dategrep - Grep standard input for lines that match EXPRESSION.
dategrep [OPTION]... EXPRESSION
Grep standard input for lines that match EXPRESSION.
EXPRESSION may be date/times prefixed with an operator ‘<’, ‘<=’, ‘=’, ‘>=’, ‘>’, ‘!=’, ‘<>’ (if omitted defaults to ‘=’), which will match lines with date/times which are older, older-equal, equal, newer-equal, newer, or not equal respectively.
EXPRESSION may also be format specifiers infixed by above operators and suffixed by a value (e.g. ‘%a="Wed"’) which matches lines whose %a representation (weekday name abbreviated) is "Wed".
EXPRESSION may be statements as described above concatenated through ‘&&’ (for conjunction) or ‘||’ (disjunction), both of which may be parenthesised as per usual to change precedence (‘&&’ goes over ‘||’).
If multiple date/times occur on the same line and any one of them fulfills the criteria then the line is considered a match and will be output.
Note:
Operations can be specified by options (--eq, --gt, ...) as
well.
This serves solely as a means of convenience, e.g. the
datetest tool has a
similar syntax.
Recognized
OPTIONs:
-h, --help
Print help and exit
-V, --version
Print version and exit
-q, --quiet
Suppress message about date/time and duration parser errors.
-i, --input-format=STRING...
Input format, can be used multiple times. Each date/time will be passed to the input format parsers in the order they are given, if a date/time can be read successfully with a given input format specifier string, that value will be used.
-b, --base=DT
For underspecified input use DT as a fallback to fill in missing fields. Also used for ambiguous format specifiers to position their range on the absolute time line. Must be a date/time in ISO8601 format. If omitted defaults to the current date/time.
-e, --backslash-escapes
Enable interpretation of backslash escapes in the output and input format specifier strings.
-o, --only-matching
Show only the part of a line matching DATE.
-v, --invert-match
Select non-matching lines.
--from-locale=LOCALE
Interpret dates on stdin or the command line as coming from the locale LOCALE, this would only affect month and weekday names as input formats have to be specified explicitly.
--from-zone=ZONE
Consider date/times on stdin as coming from the zone ZONE, default: UTC.
-z, --zone=ZONE
Consider date/times in EXPRESSION as coming from the zone ZONE, default: UTC.
--eq |
Lines match when date/times are equal to EXPRESSION. |
|||
--ne |
Lines match when date/times are not the same as EXPRESSION. |
|||
--gt |
Lines match when date/times are newer than EXPRESSION. |
|||
--lt |
Lines match when date/times are older than EXPRESSION. |
|||
--ge |
Lines match when date/times are newer than or equal EXPRESSION. |
|||
--le |
Lines match when date/times are older than or equal EXPRESSION. |
|||
--nt |
Lines match when date/times are newer than or equal EXPRESSION. |
|||
--ot |
Lines match when date/times are older than or equal EXPRESSION. |
Format specs in dateutils are similar to posix’ strftime().
However, due to a broader range of supported calendars dateutils must employ different rules.
Date specs:
%a The abbreviated weekday name
%A The full weekday name
%_a The weekday name shortened to a single character
(MTWRFAS)
%b The abbreviated month name
%B The full month name
%_b The month name shortened to a single character
(FGHJKMNQUVXZ)
%c The count of the weekday within the month (range 00 to
05)
%C The count of the weekday within the year (range 00 to 53)
%d The day of the month, 2 digits (range 00 to 31)
%D The day of the year, 3 digits (range 000 to 366)
%F Equivalent to %Y-%m-%d (ymd’s canonical format)
%g ISO week date year without the century (range 00 to 99)
%G ISO week date year including the century
%j Equivalent to %D
%m The month in the current calendar (range 00 to 12)
%Q The quarter of the year (range Q1 to Q4)
%q The number of the quarter (range 01 to 04)
%s The number of seconds since the Epoch.
%u The weekday as number (range 01 to 07, Sunday being 07)
%U The week count, day of week is Sun (range 00 to 53)
%V The ISO week count, day of week is Mon (range 01 to 53)
%w The weekday as number (range 00 to 06, Sunday being 00)
%W The week count, day of week is Mon (range 00 to 53)
%y The year without a century (range 00 to 99)
%Y The year including the century
%_y The year shortened to a single digit
%Z The zone offset in hours and minutes (HH:MM) with
a preceding sign (+ for offsets east of UTC, - for offsets
west of UTC)
%Od The day as
roman numerals
%Om The month as roman numerals
%Oy The two digit year as roman numerals
%OY The year including the century as roman numerals
%rs In time
systems whose Epoch is different from the unix Epoch, this
selects the number of seconds since then.
%rY In calendars with years that don’t coincide with
the Gregorian
years, this selects the calendar’s year.
%dth The day of
the month as an ordinal number, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.
%mth The month of the year as an ordinal number, 1st, 2nd,
3rd, etc.
%db The business
day of the month (since last month’s ultimo)
%dB Number of business days until this month’s
ultimo
Time specs:
%H The hour of the day using a 24h clock, 2 digits (range 00
to 23)
%I The hour of the day using a 12h clock, 2 digits (range 01
to 12)
%M The minute (range 00 to 59)
%N The nanoseconds (range 000000000 to 999999999)
%p The string AM or PM, noon is PM and midnight is AM.
%P Like %p but in lowercase
%S The (range 00 to 60, 60 is for leap seconds)
%T Equivalent to %H:%M:%S
General specs:
%n A newline character
%t A tab character
%% A literal % character
Modifiers:
%O Modifier to turn decimal numbers into Roman numerals
%r Modifier to turn units into real units
%0 Modifier to turn on zero prefixes
%SPC Modifier to turn on space prefixes
%- Modifier to turn off prefixes altogether
th Suffix, read and print ordinal numbers
b Suffix, treat days as business days
By design dates before 1601-01-01 are not supported.
For conformity
here is a list of calendar designators and their
corresponding format string:
ymd %Y-%m-%d
ymcw %Y-%m-%c-%w
ywd %rY-W%V-%u
bizda %Y-%m-%db
lilian n/a
ldn n/a
julian n/a
jdn n/a
matlab n/a
mdn n/a
These designators can be used as output format string, moreover, @code{lilian}/@code{ldn} and @code{julian}/@code{jdn} can also be used as input format string.
$ dategrep
2012-03-01 <<EOF
2012-02-28
2012-02-29
2012-03-01
2012-03-02
EOF
2012-03-01
$
$ dategrep
’<2012-03-01’ <<EOF
2012-02-28
2012-02-29
2012-03-01
2012-03-02
EOF
2012-02-28
2012-02-29
$
$ dategrep
\!=2012-03-01 <<EOF
2012-02-28
2012-02-29
2012-03-01
2012-03-02
EOF
2012-02-28
2012-02-29
2012-03-02
$
$ dategrep =2012-03-01 <<EOF
2012-02-28 |
|||||
2012-02-29 |
leap day | ||||
2012-03-01 |
|||||
2012-03-02 |
EOF
2012-03-01 |
$
$ dategrep -o \<2012-03-01 <<EOF
2012-02-28 |
|||||
2012-02-29 |
leap day | ||||
2012-03-01 |
|||||
2012-03-02 |
EOF
2012-02-28
2012-02-29
$
$ dategrep ’>=12:00:00’ <<EOF
11:59:58 |
||||||
11:59:59 |
leap ? | |||||
12:00:00 |
new version | |||||
12:03:12 |
EOF
12:00:00 |
new version | |||||
12:03:12 |
$
$ dategrep -o ’>=12:00:00’ <<EOF
11:59:58 |
||||||
11:59:59 |
leap ? | |||||
12:00:00 |
new version | |||||
12:03:12 |
EOF
12:00:00
12:03:12
$
$ dategrep
2012-03-01 <<EOF
2012-02-28T10:00:00
2012-02-29T10:00:00
2012-03-01T10:00:00
2012-03-02T10:00:00
EOF
2012-03-01T10:00:00
$
$ dategrep
’<2012-03-01’ <<EOF
2012-02-28T10:00:00
2012-02-29T10:00:00
2012-03-01T10:00:00
2012-03-02T10:00:00
EOF
2012-02-28T10:00:00
2012-02-29T10:00:00
$
$ dategrep
2012-03-01T10:00:00 <<EOF
2012-02-28T10:00:00
2012-02-29T10:00:00
2012-03-01T10:00:00
2012-03-02T10:00:00
EOF
2012-03-01T10:00:00
$
$ dategrep
’<2012-03-01T14:00:00’ <<EOF
2012-02-28T10:00:00
2012-02-29T10:00:00
2012-03-01T10:00:00
2012-03-02T10:00:00
EOF
2012-02-28T10:00:00
2012-02-29T10:00:00
2012-03-01T10:00:00
$
Written by Sebastian Freundt <[email protected]>
Report bugs to: https://github.com/hroptatyr/dateutils/issues
The full documentation for dategrep is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info and dategrep programs are properly installed at your site, the command
info (dateutils)dategrep
should give you access to the complete manual.