"a[3]}'`
TIME_ZONE=`echo $NEXT_DATE | awk '{print $2}'` NEXT_DATE=`TZ="$TIME_ZONE" date +"%H:%M:%S %Z %m/%d/%Y" -d "$NEXT_DATE + 1 second"`
GREP_DATE=`echo $NEXT_DATE | awk '{ split($3,a,"/"); print $1" "$2" "a[2]"."a[1]"."a[3]}'`
grep $GREP_DATE logfile
I have 2 script in bash, and i have some files:
transaction-2012-01-01.csv.bz2
transaction-2012-01-02.csv.bz2
transaction-2012-01-03.csv.bz2
transaction-2012-01-04.csv.bz2
.
.
transaction-2012-01-31.csv.bz2
transaction-2012-02-01.csv.bz2
.
.
transaction-2012-02-28.csv.bz2
I have a script called script.sh
cat script.sh
YEAR_MONTH=$1
FILEPATH="transaction-$YEAR_MONTH*.csv.bz2"
bzcat $FILEPATH|strings|grep -v "code" >> output
And if you need call the script you can use other script
cat script2.sh
LAST_MONTH=$(date -d -1month +%Y"-"%m)
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then
DATE=$1
else
DATE=$LAST_MONTH
fi
script.sh $DATE 1>output$DATE.csv 2>> log.txt
And it do cat the files in a month, but now i need call the script with a specific week in a year:
bash script2.sh 2012-01
where 2012 is the year and 01 is the month
Now i need call the script with:
bash script2.sh 2012 13
where 2012 is the year and 13 is the week in a year
Now i need the cat only to the files in the year and week that the user specified, no per month per week
But the format of the files do not help me!!!! because the name is transaction-year-month-day.csv.bz2, not transaction-year-week.csv.bz2
Take a look at the manpage for strftime. These are date format codes. For example:
$ date +"%A, %B %e, %Y at %I:%m:%S %p"
Will print out a date like:
Thursday, May 30, 2013 at 02:05:31 PM
Try to see why this works.
On some systems, the date command will have a -j switch. This means, don't set the date, but reformat the given date. This allows you to convert one date to another:
$ date -f"$input_format" "$string_date" +"$output_format"
The $input_format is the format of your input date. $string_date is the string representation of the date in your $input_format. And, $output_format is the format you want your date in.
The first two fields are easy. Your date is in YY-MM-DD format:
$ date -f"%Y-%m-%d" "$my_date_string"
The question is what can you do for the final format. Fortunately, there is a format for the week in the year. %V which represents the weeks at 01-53 and %W which represents the weeks as 00-53.
What you need to do is find the date string on your file name, then convert that to the year and week number. If that's the same as the input, you need to concatenate this file.
find $dir -type f | while read transaction_file
do
file_date=${transaction_file#transaction-} #Removes the prefix
file_date=${file_date%.csv.bz2} #Removes the suffix
weekdate=$(date -j -f"%Y-%m-%d" "$file_date" +"%Y %W")
[ "$weekdate" -eq "$desired_date" ] || continue
...
done
For example, someone puts in 2013 05 as the desired date, you will go through all of your files and find ones with dates in the range you want. NOTE: That the week of the year is zero filled. You may need to zero fill the input of the week number to match.