The phrase used on man coreadm is "decimal value of time(2)".  I guess I
was ad-libbing the timestamp part, but the decimal number looks like a
Unix epoch timestamp number to me.
 
Your perl is exactly what I need.
 
Thanks,
Glen Gunselman

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 9/6/2005 11:52:33 AM >>>

> Is there a command to take a decimal timestamp and format/display in
> something a little easier to relate to.  I have serval hundred core
> files and I'd like to know when the process started abending.

I've not heard the phrase 'decimal timestamp' before.  Do you mean a
UNIX epoch timestamp (seconds since the start of the epoch), or
something else?

If the first, I just use perl...

perl -le 'print scalar localtime 1126025267'
Tue Sep  6 09:47:47 2005

or for lots, feed them via stdin to:
perl -le 'while (<>) {chomp; print "$_ - ", scalar localtime $_ ; }'

You could format it however you want...

-- 
Darren Dunham                                          
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Senior Technical Consultant         TAOS           
http://www.taos.com/
Got some Dr Pepper?                           San Francisco, CA bay
area
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