117

A="2002-20-10"
B="2003-22-11"

How to find the difference in days between two dates?

2
  • 10
    As explained below, but your dates are the wrong way round: they need to be yyyy-mm-dd Nov 8, 2017 at 9:12
  • 1
    Many answers use the -d option of (GNU-)date. I want to add that this is NOT a part of POSIX date, therefore less portable. As long as the OP is not working on Unix distributions like Solaris, but only "common Linux", he or she should be good tho. A respective tag would help imho.
    – Cadoiz
    Jun 4, 2020 at 17:45

27 Answers 27

87

The bash way - convert the dates into %y%m%d format and then you can do this straight from the command line:

echo $(( ($(date --date="031122" +%s) - $(date --date="021020" +%s) )/(60*60*24) ))
7
  • 12
    This doesn't necessarily need the dates to be in %y%m%d format. E.g. gnu date will accept the %Y-%m-%d format the OP used. In general, ISO-8601 is a good choice (and the OP's format is one such format). Formats with 2 digit years are better avoided.
    – mc0e
    Jun 16, 2015 at 11:52
  • 8
    For the difference from today, one may like to use days_diff=$(( (`date -d $B +%s` - `date -d "00:00" +%s`) / (24*3600) )). note that $days_diff will be an integer (i.e. no decimals)
    – Julien
    Jan 7, 2016 at 10:41
  • 1
    This is dependent on the variant of date installed. It works for GNU date. It doesn't work with POSIX date. This probably isn't a problem for most readers, but it's worth noting.
    – mc0e
    Mar 1, 2018 at 15:01
  • If you really want POSIX portability, check this: unix.stackexchange.com/a/7220/43835
    – mc0e
    Mar 1, 2018 at 15:05
  • 3
    Just to combat confusion: OP's format is not %Y-%m-%d, until we introduce August 2.0 and October 2.0 OP's format is %Y-%d-%m. Relevant xkcd: xkcd.com/1179
    – confetti
    Aug 14, 2019 at 17:56
63

If you have GNU date, it allows to print the representation of an arbitrary date (-d option). In this case convert the dates to seconds since EPOCH, subtract and divide by 24*3600.

Example using GNU date (from https://stackoverflow.com/a/9008871/215713):

let DIFF=($(date +%s -d 20210131)-$(date +%s -d 20210101))/86400
echo $DIFF
30

This also works with dates in other formats, for example "2021-01-31".

Other answers suggest ways to do it that don't require GNU date.

7
  • 1
    @Tree: I believe there is no portable way to subtract dates short of implementing it yourself — it's not that hard, the only thing of interest are leap years. But nowadays everyone wants to subtract dates, as it seems: Have a look at unix.stackexchange.com/questions/1825/… :)
    – user332325
    Feb 9, 2011 at 20:29
  • 18
    For lazyweb's sake, I think this is what user332325 meant: echo "( `date -d $B +%s` - `date -d $A +%s`) / (24*3600)" | bc -l May 6, 2015 at 16:43
  • 2
    What does portable mean in this context?
    – htellez
    Feb 20, 2016 at 0:22
  • 1
    @htellez something that works on multiple platforms (windows, linux etc..)
    – Anubis
    Feb 28, 2018 at 12:50
  • For bash one liner based on this answer see: stackoverflow.com/a/49728059/1485527
    – jschnasse
    Apr 9, 2018 at 8:08
35

tl;dr

date_diff=$(( ($(date -d "2015-03-11 UTC" +%s) - $(date -d "2015-03-05 UTC" +%s)) / (60*60*24) ))

Watch out! Many of the bash solutions here are broken for date ranges which span the date when daylight savings time begins (where applicable). This is because the $(( math )) construct does a 'floor'/truncation operation on the resulting value, returning only the whole number. Let me illustrate:

DST started March 8th this year in the US, so let's use a date range spanning that:

start_ts=$(date -d "2015-03-05" '+%s')
end_ts=$(date -d "2015-03-11" '+%s')

Let's see what we get with the double parentheses:

echo $(( ( end_ts - start_ts )/(60*60*24) ))

Returns '5'.

Doing this using 'bc' with more accuracy gives us a different result:

echo "scale=2; ( $end_ts - $start_ts )/(60*60*24)" | bc

Returns '5.95' - the missing 0.05 being the lost hour from the DST switchover.

So how should this be done correctly?
I would suggest using this instead:

printf "%.0f" $(echo "scale=2; ( $end_ts - $start_ts )/(60*60*24)" | bc)

Here, the 'printf' rounds the more accurate result calculated by 'bc', giving us the correct date range of '6'.

Edit: highlighting the answer in a comment from @hank-schultz below, which I have been using lately:

date_diff=$(( ($(date -d "2015-03-11 UTC" +%s) - $(date -d "2015-03-05 UTC" +%s) )/(60*60*24) ))

This should also be leap second safe as long as you always subtract the earlier date from the later one, since leap seconds will only ever add to the difference - truncation effectively rounds down to the correct result.

7
  • 9
    If instead, you specify the timezone for both the start and the end (and make sure they are the same), then you also no longer have this problem, like so: echo $(( ($(date --date="2015-03-11 UTC" +%s) - $(date --date="2015-03-05 UTC" +%s) )/(60*60*24) )), which returns 6, instead of 5. Jun 23, 2015 at 20:40
  • 1
    Ah, one of the answerers thought about the inaccuracies of the basic solution repeated by others in variants. Thumbs up! How about leap seconds? It is leap-second-safe? There are precedents of software returning off-by-one-day result if run at certain times, ref problems associated with the leap second. Nov 20, 2015 at 12:29
  • Woops, the "wrong" computation you give as example correctly returns 6 here (Ubuntu 15.04 AMD64, GNU date version 8.23). Perhaps your example is timezone-dependant? My timezone is "Europe/Paris". Nov 20, 2015 at 12:34
  • Same good result for the "wrong" computation with GNU date 2.0 on MSYS, same timezone. Nov 20, 2015 at 12:35
  • 1
    @StéphaneGourichon, your timezone's daylight savings change looks to have happened on March 29, 2015 - so try a date range which includes that.
    – evan_b
    Dec 4, 2015 at 22:22
21

And in python

$python -c "from datetime import date; print (date(2003,11,22)-date(2002,10,20)).days"
398
4
  • 2
    @mouviciel not really. Python is not always present.
    – mc0e
    Jun 16, 2015 at 11:57
  • 3
    @mc0e in that context, nothing is always present
    – Anubis
    Feb 28, 2018 at 12:53
  • 8
    @Anubis the OP specified tags as bash and shell, so I think we can assume that we're talking about a *nix system. Within such systems, echo and date are reliably present, but python is not.
    – mc0e
    Mar 1, 2018 at 14:53
  • 2
    @mc0e yeah that makes sense. Even-though python2 is available in most *nix systems, when it comes to low-end devices (embedded etc..) we will have to survive only with primary tools.
    – Anubis
    Mar 2, 2018 at 10:06
20

This works for me:

A="2002-10-20"
B="2003-11-22"
echo $(( ($(date -d $B +%s) - $(date -d $A +%s)) / 86400 )) days

Prints

398 days

What is happening?

  1. Provide valid time string in A and B
  2. Use date -d to handle time strings
  3. Use date %s to convert time strings to seconds since 1970 (unix epoche)
  4. Use bash parameter expansion to subtract seconds
  5. divide by seconds per day (86400=60*60*24) to get difference as days
  6. ! DST is not taken into account ! See this answer at unix.stackexchange!
6
  • This answer does not work on macOS with Bash 5.1: bash: ( - ) / 86400 : syntax error: operand expected (error token is ") / 86400 ") Jun 10, 2021 at 8:22
  • Sorry to hear that. Maybe remove the whitespace to )/86400 does fix it?
    – jschnasse
    Jun 10, 2021 at 18:24
  • Sorry, it appears I pasted the wrong error message. The real problem is that on macOS, date -d sets the kernel's value for daylight saving time. It does not accept a date in that position. Jun 16, 2021 at 20:30
  • Maybe use -jf instead? If it works, I would add that variant to my answer. Initally I posted my answer because most of the others didn´t explain why they use certain parameters. Also the info about DST I referenced in the link was not prominent available. So my claim is not to provide a plattform independent solution. But together we can work towards that.
    – jschnasse
    Jun 17, 2021 at 6:28
  • Concerning MacOS and gdate: coreutils is in Homebrew. Just install brew install coreutils and you've got gdate. Maybe worth a try.
    – jschnasse
    Jun 17, 2021 at 12:26
11

Here's the MacOS X / *BSD version for your convenience.

$ A="2002-20-10"; B="2003-22-11";
$ echo $(((`date -jf %Y-%d-%m "$B" +%s` - `date -jf %Y-%d-%m "$A" +%s`)/86400))

nJoy!

5
  • 1
    -bash: ( - )/86400: syntax error: operand expected (error token is ")/86400")
    – cavalcade
    Nov 1, 2016 at 0:56
  • 1
    @cavalcade - that is because you haven't done A="2002-20-10"; B="2003-22-11"
    – RAM237
    Jul 5, 2017 at 13:43
  • Thanks, despite it works for this particular case, I would suggest using echo $(((`date -jf "%Y-%d-%m" "$B" +%s` - `date -jf "%Y-%d-%m" "$A" +%s`)/86400)), i.e. wrapping both formats and variables into double quotes, otherwise may fail on different date format (e.g. %b %d, %Y/Jul 5, 2017)
    – RAM237
    Jul 5, 2017 at 13:46
  • @RAM237 Thats what I get for not paying attention headsmack Well spotted, thanks
    – cavalcade
    May 16, 2018 at 12:54
  • 1
    ... Y-d-m? Oh my God. I thought I'd never see the day.
    – hraban
    Oct 3, 2021 at 15:42
7

If the option -d works in your system, here's another way to do it. There is a caveat that it wouldn't account for leap years since I've considered 365 days per year.

date1yrs=`date -d "20100209" +%Y`
date1days=`date -d "20100209" +%j`
date2yrs=`date +%Y`
date2days=`date +%j`
diffyr=`expr $date2yrs - $date1yrs`
diffyr2days=`expr $diffyr \* 365`
diffdays=`expr $date2days - $date1days`
echo `expr $diffyr2days + $diffdays`
5

Even if you don't have GNU date, you'll probably have Perl installed:

use Time::Local;
sub to_epoch {
  my ($t) = @_; 
  my ($y, $d, $m) = ($t =~ /(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})/);
  return timelocal(0, 0, 0, $d+0, $m-1, $y-1900);
}
sub diff_days {
  my ($t1, $t2) = @_; 
  return (abs(to_epoch($t2) - to_epoch($t1))) / 86400;
}
print diff_days("2002-20-10", "2003-22-11"), "\n";

This returns 398.041666666667 -- 398 days and one hour due to daylight savings.


The question came back up on my feed. Here's a more concise method using a Perl bundled module

days=$(perl -MDateTime -le '
    sub parse_date { 
        @f = split /-/, shift;
        return DateTime->new(year=>$f[0], month=>$f[2], day=>$f[1]); 
    }
    print parse_date(shift)->delta_days(parse_date(shift))->in_units("days");
' $A $B)
echo $days   # => 398
4

Here's my working approach using zsh. Tested on OSX:

# Calculation dates
## A random old date
START_DATE="2015-11-15"
## Today's date
TODAY=$(date +%Y-%m-%d)

# Import zsh date mod
zmodload zsh/datetime

# Calculate number of days
DIFF=$(( ( $(strftime -r %Y-%m-%d $TODAY) - $(strftime -r %Y-%m-%d $START_DATE) ) / 86400 ))
echo "Your value: " $DIFF

Result:

Your value:  1577

Basically, we use strftime reverse (-r) feature to transform our date string back to a timestamp, then we make our calculation.

3

Command line bash solution

echo $((($(date +%s -d 20210131)-$(date +%s -d 20210101))/86400)) days

will print

30 days
2

Using mysql command

$ echo "select datediff('2013-06-20 18:12:54+08:00', '2013-05-30 18:12:54+08:00');"  | mysql -N

Result: 21

NOTE: Only the date parts of the values are used in the calculation

Reference: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.6/en/date-and-time-functions.html#function_datediff

2

This is the simplest i managed to get working on centos 7:

OLDDATE="2018-12-31"
TODAY=$(date -d $(date +%Y-%m-%d) '+%s')
LINUXDATE=$(date -d "$OLDDATE" '+%s')
DIFFDAYS=$(( ($TODAY - $LINUXDATE) / (60*60*24) ))

echo $DIFFDAYS
2

If you have datediff command (for example dateutils package in some Linux distributions),

datediff 2003-11-22 2002-10-20

This gives an integer as number of days (398). The input should conform to some standard date like ISO format: YYYY-MM-DD

1

I'd submit another possible solution in Ruby. Looks like it's the be smallest and cleanest looking one so far:

A=2003-12-11
B=2002-10-10
DIFF=$(ruby -rdate -e "puts Date.parse('$A') - Date.parse('$B')")
echo $DIFF
2
  • 2
    He is looking for a way in bash.
    – Cojones
    Mar 7, 2012 at 11:26
  • 2
    There is no portable way to do it in shell itself. All alternatives use particular external programs (i.e. GNU date or some scripting language) and I honestly think that Ruby is a good way to go here. This solution is very short and does not use any non-standard libraries or other dependencies. In fact, I think that there's a higher chance of having Ruby installed than one would have GNU date installed.
    – GreyCat
    Mar 8, 2012 at 21:14
1

Another Python version:

python -c "from datetime import date; print date(2003, 11, 22).toordinal() - date(2002, 10, 20).toordinal()"
1

Use the shell functions from http://cfajohnson.com/shell/ssr/ssr-scripts.tar.gz; they work in any standard Unix shell.

date1=2012-09-22
date2=2013-01-31
. date-funcs-sh
_date2julian "$date1"
jd1=$_DATE2JULIAN
_date2julian "$date2"
echo $(( _DATE2JULIAN - jd1 ))

See the documentation at http://cfajohnson.com/shell/ssr/08-The-Dating-Game.shtml

1

on unix you should have GNU dates installed. you do not need to deviate from bash. here is the strung out solution considering days, just to show the steps. it can be simplified and extended to full dates.

DATE=$(echo `date`)
DATENOW=$(echo `date -d "$DATE" +%j`)
DATECOMING=$(echo `date -d "20131220" +%j`)
THEDAY=$(echo `expr $DATECOMING - $DATENOW`)

echo $THEDAY 
1

This assumes that a month is 1/12 of a year:

#!/usr/bin/awk -f
function mktm(datespec) {
  split(datespec, q, "-")
  return q[1] * 365.25 + q[3] * 365.25 / 12 + q[2]
}
BEGIN {
  printf "%d\n", mktm(ARGV[2]) - mktm(ARGV[1])
}
0

Give this a try:

perl -e 'use Date::Calc qw(Delta_Days); printf "%d\n", Delta_Days(2002,10,20,2003,11,22);'
0

Assume we rsync Oracle DB backups to a tertiary disk manually. Then we want to delete old backups on that disk. So here is a small bash script:

#!/bin/sh

for backup_dir in {'/backup/cmsprd/local/backupset','/backup/cmsprd/local/autobackup','/backup/cfprd/backupset','/backup/cfprd/autobackup'}
do

    for f in `find $backup_dir -type d -regex '.*_.*_.*' -printf "%f\n"`
    do

        f2=`echo $f | sed -e 's/_//g'`
        days=$(((`date "+%s"` - `date -d "${f2}" "+%s"`)/86400))

        if [ $days -gt 30 ]; then
            rm -rf $backup_dir/$f
        fi

    done

done

Modify the dirs and retention period ("30 days") to suit your needs.

1
  • Oracle puts backup sets in Flash Recovery Area using format like 'YYYY_MM_DD' so we delete the underscores for passing it to 'date -d' Feb 18, 2013 at 8:52
0

For MacOS sierra (maybe from Mac OS X yosemate),

To get epoch time(Seconds from 1970) from a file, and save it to a var: old_dt=`date -j -r YOUR_FILE "+%s"`

To get epoch time of current time new_dt=`date -j "+%s"`

To calculate difference of above two epoch time (( diff = new_dt - old_dt ))

To check if diff is more than 23 days (( new_dt - old_dt > (23*86400) )) && echo Is more than 23 days

0
echo $(date +%d/%h/%y) date_today
echo " The other date is 1970/01/01"
TODAY_DATE="1970-01-01"
BEFORE_DATE=$(date +%d%h%y)
echo "THE DIFFERNS IS " $(( ($(date -d $BEFORE_DATE +%s) - $(date -d $TODAY_DATE +%s)) )) SECOUND

use it to get your date today and your sec since the date you want. if you want it with days just divide it with 86400

echo $(date +%d/%h/%y) date_today
echo " The other date is 1970/01/01"
TODAY_DATE="1970-01-01"
BEFORE_DATE=$(date +%d%h%y)
echo "THE DIFFERNS IS " $(( ($(date -d $BEFORE_DATE +%s) - $(date -d $TODAY_DATE +%s))/ 86400)) SECOUND
0

Instead of hard coding the expiration to a set amount of days when generating self-signed certificates, I wanted to have them expire just before the Y2k38 problem kicks in (on 19 January 2028). But, OpenSSL only allow the expiration to be set using -days, which is the number of days from the current date. I ended up using this:

openssl req -newkey rsa -new -x509 \
  -days $((( $((2**31)) - $(date +%s))/86400-1)) \
  -nodes -out new.crt -keyout new.key -subj '/CN=SAML_SP/'
0

for zsh (Only works if dates in the same year)

echo $(($(date -d "today" +%j) - $(date -d "08 Jan 2021" +%j) )) days
0

Using postgresql psql command

$ echo "select '2003-2-11'::date - '2002-2-10'::date;" | psql -A -t

Result: 366


If you want to display the accompanying unit of time in words, you could use the age function:
$ echo "select age('2003-2-11'::date, '2002-2-10'::date);" | psql -A -t

Result: 1 year 1 day

0
pip install diffdate
diffdate 10-20-2002 11-22-2003
0

One may encounter issues with local date format. The following worked for me just fine.

$ START_TIME=$(date --rfc-3339=ns --utc)
$ echo "Starting at $(date --date="$START_TIME")"
$ sleep 5
$ END_TIME=$(date --rfc-3339=ns --utc)
$ TIME_DIFF=$(( $(date --date="$END_TIME" +%s) - $(date --date="$START_TIME" +%s) ))
$ echo "Finished at $(date --date="$END_TIME")"
$ echo "DONE in $(date --date="@$TIME_DIFF" --utc +%T)"

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