Ichorus
Ichorus

Reputation: 4617

What is the Best Way to Perform Timestamp Comparison in Bash

I have an alert script that I am trying to keep from spamming me so I'd like to place a condition that if an alert has been sent within, say the last hour, to not send another alert. Now I have a cron job that checks the condition every minute because I need to be alerted quickly when the condition is met but I don't need to get the email every munite until I get the issue under control. What is the best way to compare time in bash to accomplish this?

Upvotes: 45

Views: 55977

Answers (3)

jonathan-stafford
jonathan-stafford

Reputation: 11827

Use the date command to convert the two times into a standard format, and subtract them. You'll probably want to store the previous execution time in a dotfile then do something like:

last = $(cat /tmp/.lastrun)
curr = $(date '+%s')

diff = $(($curr - $last))
if [ $diff -gt 3600 ]; then
    # ...
fi

echo "$curr" >/tmp/.lastrun

(Thanks, Steve.)

Upvotes: 19

Bruno De Fraine
Bruno De Fraine

Reputation: 47426

By far the easiest is to store time stamps as modification times of dummy files. GNU touch and date commands can set/get these times and perform date calculations. Bash has tests to check whether a file is newer than (-nt) or older than (-ot) another.

For example, to only send a notification if the last notification was more than an hour ago:

touch -d '-1 hour' limit
if [ limit -nt last_notification ]; then
    #send notification...
    touch last_notification
fi

Upvotes: 68

JesperE
JesperE

Reputation: 64454

Use "test":

if test file1 -nt file2; then
   # file1 is newer than file2
fi

EDIT: If you want to know when an event occurred, you can use "touch" to create a file which you can later compare using "test".

Upvotes: 22

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