On Wed, Aug 21, 2019 at 06:23:41PM +0200, Florian Westphal wrote:
> Ander Juaristi <[email protected]> wrote:
> > These keywords introduce new checks for a timestamp, an absolute date 
> > (which is converted to a timestamp),
> > an hour in the day (which is converted to the number of seconds since 
> > midnight) and a day of week.
> > 
> > When converting an ISO date (eg. 2019-06-06 17:00) to a timestamp,
> > we need to substract it the GMT difference in seconds, that is, the value
> > of the 'tm_gmtoff' field in the tm structure. This is because the kernel
> > doesn't know about time zones. And hence the kernel manages different 
> > timestamps
> > than those that are advertised in userspace when running, for instance, 
> > date +%s.
> > 
> > The same conversion needs to be done when converting hours (e.g 17:00) to 
> > seconds since midnight
> > as well.
> > 
> > The result needs to be computed modulo 86400 in case GMT offset (difference 
> > in seconds from UTC)
> > is negative.
> > 
> > We also introduce a new command line option (-t, --seconds) to show the 
> > actual
> > timestamps when printing the values, rather than the ISO dates, or the hour.
> 
> Pablo, please see this "-t" option -- should be just re-use -n instead?
> 
> Other than this, this patch looks good and all tests pass for me.

this should be printed numerically with -n (global switch to disable
literal printing).

Then, -t could be added for disabling literal in a more fine grain, as
Phil suggest time ago with other existing options that are similar to
this one.

Reply via email to