xref: /freebsd/bin/date/date.1 (revision 2e3507c25e42292b45a5482e116d278f5515d04d)
1.\"-
2.\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1990, 1993
3.\"	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
4.\"
5.\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
6.\" the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
7.\"
8.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
9.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
10.\" are met:
11.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
12.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
13.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
14.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
15.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
16.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
17.\"    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
18.\"    without specific prior written permission.
19.\"
20.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
21.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
22.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
23.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
24.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
25.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
26.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
27.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
28.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
29.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
30.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
31.\"
32.Dd May 19, 2023
33.Dt DATE 1
34.Os
35.Sh NAME
36.Nm date
37.Nd display or set date and time
38.Sh SYNOPSIS
39.\" Display time.
40.Nm
41.Op Fl nRu
42.Op Fl z Ar output_zone
43.Op Fl I Ns Op Ar FMT
44.Op Fl r Ar filename
45.Op Fl r Ar seconds
46.Oo
47.Sm off
48.Fl v
49.Op Cm + | -
50.Ar val Op Cm y | m | w | d | H | M | S
51.Sm on
52.Oc
53.Op Cm + Ns Ar output_fmt
54.\" Set time with the default input format.
55.Nm
56.Op Fl jnRu
57.Op Fl z Ar output_zone
58.Op Fl I Ns Op Ar FMT
59.Oo
60.Sm off
61.Fl v
62.Op Cm + | -
63.Ar val Op Cm y | m | w | d | H | M | S
64.Sm on
65.Oc
66.Sm off
67.Oo Oo Oo Oo Oo
68.Ar cc Oc
69.Ar yy Oc
70.Ar mm Oc
71.Ar dd Oc
72.Ar HH
73.Oc Ar MM Op Cm \&. Ar SS
74.Sm on
75.Op Cm + Ns Ar output_fmt
76.\" Set time with the user-provided input format.
77.Nm
78.Op Fl jnRu
79.Op Fl z Ar output_zone
80.Op Fl I Ns Op Ar FMT
81.Oo
82.Sm off
83.Fl v
84.Op Cm + | -
85.Ar val Op Cm y | m | w | d | H | M | S
86.Sm on
87.Oc
88.Fl f Ar input_fmt
89.Ar new_date
90.Op Cm + Ns Ar output_fmt
91.Sh DESCRIPTION
92When invoked without arguments, the
93.Nm
94utility displays the current date and time.
95Otherwise, depending on the options specified,
96.Nm
97will set the date and time or print it in a user-defined way.
98.Pp
99The
100.Nm
101utility displays the date and time read from the kernel clock.
102When used to set the date and time,
103both the kernel clock and the hardware clock are updated.
104.Pp
105Only the superuser may set the date,
106and if the system securelevel (see
107.Xr securelevel 7 )
108is greater than 1,
109the time may not be changed by more than 1 second.
110.Pp
111The options are as follows:
112.Bl -tag -width Ds
113.It Fl f Ar input_fmt
114Use
115.Ar input_fmt
116as the format string to parse the
117.Ar new_date
118provided rather than using the default
119.Sm off
120.Oo Oo Oo Oo Oo
121.Ar cc Oc
122.Ar yy Oc
123.Ar mm Oc
124.Ar dd Oc
125.Ar HH
126.Oc Ar MM Op Cm \&. Ar SS
127.Sm on
128format.
129Parsing is done using
130.Xr strptime 3 .
131.It Fl I Ns Op Ar FMT
132Use
133.St -iso8601
134output format.
135.Ar FMT
136may be omitted, in which case the default is
137.Cm date .
138Valid
139.Ar FMT
140values are
141.Cm date ,
142.Cm hours ,
143.Cm minutes ,
144and
145.Cm seconds .
146The date and time is formatted to the specified precision.
147When
148.Ar FMT
149is
150.Cm hours
151(or the more precise
152.Cm minutes
153or
154.Cm seconds ) ,
155the
156.St -iso8601
157format includes the timezone.
158.It Fl j
159Do not try to set the date.
160This allows you to use the
161.Fl f
162flag in addition to the
163.Cm +
164option to convert one date format to another.
165Note that any date or time components unspecified by the
166.Fl f
167format string take their values from the current time.
168.It Fl n
169Obsolete flag, accepted and ignored for compatibility.
170.It Fl R
171Use RFC 2822 date and time output format.
172This is equivalent to using
173.Dq Li %a, %d %b %Y \&%T %z
174as
175.Ar output_fmt
176while
177.Ev LC_TIME
178is set to the
179.Dq C
180locale .
181.It Fl r Ar seconds
182Print the date and time represented by
183.Ar seconds ,
184where
185.Ar seconds
186is the number of seconds since the Epoch
187(00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970;
188see
189.Xr time 3 ) ,
190and can be specified in decimal, octal, or hex.
191.It Fl r Ar filename
192Print the date and time of the last modification of
193.Ar filename .
194.It Fl u
195Display or set the date in
196.Tn UTC
197(Coordinated Universal) time.
198By default
199.Nm
200displays the time in the time zone described by
201.Pa /etc/localtime
202or the
203.Ev TZ
204environment variable.
205.It Fl z Ar output_zone
206Just before printing the time, change to the specified timezone;
207see the description of
208.Ev TZ
209below.
210This can be used with
211.Fl j
212to easily convert time specifications from one zone to another.
213.It Xo
214.Fl v
215.Sm off
216.Op Cm + | -
217.Ar val Op Cm y | m | w | d | H | M | S
218.Sm on
219.Xc
220Adjust (i.e., take the current date and display the result of the
221adjustment; not actually set the date) the second, minute, hour, month
222day, week day, month or year according to
223.Ar val .
224If
225.Ar val
226is preceded with a plus or minus sign,
227the date is adjusted forwards or backwards according to the remaining string,
228otherwise the relevant part of the date is set.
229The date can be adjusted as many times as required using these flags.
230Flags are processed in the order given.
231.Pp
232When setting values
233(rather than adjusting them),
234seconds are in the range 0-59, minutes are in the range 0-59, hours are
235in the range 0-23, month days are in the range 1-31, week days are in the
236range 0-6 (Sun-Sat),
237months are in the range 1-12 (Jan-Dec)
238and years are in a limited range depending on the platform.
239.Pp
240On i386, years are in the range 69-38 representing 1969-2038.
241On every other platform, years 0-68 are accepted and represent 2000-2068, and
24269-99 are accepted and represent 1969-1999.
243In both cases, years between 100 and 1900 (both included) are accepted and
244interpreted as relative to 1900 of the Gregorian calendar with a limit of 138 on
245i386 and a much higher limit on every other platform.
246Years starting at 1901 are also accepted, and are interpreted as absolute years.
247.Pp
248If
249.Ar val
250is numeric, one of either
251.Cm y ,
252.Cm m ,
253.Cm w ,
254.Cm d ,
255.Cm H ,
256.Cm M
257or
258.Cm S
259must be used to specify which part of the date is to be adjusted.
260.Pp
261The week day or month may be specified using a name rather than a
262number.
263If a name is used with the plus
264(or minus)
265sign, the date will be put forwards
266(or backwards)
267to the next
268(previous)
269date that matches the given week day or month.
270This will not adjust the date,
271if the given week day or month is the same as the current one.
272.Pp
273When a date is adjusted to a specific value or in units greater than hours,
274daylight savings time considerations are ignored.
275Adjustments in units of hours or less honor daylight saving time.
276So, assuming the current date is March 26, 0:30 and that the DST adjustment
277means that the clock goes forward at 01:00 to 02:00, using
278.Fl v No +1H
279will adjust the date to March 26, 2:30.
280Likewise, if the date is October 29, 0:30 and the DST adjustment means that
281the clock goes back at 02:00 to 01:00, using
282.Fl v No +3H
283will be necessary to reach October 29, 2:30.
284.Pp
285When the date is adjusted to a specific value that does not actually exist
286(for example March 26, 1:30 BST 2000 in the Europe/London timezone),
287the date will be silently adjusted forwards in units of one hour until it
288reaches a valid time.
289When the date is adjusted to a specific value that occurs twice
290(for example October 29, 1:30 2000),
291the resulting timezone will be set so that the date matches the earlier of
292the two times.
293.Pp
294It is not possible to adjust a date to an invalid absolute day, so using
295the switches
296.Fl v No 31d Fl v No 12m
297will simply fail five months of the year.
298It is therefore usual to set the month before setting the day; using
299.Fl v No 12m Fl v No 31d
300always works.
301.Pp
302Adjusting the date by months is inherently ambiguous because
303a month is a unit of variable length depending on the current date.
304This kind of date adjustment is applied in the most intuitive way.
305First of all,
306.Nm
307tries to preserve the day of the month.
308If it is impossible because the target month is shorter than the present one,
309the last day of the target month will be the result.
310For example, using
311.Fl v No +1m
312on May 31 will adjust the date to June 30, while using the same option
313on January 30 will result in the date adjusted to the last day of February.
314This approach is also believed to make the most sense for shell scripting.
315Nevertheless, be aware that going forth and back by the same number of
316months may take you to a different date.
317.Pp
318Refer to the examples below for further details.
319.El
320.Pp
321An operand with a leading plus
322.Pq Sq +
323sign signals a user-defined format string
324which specifies the format in which to display the date and time.
325The format string may contain any of the conversion specifications
326described in the
327.Xr strftime 3
328manual page, as well as any arbitrary text.
329A newline
330.Pq Ql \en
331character is always output after the characters specified by
332the format string.
333The format string for the default display is
334.Dq +%+ .
335.Pp
336If an operand does not have a leading plus sign, it is interpreted as
337a value for setting the system's notion of the current date and time.
338The canonical representation for setting the date and time is:
339.Pp
340.Bl -tag -width Ds -compact -offset indent
341.It Ar cc
342Century
343(either 19 or 20)
344prepended to the abbreviated year.
345.It Ar yy
346Year in abbreviated form
347(e.g., 89 for 1989, 06 for 2006).
348.It Ar mm
349Numeric month, a number from 1 to 12.
350.It Ar dd
351Day, a number from 1 to 31.
352.It Ar HH
353Hour, a number from 0 to 23.
354.It Ar MM
355Minutes, a number from 0 to 59.
356.It Ar SS
357Seconds, a number from 0 to 60
358(59 plus a potential leap second).
359.El
360.Pp
361Everything but the minutes is optional.
362.Pp
363.Nm
364understands the time zone definitions from the IANA Time Zone Database,
365.Sy tzdata ,
366located in
367.Pa /usr/share/zoneinfo .
368Time changes for Daylight Saving Time, standard time, leap seconds
369and leap years are handled automatically.
370.Pp
371There are two ways to specify the time zone:
372.Pp
373If the file or symlink
374.Pa /etc/localtime
375exists, it is interpreted as a time zone definition file, usually in
376the directory hierarchy
377.Pa /usr/share/zoneinfo ,
378which contains the time zone definitions from
379.Sy tzdata .
380.Pp
381If the environment variable
382.Ev TZ
383is set, its value is interpreted as the name of a time zone definition
384file, either an absolute path or a relative path to a time zone
385definition in
386.Pa /usr/share/zoneinfo .
387The
388.Ev TZ
389variable overrides
390.Pa /etc/localtime .
391.Pp
392If the time zone definition file is invalid,
393.Nm
394silently reverts to UTC.
395.Pp
396Previous versions of
397.Nm
398included the
399.Fl d
400(set daylight saving time flag) and
401.Fl t
402(set negative time zone offset) options, but these details are now
403handled automatically by
404.Sy tzdata .
405Modern offsets are positive for time zones ahead of UTC and negative
406for time zones behind UTC, but like the obsolete
407.Fl t
408option, the
409.Sy tzdata
410files in the subdirectory
411.Pa /usr/share/zoneinfo/Etc
412still use an older convention where times ahead of UTC are considered
413negative.
414.Sh ENVIRONMENT
415The following environment variable affects the execution of
416.Nm :
417.Bl -tag -width Ds
418.It Ev TZ
419The timezone to use when displaying dates.
420The normal format is a pathname relative to
421.Pa /usr/share/zoneinfo .
422For example, the command
423.Dq TZ=America/Los_Angeles date
424displays the current time in California.
425The variable can also specify an absolute path.
426See
427.Xr environ 7
428for more information.
429.El
430.Sh FILES
431.Bl -tag -width /var/log/messages -compact
432.It Pa /etc/localtime
433Time zone information file for default system time zone.
434May be omitted, in which case the default time zone is UTC.
435.It Pa /usr/share/zoneinfo
436Directory containing time zone information files.
437.It Pa /var/log/messages
438Record of the user setting the time.
439.It Pa /var/log/utx.log
440Record of date resets and time changes.
441.El
442.Sh EXIT STATUS
443The
444.Nm
445utility exits 0 on success, 1 if unable to set the date, and 2
446if able to set the local date, but unable to set it globally.
447.Sh EXAMPLES
448The command:
449.Pp
450.Dl "date ""+DATE: %Y-%m-%d%nTIME: %H:%M:%S"""
451.Pp
452will display:
453.Bd -literal -offset indent
454DATE: 1987-11-21
455TIME: 13:36:16
456.Ed
457.Pp
458In the Europe/London timezone, the command:
459.Pp
460.Dl "date -v1m -v+1y"
461.Pp
462will display:
463.Pp
464.Dl "Sun Jan  4 04:15:24 GMT 1998"
465.Pp
466where it is currently
467.Li "Mon Aug  4 04:15:24 BST 1997" .
468.Pp
469The command:
470.Pp
471.Dl "date -v1d -v3m -v0y -v-1d"
472.Pp
473will display the last day of February in the year 2000:
474.Pp
475.Dl "Tue Feb 29 03:18:00 GMT 2000"
476.Pp
477So will the command:
478.Pp
479.Dl "date -v3m -v30d -v0y -v-1m"
480.Pp
481because there is no such date as the 30th of February.
482.Pp
483The command:
484.Pp
485.Dl "date -v1d -v+1m -v-1d -v-fri"
486.Pp
487will display the last Friday of the month:
488.Pp
489.Dl "Fri Aug 29 04:31:11 BST 1997"
490.Pp
491where it is currently
492.Li "Mon Aug  4 04:31:11 BST 1997" .
493.Pp
494The command:
495.Pp
496.Dl "date 8506131627"
497.Pp
498sets the date to
499.Dq Li "June 13, 1985, 4:27 PM" .
500.Pp
501.Dl "date ""+%Y%m%d%H%M.%S"""
502.Pp
503may be used on one machine to print out the date
504suitable for setting on another.
505.Qq ( Li "+%m%d%H%M%Y.%S"
506for use on
507.Tn Linux . )
508.Pp
509The command:
510.Pp
511.Dl "date 1432"
512.Pp
513sets the time to
514.Li "2:32 PM" ,
515without modifying the date.
516.Pp
517The command
518.Pp
519.Dl "TZ=America/Los_Angeles date -Iseconds -r 1533415339"
520.Pp
521will display
522.Pp
523.Dl "2018-08-04T13:42:19-07:00"
524.Pp
525The command:
526.Pp
527.Dl "env LC_ALL=C date -j -f ""%a %b %d %T %Z %Y"" ""`env LC_ALL=C date`"" ""+%s"""
528.Pp
529can be used to parse the output from
530.Nm
531and express it in Epoch time.
532.Pp
533Finally the command
534.Pp
535.Dl "TZ=America/Los_Angeles date -z Europe/Paris -j 0900"
536.Pp
537will print the time in the "Europe/Paris" timezone when it is 9:00 in The
538America/Los_Angeles timezone.
539.Sh DIAGNOSTICS
540It is invalid to combine the
541.Fl I
542flag with either
543.Fl R
544or an output format
545.Dq ( + Ns ... )
546operand.
547If this occurs,
548.Nm
549prints:
550.Ql multiple output formats specified
551and exits with status 1.
552.Sh SEE ALSO
553.Xr locale 1 ,
554.Xr gettimeofday 2 ,
555.Xr getutxent 3 ,
556.Xr strftime 3 ,
557.Xr strptime 3 ,
558.Xr tzset 3 ,
559.Xr adjkerntz 8 ,
560.Xr ntpd 8 ,
561.Xr tzsetup 8
562.Rs
563.%T "TSP: The Time Synchronization Protocol for UNIX 4.3BSD"
564.%A R. Gusella
565.%A S. Zatti
566.Re
567.Rs
568.%U https://iana.org/time-zones
569.%T Time Zone Database
570.Re
571.Sh STANDARDS
572The
573.Nm
574utility is expected to be compatible with
575.St -p1003.2 .
576With the exception of the
577.Fl u
578option, all options are extensions to the standard.
579.Pp
580The format selected by the
581.Fl I
582flag is compatible with
583.St -iso8601 .
584.Sh HISTORY
585A
586.Nm
587command appeared in
588.At v1 .
589.Pp
590A number of options were added and then removed again, including the
591.Fl d
592(set DST flag) and
593.Fl t
594(set negative time zone offset).
595Time zones are now handled by code bundled with
596.Sy tzdata .
597.Pp
598The
599.Fl I
600flag was added in
601.Fx 12.0 .
602