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date -d的灵活应用

* To print the date of the day before yesterday:

比如现在的时间是  date   :    2017年 05月 01日 星期一 02:02:39 CST

          date --date "1 days ago"  ==date -d "1 days ago"

                     结果为:2017年 04月 30日 星期日 02:03:01 CST

   * To print the date of the day three months and one day hence:

          date --date '3 months 1 day' == date -d "3 months 1 day"

       结果为:  2017年 08月 02日 星期三 02:03:49 CST 3个月零一天之后

   * To print the day of year of Christmas in the current year:

          date --date '25 Dec' +%j

   * To print the current full month name and the day of the month:

          date '+%B %d' 打印今天是几月和几台是几号

     But this may not be what you want because for the first nine days

     of the month, the `%d' expands to a zero-padded two-digit field,

     for example `date -d 1may '+%B %d'' will print `May 01'.

   * To print a date without the leading zero for one-digit days of the

     month, you can use the (GNU extension) `-' flag to suppress the

     padding altogether:

          date -d 1may '+%B %-d

   * To print the current date and time in the format required by many

     non-GNU versions of `date' when setting the system clock:

          date +%m%d%H%M%Y.%S

   * To set the system clock forward by two minutes:

          date --set='+2 minutes'

   * To print the date in RFC 2822 format, use `date --rfc-2822'.  Here

     is some example output:

          Fri, 09 Sep 2005 13:51:39 -0700

   * To convert a date string to the number of seconds since the epoch

     (which is 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC), use the `--date' option with

     the `%s' format.  That can be useful in sorting and/or graphing

     and/or comparing data by date.  The following command outputs the

     number of the seconds since the epoch for the time two minutes

     after the epoch:

          date --date='1970-01-01 00:02:00 +0000' +%s

          120

     If you do not specify time zone information in the date string,

     `date' uses your computer's idea of the time zone when

     interpreting the string.  For example, if your computer's time

     zone is that of Cambridge, Massachusetts, which was then 5 hours

     (i.e., 18,000 seconds) behind UTC:

          # local time zone used

          date --date='1970-01-01 00:02:00' +%s

          18120

   * If you're sorting or graphing dated data, your raw date values may

     be represented as seconds since the epoch.  But few people can

     look at the date `946684800' and casually note "Oh, that's the

     first second of the year 2000 in Greenwich, England."

          date --date='2000-01-01 UTC' +%s

          946684800

     An alternative is to use the `--utc' (`-u') option.  Then you may

     omit `UTC' from the date string.  Although this produces the same

     result for `%s' and many other format sequences, with a time zone

     offset different from zero, it would give a different result for

     zone-dependent formats like `%z'.

          date -u --date=2000-01-01 +%s

     To convert such an unwieldy number of seconds back to a more

     readable form, use a command like this:

          date -d '1970-01-01 UTC 946684800 seconds' +"%Y-%m-%d %T %z"

          1999-12-31 19:00:00 -0500

     Often it is better to output UTC-relative date and time:

          date -u -d '1970-01-01 946684800 seconds' +"%Y-%m-%d %T %z"

          2000-01-01 00:00:00 +0000

本文转自 zfno11 51CTO博客,原文链接:http://blog.51cto.com/zfno111/1943422

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