NAME

clock - Obtain and manipulate time

SYNOPSIS

clock option ?arg arg ...?

DESCRIPTION

This command performs one of several operations that may obtain or manipulate strings or values that represent some notion of time. The option argument determines what action is carried out by the command. The legal options (which may be abbreviated) are:

clock clicks
Return a high-resolution time value as a system-dependent integer value. The unit of the value is system-dependent but should be the highest resolution clock available on the system such as a CPU cycle counter. This value should only be used for the relative measurement of elapsed time.
clock format clockValue ?-format string? ?-gmt boolean?
Converts an integer time value, typically returned by clock seconds, clock scan, or the atime, mtime, or ctime options of the file command, to human-readable form. If the -format argument is present the next argument is a string that describes how the date and time are to be formatted. Field descriptors consist of a % followed by a field descriptor character. All other characters are copied into the result. Valid field descriptors are:

%%
Insert a %.
%a
Abbreviated weekday name. (Mon, Tue, etc.)
%A
Full weekday name. (Monday, Tuesday, etc.)
%b
Abbreviated month name. (Jan, Feb, etc.)
%B
Full month name.
%d
Day of month (01 - 31).
%D
Date as %m/%d/%y.
%e
Day of month (1 - 31), no leading zeros.
%h
Abbreviated month name.
%H
Hour (00 - 23).
%I
Hour (00 - 12).
%j
Day number of year (001 - 366).
%m
Month number (01 - 12).
%M
Minute (00 - 59).
%n
Insert a newline.
%p
AM or PM.
%r
Time as %I:%M:%S %p.
%R
Time as %H:%M.
%S
Seconds (00 - 59).
%t
Insert a tab.
%T
Time as %H:%M:%S.
%U
Week number of year (01 - 52), Sunday is the first day of the week.
%w
Weekday number (Sunday = 0).
%W
Week number of year (01 - 52), Monday is the first day of the week.
%x
Local specific date format.
%X
Local specific time format.
%y
Year within century (00 - 99).
%Y
Year as ccyy (e.g. 1990)
%Z
Time zone name.

clock scan dateString ?-base clockVal? ?-gmt boolean?
Convert dateString to an integer clock value (see clock seconds). This command can parse and convert virtually any standard date and/or time string, which can include standard time zone mnemonics. If only a time is specified, the current date is assumed. If the string does not contain a time zone mnemonic, the local time zone is assumed, unless the -gmt argument is true, in which case the clock value is calculated assuming that the specified time is relative to Greenwich Mean Time.

If the -base flag is specified, the next argument should contain an integer clock value. Only the date in this value is used, not the time. This is useful for determining the time on a specific day or doing other date-relative conversions.

The dateString consists of zero or more specifications of the following form:

time
A time of day, which is of the form: hh?:mm?:ss?? ?meridian? ?zone? or hhmm ?meridian? ?zone?. If no meridian is specified, hh is interpreted on a 24-hour clock.
date
A specific month and day with optional year. The acceptable formats are mm/dd?/yy?, monthname dd ?, yy?, dd monthname ?yy? and day, dd monthname yy. The default year is the current year. If the year is less then 100, then 1900 is added to it.
relative time
A specification relative to the current time. The format is number unit acceptable units are year, fortnight, month, week, day, hour, minute (or min), and second (or sec). The unit can be specified as a singular or plural, as in 3 weeks. These modifiers may also be specified: tomorrow, yesterday, today, now, last, this, next, ago.

clock seconds
Return the current date and time as a system-dependent integer value. The unit of the value is seconds, allowing it to be used for relative time calculations. The value is usually defined as total elapsed time from an ``epoch''. You shouldn't assume the value of the epoch.

KEYWORDS

clock, date, time
Copyright © 1992-1995 Karl Lehenbauer and Mark Diekhans.
Copyright © 1995-1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
Copyright © 1995, 1996 Roger E. Critchlow Jr.