diff options
author | Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> | 2001-05-21 07:05:37 +0000 |
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committer | Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> | 2001-05-21 07:05:37 +0000 |
commit | ca7fc5d6838f8ff7fd0193cc28449156d033fc56 (patch) | |
tree | 8acebd0bdb649062aa07b0bb43226f66fae96ef0 /doc | |
parent | e204540061344b28896db139da1a9f28369cf4e6 (diff) | |
download | coreutils-ca7fc5d6838f8ff7fd0193cc28449156d033fc56.tar.xz |
Add new --time-style option.
Change --full-time to be equivalent to --time-style=full-iso.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/omni-utils.texi | 94 |
1 files changed, 71 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/doc/omni-utils.texi b/doc/omni-utils.texi index ee2f8d12a..5beb124b9 100644 --- a/doc/omni-utils.texi +++ b/doc/omni-utils.texi @@ -4559,6 +4559,7 @@ Also see @ref{Common options}. * Sorting the output:: * More details about version sort:: * General output formatting:: +* Formatting file timestamps:: * Formatting the file names:: @end menu @@ -4682,6 +4683,12 @@ Finally, output a line of the form: @end example where @var{word} is the quoting style (@pxref{Formatting the file names}). +@item --full-time +@opindex --full-time +Produce long format directory listings, and list times in full. It is +equivalent to using @option{--format=long} with +@option{--time-style=full-iso} (@pxref{Formatting file timestamps}). + @item -g @opindex -g Produce long format directory listings, but don't display owner information. @@ -4721,14 +4728,8 @@ uniquely identifies each file within a particular filesystem.) @opindex verbose ls @r{format} In addition to the name of each file, print the file type, permissions, number of hard links, owner name, group name, size in bytes, and -timestamp (by default, the modification time). For files with a time -more than six months old or in the future, the timestamp contains the -year instead of the time of day. - -If the timestamp contains today's date with the year rather than a time -of day, the file's time is in the future, which means you probably have -clock skew problems which may break programs like @command{make} that -rely on file times. +timestamp (@pxref{Formatting file timestamps}), normally +the modification time. For each directory that is listed, preface the files with a line @samp{total @var{blocks}}, where @var{blocks} is the total disk allocation @@ -5007,21 +5008,6 @@ for regular files that are executable, append @samp{*}. The file type indicators are @samp{/} for directories, @samp{@@} for symbolic links, @samp{|} for FIFOs, @samp{=} for sockets, and nothing for regular files. -@item --full-time -@opindex --full-time -List times in full, rather than using the standard abbreviation -heuristics. The format is currently similar to that of @command{date}, -but this is planned to change in a future release, partly because modern -file time stamps have more precision. It's not possible to change the -format, but you can extract out the date string with @code{cut} and then -pass the result to @code{date -d}. @xref{date invocation, @code{date} -invocation, , sh-utils, Shell utilities}. - -This is most useful because the time output includes the seconds. (Unix -filesystems store file timestamps only to the nearest second, so this -option shows all the information there is.) For example, this can help -when you have a Makefile that is not regenerating files properly. - @item --indicator-style=@var{word} @opindex --indicator-style Append a character indicator with style @var{word} to entry names, @@ -5093,6 +5079,68 @@ is 80. @end table +@node Formatting file timestamps +@subsection Formatting file timestamps + +By default, file timestamps are output in abbreviated form. For files +with a time more than six months old or in the future, the timestamp +contains the year instead of the time of day. If the timestamp contains +today's date with the year rather than a time of day, the file's time is +in the future, which means you probably have clock skew problems which +may break programs like @command{make} that rely on file times. + +The following option changes how file timestamps are printed. + +@table @samp +@item --time-style=@var{word} +@opindex --time-style +@cindex time style +Use style @var{word} to output file timestamps. The @var{word} should +be one of the following: + +@table @samp +@item full-iso +List timestamps in full, rather than using the standard abbreviation +heuristics. The format is @sc{iso} 8601 date, time, and time zone +format with nanosecond precision, e.g., @samp{2001-05-14 +23:45:56.477817180 -0700}. It's not possible to change the format, but +you can extract out the date string with @code{cut} and then pass the +result to @code{date -d}. @xref{date invocation, @code{date} +invocation, , sh-utils, Shell utilities}. + +This is useful because the time output includes all the information that +is available from the operating system. For example, this can help +when you have a Makefile that is not regenerating files properly. + +@item iso +Use @sc{iso}-style time stamps like @samp{2001-05-14@ } and @samp{05-14 +23:45}. + +@item locale +@vindex LC_ALL +@vindex LC_TIME +@vindex LANG +Use locale-dependent dates like @samp{touko@ @ 14 2001} and @samp{touko@ +@ 14 23:45}, time stamps that might occur in a Finnish locale. The +locale for formatting timestamps is specified by the first of three +environment variables @env{LC_ALL}, @env{LC_TIME}, @env{LANG} that is +set. + +@item posix-iso +Use traditional @sc{posix}-locale dates like @samp{May 14@ @ 2001} and +@samp{May 14 23:45} unless the user specifies a non-@sc{posix} locale, +in which case use @sc{iso}-style dates. This is the default. +@end table +@end table + +@vindex TIME_STYLE +You can specify the default value of the @option{--time-style} option +with the environment variable @env{TIME_STYLE}. @sc{gnu} Emacs 21 and +later can parse @sc{iso} dates, but older Emacs versions do not, so if +you are using an older version of Emacs and specify a non-@sc{posix} +locale, you may need to set @samp{TIME_STYLE="locale"}. + + @node Formatting the file names @subsection Formatting the file names |