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NAME

       getdate, getdate_r - convert a date-plus-time string to broken-down time

SYNOPSIS

       #include <time.h>

       struct tm *getdate(const char *string);

       extern int getdate_err;

       #include <time.h>

       int getdate_r(const char *string, struct tm *res);

   Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):

       getdate():
           _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 500 || _XOPEN_SOURCE && _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED
       getdate_r():
           _GNU_SOURCE

DESCRIPTION

       The  function  getdate()  converts  a  string  representation of a date and time, contained in the buffer
       pointed to by string, into a broken-down time.  The broken-down time is stored in a tm structure,  and  a
       pointer  to  this structure is returned as the function result.  This tm structure is allocated in static
       storage, and consequently it will be overwritten by further calls to getdate().

       In contrast to strptime(3), (which has a format argument), getdate() uses the formats found in  the  file
       whose  full  pathname  is  given  in  the  environment variable DATEMSK.  The first line in the file that
       matches the given input string is used for the conversion.

       The matching is done case insensitively.  Superfluous whitespace, either in the pattern or in the  string
       to be converted, is ignored.

       The  conversion  specifications  that  a  pattern  can contain are those given for strptime(3).  One more
       conversion specification is specified in POSIX.1-2001:

       %Z     Timezone name.  This is not implemented in glibc.

       When %Z is given, the structure containing the broken-down time is initialized with values  corresponding
       to  the  current  time in the given timezone.  Otherwise, the structure is initialized to the broken-down
       time corresponding to the current local time (as by a call to localtime(3)).

       When only the weekday is given, the day is taken to be the first such day on or after today.

       When only the month is given (and no year), the month is taken to be the first such  month  equal  to  or
       after the current month.  If no day is given, it is the first day of the month.

       When no hour, minute and second are given, the current hour, minute and second are taken.

       If  no date is given, but we know the hour, then that hour is taken to be the first such hour equal to or
       after the current hour.

       getdate_r() is a GNU extension that provides a reentrant version  of  getdate().   Rather  than  using  a
       global  variable  to  report errors and a static buffer to return the broken down time, it returns errors
       via the function result value, and returns the resulting broken-down time in the caller-allocated  buffer
       pointed to by the argument res.

RETURN VALUE

       When  successful,  getdate()  returns  a pointer to a struct tm.  Otherwise, it returns NULL and sets the
       global variable getdate_err to one of the error numbers shown below.  Changes to errno are unspecified.

       On success getdate_r() returns 0; on error it returns one of the error numbers shown below.

ERRORS

       The following errors are returned via  getdate_err  (for  getdate())  or  as  the  function  result  (for
       getdate_r()):

       1   The DATEMSK environment variable is not defined, or its value is an empty string.

       2   The template file specified by DATEMSK cannot be opened for reading.

       3   Failed to get file status information.

       4   The template file is not a regular file.

       5   An error was encountered while reading the template file.

       6   Memory allocation failed (not enough memory available).

       7   There is no line in the file that matches the input.

       8   Invalid input specification.

ENVIRONMENT

       DATEMSK
              File containing format patterns.

       TZ, LC_TIME
              Variables used by strptime(3).

ATTRIBUTES

   Multithreading (see pthreads(7))
       The getdate() function is not thread-safe.

       The getdate_r() function is thread-safe.

CONFORMING TO

       POSIX.1-2001.

NOTES

       The  POSIX.1-2001  specification  for  strptime(3)  contains conversion specifications using the %E or %O
       modifier, while such specifications are not given for getdate().   In  glibc,  getdate()  is  implemented
       using strptime(3), so that precisely the same conversions are supported by both.

EXAMPLE

       The  program below calls getdate() for each of its command-line arguments, and for each call displays the
       values in the fields of the  returned  tm  structure.   The  following  shell  session  demonstrates  the
       operation of the program:

           $ TFILE=$PWD/tfile
           $ echo '%A' > $TFILE       # Full weekday name
           $ echo '%T' >> $TFILE      # ISO date (YYYY-MM-DD)
           $ echo '%F' >> $TFILE      # Time (HH:MM:SS)
           $ date
           $ export DATEMSK=$TFILE
           $ ./a.out Tuesday '2009-12-28' '12:22:33'
           Sun Sep  7 06:03:36 CEST 2008
           Call 1 ("Tuesday") succeeded:
               tm_sec   = 36
               tm_min   = 3
               tm_hour  = 6
               tm_mday  = 9
               tm_mon   = 8
               tm_year  = 108
               tm_wday  = 2
               tm_yday  = 252
               tm_isdst = 1
           Call 2 ("2009-12-28") succeeded:
               tm_sec   = 36
               tm_min   = 3
               tm_hour  = 6
               tm_mday  = 28
               tm_mon   = 11
               tm_year  = 109
               tm_wday  = 1
               tm_yday  = 361
               tm_isdst = 0
           Call 3 ("12:22:33") succeeded:
               tm_sec   = 33
               tm_min   = 22
               tm_hour  = 12
               tm_mday  = 7
               tm_mon   = 8
               tm_year  = 108
               tm_wday  = 0
               tm_yday  = 250
               tm_isdst = 1

   Program source

       #define _GNU_SOURCE 500
       #include <time.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>

       int
       main(int argc, char *argv[])
       {
           struct tm *tmp;
           int j;

           for (j = 1; j < argc; j++) {
               tmp = getdate(argv[j]);

               if (tmp == NULL) {
                   printf("Call %d failed; getdate_err = %d\n",
                          j, getdate_err);
                   continue;
               }

               printf("Call %d (\"%s\") succeeded:\n", j, argv[j]);
               printf("    tm_sec   = %d\n", tmp->tm_sec);
               printf("    tm_min   = %d\n", tmp->tm_min);
               printf("    tm_hour  = %d\n", tmp->tm_hour);
               printf("    tm_mday  = %d\n", tmp->tm_mday);
               printf("    tm_mon   = %d\n", tmp->tm_mon);
               printf("    tm_year  = %d\n", tmp->tm_year);
               printf("    tm_wday  = %d\n", tmp->tm_wday);
               printf("    tm_yday  = %d\n", tmp->tm_yday);
               printf("    tm_isdst = %d\n", tmp->tm_isdst);
           }

           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

SEE ALSO

       time(2), localtime(3), setlocale(3), strftime(3), strptime(3)

COLOPHON

       This  page  is  part  of  release 3.54 of the Linux man-pages project.  A description of the project, and
       information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

                                                   2013-06-21                                         GETDATE(3)