3

I have date and time format like this(yearmonthday):

20141105 11:30:00

I need assignment year, month, day, hour and minute values to variable.

I can do it year, day and hour like this:

year=$(awk '{print $1}' log.log | sed 's/^\(....\).*/\1/')
day=$(awk '{print $1}' log.log | sed 's/^.*\(..\).*/\1/')  
hour=$(awk '{print $2}' log.log | sed 's/^\(..\).*/\1/')  

How can I do this for month and minute?

--

And I need that every line of my log file:

20141105 11:30:00 /bla/text.1
20141105 11:35:00 /bla/text.2
20141105 11:40:00 /bla/text.3
.... 

I'm trying read line by line this log file and do this:

mkdir -p "/bla/backup/$year/$month/$day/$hour/$minute"
mv $file "/bla/backup/$year/$month/$day/$hour/$minute"

Here is my not working code:

#!/bin/bash
LOG=/var/log/LOG

while read line
do

year=${line:0:4}
month=${line:4:2}
day=${line:6:2}
hour=${line:9:2}
minute=${line:12:2}
file=$(awk '{print $3}')

if [ -f "$file" ]; then

printf -v path "%s/%s/%s/%s/%s" $year $month $day $hour $minute
mkdir -p "/bla/backup/$path"
mv $file "/bla/backup/$path"

fi
done < $LOG
4
  • What is your end goal, why are they being put in variables ?
    – user3442743
    Nov 5, 2014 at 9:40
  • I need to create path like this -> /bla/2014/11/05/11/30/
    – onur
    Nov 5, 2014 at 9:50
  • where are you getting the date from ?
    – user3442743
    Nov 5, 2014 at 10:04
  • Possible duplicate of Parse Date in Bash May 10, 2016 at 2:02

7 Answers 7

3

You don't need to call out to awk to date at all, use bash's substring operations

d="20141105 11:30:00"
yr=${d:0:4}
mo=${d:4:2}
dy=${d:6:2}
hr=${d:9:2}
mi=${d:12:2}
printf -v dir "/bla/%s/%s/%s/%s/%s/\n" $yr $mo $dy $hr $mi
echo "$dir"
/bla/2014/11/05/11/30/

Or directly, without all the variables.

printf -v dir "/bla/%s/%s/%s/%s/%s/\n" ${d:0:4} ${d:4:2} ${d:6:2} ${d:9:2} ${d:12:2}

Given your log file:

while read -r date time file; do
    d="$date $time"
    printf -v dir "/bla/%s/%s/%s/%s/%s/\n" ${d:0:4} ${d:4:2} ${d:6:2} ${d:9:2} ${d:12:2}
    mkdir -p "$dir"
    mv "$file" "$dir"
done < filename

or, making a big assumption that there are no whitespace or globbing characters in your filenames:

sed -r 's#(....)(..)(..) (..):(..):.. (.*)#mv \6 /blah/\1/\2/\3/\4/\5#' | sh
2
  • How can I do this all line of my log files?
    – onur
    Nov 5, 2014 at 11:52
  • edit your question to show a sample of your log file. Nov 5, 2014 at 14:04
1

date command also do this work

#!/bin/bash
year=$(date  +'%Y' -d'20141105 11:30:00')
day=$(date  +'%d' -d'20141105 11:30:00')
month=$(date  +'%m' -d'20141105 11:30:00')
minutes=$(date  +'%M' -d'20141105 11:30:00')
echo  "$year---$day---$month---$minutes"
1

You can use only one awk

month=$(awk '{print substr($1,5,2)}' log.log)
year=$(awk '{print substr($1,0,4)}' log.log)
minute=$(awk '{print substr($2,4,2)}' log.log)
etc
0
1

I guess you are processing the log file, which each line starts with the date string. You may have already written a loop to handle each line, in your loop, you could do:

d="$(awk '{print $1,$2}' <<<"$line")"
year=$(date -d"$d" +%Y)
month=$(date -d"$d" +%m)
day=$(date -d"$d" +%d)
min=$(date -d"$d" +%M)
1

Don't repeat yourself.

d='20141105 11:30:00'
IFS=' ' read -r year month day min < <(date -d"$d" '+%Y %d %m %M')

echo "year: $year"
echo "month: $month"
echo "day: $day"
echo "min: $min"

The trick is to ask date to output the fields you want, separated by a character (here a space), to put this character in IFS and ask read to do the splitting for you. Like so, you're only executing date once and only spawn one subshell.

If the date comes from the first line of the file log.log, here's how you can assign it to the variable d:

IFS= read -r d < log.log
1
eval "$( 
   echo '20141105 11:30:00' \
    | sed 'G;s/\(....\)\(..\)\(..\) \(..\):\(..\):\(..\) *\(.\)/Year=\1\7Month=\2\7Day=\3\7Hour=\4\7Min=\5\7Sec=\6/'
    )"

pass via a assignation string to evaluate. You could easily adapt to also check the content by replacing dot per more specific pattern like [0-5][0-9] for min and sec, ...

posix version so --posix on GNU sed

1

I wrote a function that I usually cut and paste into my script files

function getdate()
{
  local a
  a=(`date "+%Y %m %d %H %M %S" | sed -e 's/ / /'`)
  year=${a[0]}
  month=${a[1]}
  day=${a[2]}
  hour=${a[3]}
  minute=${a[4]}
  sec=${a[5]}
}

in the script file, on a line of it's own

getdate

echo "year=$year,month=$month,day=$day,hour=$hour,minute=$minute,second=$sec"

Of course, you can modify what I provided or use answer [6] above. The function takes no arguments.

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