Provided by: faketime_0.9.7-3ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       faketime - manipulate the system time for a given command

SYNOPSIS

       faketime [options] timestamp program [arguments...]

DESCRIPTION

       The  given  command will be tricked into believing that the current system time is the one
       specified in the timestamp. Filesystem timestamps will also be reported relative  to  this
       timestamp.  The  wall  clock will continue to run from this date and time unless specified
       otherwise (see advanced options).  Actually, faketime is a simple wrapper for libfaketime,
       which  uses the LD_PRELOAD mechanism to load a small library which intercepts system calls
       to functions such as  time(2)  and  fstat(2).  This  wrapper  exposes  only  a  subset  of
       libfaketime's  functionality;  please refer to the README file that came with faketime for
       more details and advanced options, or have a look at http://github.com/wolfcw/libfaketime

OPTIONS

       --help show usage information and quit.

       --version
              show version information and quit.

       -m     use the multi-threading variant of libfaketime.

       -f     use the advanced timestamp specification format.

       --exclude-monotonic
              Do  not  fake  time  when  the  program  makes  a  call  to  clock_gettime  with  a
              CLOCK_MONOTONIC clock.

EXAMPLES

       faketime 'last Friday 5 pm' /bin/date
       faketime '2008-12-24 08:15:42' /bin/date
       faketime -f '+2,5y x10,0' /bin/bash -c 'date; while true; do echo $SECONDS ; sleep 1 ; done'
       faketime -f '+2,5y x0,50' /bin/bash -c 'date; while true; do echo $SECONDS ; sleep 1 ; done'
       faketime -f '+2,5y i2,0' /bin/bash -c 'while true; do date ; sleep 1 ; done'
       In this single case all spawned processes will use the same global clock without restarting it at the start of each process.

       (Please note that it depends on your locale settings whether . or , has to be used for fractional offsets)

ADVANCED TIMESTAMP FORMAT

       The  simple  timestamp  format  used  by default applies the /bin/date -d command to parse
       user-friendly specifications such as 'last friday'. When using the faketime option -f, the
       timestamp specified on the command line is directly passed to libfaketime, which enables a
       couple of additional features such as speeding the clock up or slowing  it  down  for  the
       target  program.  It  is  strongly  recommended  that  you  have a look at the libfaketime
       documentation. Summary:

       Freeze clock at absolute timestamp: "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss"
              If you want to specify an absolute point in time, exactly this format must be used.
              Please  note that freezing the clock is usually not what you want and may break the
              application. Only use if you know what you're doing!

       Relative time offset: "[+/-]123[m/h/d/y], e.g. "+60m", "+2y"
              This is the most often used format and specifies the faked time relatively  to  the
              current real time. The first character of the format string must be a + or a -. The
              numeric value by default represents seconds, but the modifiers m, h, d, and  y  can
              be used to specify minutes, hours, days, or years, respectively. For example, "-2y"
              means "two years ago". Fractional time offsets can be  used,  e.g.  "+2,5y",  which
              means "two and a half years in the future". Please note that the fraction delimiter
              depends on your locale settings, so if "+2,5y" does not work, you might want to try
              "+2.5y".

       Start-at timestamps: "@YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss"
              The wall clock will start counting at the given timestamp for the program. This can
              be used for specifying absolute timestamps without freezing the clock.

ADVANCED USAGE

       When using relative time offsets or start-at timestamps  (see  ADVANCED  TIMESTAMP  FORMAT
       above  and option -f), the clock speed can be adjusted, i.e. time may run faster or slower
       for the executed program. For example, "+5y x10" will set the faked time 5 years into  the
       future and make the time pass 10 times as fast (one real second equals 10 seconds measured
       by the program). Similarly, the flow of time can be slowed, e.g. using "-7d  x0,2",  which
       will  set the faked time 7 days in the past and set the clock speed to 20 percent, i.e. it
       takes five real world seconds for one second measured by the program. Again, depending  on
       your locale, either "x2.0" or "x2,0" may be required regarding the delimiter. You can also
       make faketime to advance the reported time by a preset  interval  upon  each  time()  call
       independently  from  the  system's  time  using  "-7d  i2,0", where "i" is followed by the
       increase interval in seconds.

       Faking times for multiple  programs  or  even  system-wide  can  be  simplified  by  using
       ~/.faketimerc  files  and  /etc/faketimerc.  Please  refer  to  the  README that came with
       faketime for warnings and details.

       Faking of filesystem timestamps may be disabled by setting  the  NO_FAKE_STAT  environment
       variable to a non-empty value.

AUTHOR

       Please see the README and NEWS files for contributors.

BUGS

       Due  to  limitations of the LD_PRELOAD mechanism, faketime will not work with suidroot and
       statically linked programs.  While  timestamps  and  time  offsets  will  work  for  child
       processes,  speeding  the  clock  up or slowing it down might not work for child processes
       spawned by the executed program as expected; a new instance of  libfaketime  is  used  for
       each  child  process,  which means that the libfaketime start time, which is used in speed
       adjustments, will also be  re-initialized.  Some  programs  may  dynamically  load  system
       libraries,  such  as  librt,  at run-time and therefore bypass libfaketime. You may report
       programs that do not work with libfaketime, but only if they are available as open source.

REPORTING BUGS

       Please use https://github.com/wolfcw/libfaketime/issues

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2003-2013 by the libfaketime authors.

       There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR  A  PARTICULAR  PURPOSE.
       You may redistribute copies of faketime under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
       For more information about these matters, see the file named COPYING.

SEE ALSO

       ld.so(1), time(2), fstat(2)