[ Next Article |
Previous Article |
Book Contents |
Library Home |
Legal |
Search ]
Commands Reference, Volume 2
date Command
Purpose
Displays or sets the date or time.
Syntax
/usr/bin/date [ -n ] [ -u ] [ Date ] [ +FieldDescriptor ... ]
/usr/bin/date [ -u ] [ +FieldDescriptor ... ]
Description
Attention: Do not change the date when the system is running with more than one user.
The date command writes the current date and time to standard output if called with no flags or with a flag list that begins with a + (plus sign). Otherwise, it sets the current date. Only a root user can change the date and time. The date command prints out the usage message on any unrecognized flags or input.
The following formats can be used when setting the date with the Date parameter:
- mmddHHMM[ccyy]
- mmddHHMM[yy]
The variables to the Date parameter are defined as follows:
mm |
Specifies the month number. |
dd |
Specifies the number of the day in the month. |
HH |
Specifies the hour in the day (using a 24-hour clock). |
MM |
Specifies the minute number. |
cc |
Specifies the century and is the first two digits of the year.
Note:If you do not specify a century, values in the range 69 to 99
refer to the twentieth century, 1969 to 1999 inclusive, and values in the range
00 to 68 refer to years in the twenty-first century, 2000 to 2068 inclusive. |
yy |
Specifies the last two numbers of the year. |
The current number of seconds and the current year are used as default values when the SS or yy variables are not specified.
The system operates in Coordinated Universal Time (CUT).
If you follow the date command with a + (plus sign) and a field descriptor, you can control the output of the command. You must precede each field descriptor with a % (percent sign). The system replaces the field descriptor with the specified value. Enter a literal % as %% (two percent signs). The date command copies any other characters to the output without change. The date command always ends the string with a new-line character.
Flags
-n |
Does not set the time globally on all machines in a local area network that have their clocks synchronized. |
-u |
Displays or sets the time in Coordinated Universal Time (CUT). |
Field Descriptors
%a |
Displays the locale's abbreviated weekday name. |
%A |
Displays the locale's full weekday name. |
%b |
Displays the locale's abbreviated month name. |
%B |
Displays the locale's full month name. |
%c |
Displays the locale's appropriate date and time representation. This is the default. |
%C |
Displays the century as a decimal number (00-99). A year is divided by 100 and truncated to an integer. |
%d |
Displays the day of the month as a decimal number (01-31). In a two-digit field, a 0 is used as leading space fill. |
%D |
Displays the date in the format equivalent to %m/%d/%y. |
%e |
Displays the day of the month as a decimal number (1-31). In a two-digit field, a blank space is used as leading space fill. |
%h |
Displays the locale's abbreviated month name (a synonym for %b). |
%H |
Displays the hour (24-hour clock) as a decimal number (00-23). |
%I |
Displays the hour (12-hour clock) as a decimal number (01-12). |
%j |
Displays the day of year as a decimal number (001-366). |
%m |
Displays the month of year as a decimal number (01-12). |
%M |
Displays the minutes as a decimal number (00-59). |
%n |
Inserts a <new-line> character. |
%p |
Displays the locale's equivalent of either AM or PM. |
%r |
Displays 12-hour clock time (01-12) using the AM-PM notation; in the POSIX locale, this is equivalent to %I:%M:%S %p. |
%S |
Displays the seconds as a decimal number (00-
59). |
%t |
Inserts a <tab> character. |
%T |
Displays the 24-hour clock (00-23) in the format equivalent to
HH:MM:SS
. |
%u |
Displays the weekday as a decimal number from 1-7 (Sunday = 7). Refer to the %w field descriptor. |
%U |
Displays week of the year(Sunday as the first day of the week)
as a decimal number[00 - 53] . All days in a new year
preceding the first Sunday are considered to be in
week 0. |
%V |
Displays the week of the year as a decimal number from 01-53 (Monday is used as the first day of the week). If the week containing January 1 has four or more days in the new year, then it is considered week 01; otherwise, it is week 53 of the previous year. |
%w |
Displays the weekday as a decimal number from 0-6 (Sunday = 0). Refer to the %u field descriptor. |
%W |
Displays the week number of the year as a decimal number (00-53) counting Monday as the first day of the week. |
%x |
Displays the locale's appropriate date representation. |
%X |
Displays the locale's appropriate time representation. |
%y |
Displays the last two numbers of the year (00-99). |
%Y |
Displays the year with century as a decimal number. |
%Z |
Displays the time-zone name, or no characters if no time zone is determinable. |
%% |
Displays a % (percent sign) character. |
Modified Field Descriptors
The %E and %O field descriptors can be modified to indicate a different format or specification, as described in
LC_TIME Category
for the Locale Definition Source File Format in AIX Version 4.3 Files Reference.
If the corresponding keyword (see the era, era_year,
era_d_fmt, and alt_digits keywords) is not specified or not
supported for the current locale, the unmodified field descriptor value is used.
%Ec |
Displays the locale's alternative appropriate date and time representation. |
%EC |
Displays the name of the base year (or other time period) in the locale's alternative representation. |
%Ex |
Displays the locale's alternative date representation. |
%EX |
Displays the locale's alternative time representation. |
%Ey |
Displays the offset from the %EC field descriptor (year only) in the locale's alternative representation. |
%EY |
Displays the full alternative year representation. |
%Od |
Displays the day of the month using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. |
%Oe |
Displays the day of the month using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. |
%OH |
Displays the hour (24-hour clock) using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. |
%OI |
Displays the hour (12-hour clock) using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. |
%Om |
Displays the month using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. |
%OM |
Displays minutes using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. |
%OS |
Displays seconds using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. |
%Ou |
Displays the weekday as a number in the locale's alternative representation (Monday=1). |
%OU |
Displays the week number of the year using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. Sunday is considered the first day of the week. |
%OV |
Displays the week number of the year using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. Monday is considered the first day of the week. |
%Ow |
Displays the weekday as a number in the locale's alternative representation (Sunday =0). |
%OW |
Displays the week number of the year using the locale's alternative numeric symbols. Monday is considered the first day of the week. |
%Oy |
Displays the year (offset from %C) in alternative representation. |
Exit Status
This command returns the following exit values:
0 |
The date was written successfully. |
>0 |
An error occurred. |
Examples
- To display current date and time, enter:
date
- To set the date and time, enter:
date 0217142590
This sets the date and time to Sat Feb 17
14:25:00
CST 1990.
Note: You must have root authority to change the date and time.
- To display the date and time in a specified format, enter:
date +"%r %a %d %h %y (Julian Date: %j)"
This displays the date shown in Example 2 as:
02:25:03 PM Fri 17 Feb 90 (Julian Date: 048)
Environment Variables
The following environment variables affect the execution of the date command.
LANG |
Determines the locale to use when both LC_ALL and the corresponding environment variable (beginning with LC_) do not specify a locale. |
LC_ALL |
Determines the locale to be used to override any values for locale categories specified by the setting of LANG or any environment variable beginning with LC_. |
LC_CTYPE |
Determines the locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of text data as characters (for example, single versus multibyte character in an argument). |
LC_MESSAGES |
Determines the language in which messages should be written. |
LC_TIME |
Determines the contents of date and time strings written by date. |
NLSPATH |
Determines the location of message catalogues for the processing of LC_MESSAGES. |
TZ |
Specifies the time zone in which the time and date are written, unless the -u option is specified. If the TZ variable is not set and the -u flag is not specified, an unspecified system default time zone is used. |
Related Information
The environment file.
The localtime subroutine, strftime subroutine, time subroutine.
LC_TIME Category for the Locale Definition Source File Format in AIX Version 4.3 Files Reference.
Understanding Locale in AIX Version 4.3 System Management Concepts: Operating System and Devices discusses locale values.
[ Next Article |
Previous Article |
Book Contents |
Library Home |
Legal |
Search ]