parsedate(3)


NAME

   parsedate - convert time and date string to number

SYNOPSIS

   #include <sys/types.h>

   typedef struct _TIMEINFO {
       time_t           time;
       long             usec;
       long             tzone;
   } TIMEINFO;

   time_t
   parsedate(text, now)
       char             *text;
       TIMEINFO         *now;

DESCRIPTION

   Parsedate  converts  many common time specifications into the number of
   seconds since the epoch --- i.e., a time_t; see time(2).

   Parsedate returns the time, or -1 on error.  Text is a character string
   containing the time and date.  Now is a pointer to the time that should
   be  used  for  calculating  relative  dates.   If  now  is  NULL,  then
   GetTimeInfo  in  libinn(3)  is  used  to  obtain  the  current time and
   timezone.

   The character string consists of zero or  more  specifications  of  the
   following form:

   time   A  time  of  day,  which  is of the form hh[:mm[:ss]] [meridian]
          [zone] or hhmm [meridian] [zone].  If no meridian is  specified,
          hh is interpreted on a 24-hour clock.

   date   A  specific  month  and  day with optional year.  The acceptable
          formats are  mm/dd[/yy],  yyyy/mm/dd,  monthname  dd[,  yy],  dd
          monthname  [yy],  and day, dd monthname yy.  The default year is
          the current year.  If the year is less then 100,  then  1900  is
          added to it; if it is less then 21, then 2000 is added to it.

   relative time
          A  specification  relative  to  the current time.  The format is
          number unit; acceptable units are year, month, week, day,  hour,
          minute (or min), and second (or sec).  The unit can be specified
          as a singular or plural, as in 3 weeks.

   The actual date is calculated according to the following steps.  First,
   any  absolute  date and/or time is processed and converted.  Using that
   time as the base, day-of-week specifications are added.  Next, relative
   specifications  are  used.   If  a  date  or  day  is specified, and no
   absolute or relative time is  given,  midnight  is  used.   Finally,  a
   correction  is  applied so that the correct hour of the day is produced
   after allowing for daylight savings time differences.

   Parsedate ignores case when parsing all words; unknown words are  taken
   to  be  unknown  timezones, which are treated as GMT.  The names of the
   months and days of the week can be abbreviated  to  their  first  three
   letters,  with  optional  trailing  period.  Periods are ignored in any
   timezone or meridian values.

BUGS

   Parsedate does not accept all desirable and unambiguous  constructions.
   Semantically incorrect dates such as ``February 31'' are accepted.

   Daylight  savings  time  is  always taken as a one-hour change which is
   wrong for some places.  The daylight savings time  correction  can  get
   confused  if  parsing  a  time  within  an  hour  of when the reckoning
   changes, or if given a partial date.

HISTORY

   Originally written by Steven M. Bellovin  <smb@research.att.com>  while
   at  the  University  of  North  Carolina at Chapel Hill and distributed
   under the name getdate.

   A major overhaul was done by Rich $alz <rsalz@bbn.com> and  Jim  Berets
   <jberets@bbn.com> in August, 1990.

   It  was  further  revised  (primarily to remove obsolete constructs and
   timezone  names)  a  year  later  by  Rich  (now  <rsalz@osf.org>)  for
   InterNetNews,  and  the name was changed.  This is revision 1.10, dated
   1993/01/29.

SEE ALSO

   date(1), ctime(3), libinn(3), time(2).

                                                              PARSEDATE(3)





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