On Friday 04 June 2004 02:09 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> You realise you can do this on the command line :
>
> Shell> perl -e 'print scalar localtime(1086332760) . "\n"'
>
> Or to print the current time :
>
> Shell> perl -e 'print scalar localtime(time) . "\n"'
>
>
>               - R�khar�ur Egilsson
>
>

Thanks to all who replied, I used the above and it works great.  All the 
atimes look good except two.  Oldest atime is Apr 27 18:32:21 2004 and the 
last expire atime delta is Jan 13 08:45:53 1970.  Those two don't look 
right, are they?  The digits for the last expire atime delta is a lot less 
than the others, 1089953.

I haven't seen any problems though with the database.

Thanks

-- 
Chris
Registered Linux User 283774 http://counter.li.org
7:55pm up 4 days, 1:31, 2 users, load average: 0.63, 1.05, 1.37
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now, it we had this sort of thing:
  yield -a     for yield to all traffic
  yield -t     for yield to trucks
  yield -f     for yield to people walking (yield foot)
  yield -d t*  for yield on days starting with t
...you'd have a lot of dead people at intersections, and traffic jams you
wouldn't believe...
(Discussion in comp.os.linux.misc on the intuitiveness of commands.)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Live - From Virgin Radio UK The Eagles - Hotel California

Reply via email to