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UGU: Unix Guru Universe - Unix Tip #4032- February 25, 2012
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Unix Tip #4032- February 25, 2012
SOLARIS CHANGING SEASONS
During a session, sometimes
we have a need to change the
system time for our session
only. We have used it to
simulate time based testing.
export TZ=ESThhEDT
The EST set your time to Eastern
Standard Time and EDT is Eastern
Daylight Time.
hh is the number of hours you
wish to change.
Example: Currently the system
date is Tue Jun 19 13:38:03 EDT 2001
and you wish to set it to
yesterday at the same time.
You would substitute a positive
29 for hh.
export TZ=EST29EDT
Now the shell time is:
Mon Jun 18 13:38:50 EDT 2001
WHY 29 and not 24? The main
UNIX clock is set from GMT not
EST therefore you have to add
5 hours to your backward
calculations to get the same
exact time since EST is
GMT - 5 hours.
Use negitive numbers to set
the clock into the future.
Also if you need to set the
minutes and seconds it is
hh:mm:ss. These are all the
number of hours, minutes and
seconds from GMT that you wish
to set.
This is for Solaris 2.6, your
mileage may vary.
NOTE: All tips provided are USE AT YOUR OWN RISK. Tips are submitted
by various unix admins around the globe. UGU suggest you read and
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production.
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