Given the constraints of the system in question, and my inability to access anything akin to it, I'm uncertain whether this might work, however one possible solution that doesn't use perl
or stat
(1) might be to use awk:
At least in a modern GNU Awk, one can get a time that's "30 minutes ago" with the following:
awk 'END {print strftime("%Y%m%d%H%M.%S", systime()-1800)}' < /dev/null
One could then plug that in to touch
to make a file that's marked as being 30 minutes old, and then use the -ot
or -nt
options of test
(or [
/]
). Putting things together for a simple test case, one might try:
#!/bin/sh
touch -t "`awk 'END {print strftime("%Y%m%d%H%M.%S", systime()-1800)}' < /dev/null`" .30minutes
if [ ! -f testfile ]; then
echo "please create testfile before testing."
elif [ testfile -nt .30minutes ]; then
echo "testfile is newer than 30 minutes old"
else
echo "testfile is 30 minutes old or older"
fi
This works for me on a modern Ubuntu machine. Whether it would work with the /bin/sh
and touch
and test
of an Interactive Unix system, I leave as an exercise to those who have access to such a system.
use File::stat; print "Older" if (time - stat($file)->mtime) > 60*30;