224

How can I print the date which is a day before current time in Bash?

5
  • Tried date but seems like there is no -d switch in Solaris 10's bash
    – conandor
    Commented Nov 10, 2009 at 19:43
  • I found another great solution by installing gnu date (coreutil package) from sunfreeware.
    – conandor
    Commented Jul 9, 2010 at 6:12
  • nor is there a -d switch in AIX's date
    – frankster
    Commented Nov 19, 2012 at 15:22
  • The --date or -d option is only available in GNU date Commented Nov 27, 2012 at 14:27
  • See stackoverflow.com/q/15374752/462865 for a DST-safe version of this question. Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 12:35

19 Answers 19

324

if you have GNU date and i understood you correctly

$ date +%Y:%m:%d -d "yesterday"
2009:11:09

or

$ date +%Y:%m:%d -d "1 day ago"
2009:11:09
7
  • 2
    I found most are as suggested answer but -d switch is not found in Solaris's date
    – conandor
    Commented Nov 11, 2009 at 4:30
  • 3
    For the usage on Ubuntu with date function: $(date +%Y:%m:%d -d "1 day ago"), output is: 2013:04:21. And if you want the date 10 days before, you can use $(date +%Y:%m:%d -d "10 days ago") or $(date +%Y:%m:%d -d "10 day ago")
    – zhihong
    Commented Apr 22, 2013 at 16:08
  • On OS X you can install coreutils through brew: see stackoverflow.com/questions/15374752/…
    – kasterma
    Commented Jun 4, 2014 at 8:30
  • 18
    date -v-1d on OSX (minus), -v+1d (plus)
    – bgs
    Commented Feb 26, 2016 at 0:17
  • 3
    This bash function will work on both Linux and OSX. Basically it tries the GNU Linux style first. If that fails it tries the OSX style. Call it with an argument of the number of days in the past you want the date. If you pass no argument it assume 0 days. This code is a one-liner, so cut and paste should work -- no line endings assumed. date_days_past () { days_past=${1:-0}; if ! date -v-${days_past}d +%Y%m%d 2>/dev/null; then date --date="-${days_past} day" +%Y%m%d; fi } Commented May 16, 2016 at 21:29
62

If you have BSD (OSX) date you can do it like this:

date -j -v-1d
Wed Dec 14 15:34:14 CET 2011

Or if you want to do date calculations on an arbitrary date:

date -j -v-1d -f "%Y-%m-%d" "2011-09-01" "+%Y-%m-%d"
2011-08-31
51
date --date='-1 day'
2
  • 4
    Erros on macOS Sierra: date: illegal option -- -
    – kuanb
    Commented May 3, 2017 at 20:33
  • 3
    You need to install the GNU version of date, available through the coreutils package, to make this syntax work on macOS. If you're using Homebrew, you can install it via brew install coreutils, after which you should be able to use GNU date through the gdate command. See: topbug.net/blog/2013/04/14/…
    – sumitsu
    Commented Feb 16, 2018 at 19:56
30

MAC OSX

For yesterday's date:

date -v-1d +%F

where 1d defines current day minus 1 day. Similarly,

date -v-1w +%F - for previous week date

date -v-1m +%F - for previous month date

IF YOU HAVE GNU DATE,

date --date="1 day ago"

More info: https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-unix-get-yesterdays-tomorrows-date.html

8

Advanced Bash-scripting Guide

date +%Y:%m:%d -d "yesterday"

For details about the date format see the man page for date

date --date='-1 day'
8

Sorry not mentioning I on Solaris system. As such, the -date switch is not available on Solaris bash.

I find out I can get the previous date with little trick on timezone.

DATE=`TZ=MYT+16 date +%Y-%m-%d_%r`
echo $DATE
3
  • 1
    This method is not 100% reliable (about 98% actually) if you happen to live in a place using daylight saving time.
    – jlliagre
    Commented Nov 18, 2011 at 7:31
  • Not exactly, you can use bash $(TZ=America/New_York date +%Y-%m-%d)
    – phray2002
    Commented Jul 24, 2019 at 4:28
  • See stackoverflow.com/a/21283578/2089784 for a DST-safe version Commented Oct 2, 2022 at 10:39
8

Well this is a late answer,but this seems to work!!

     YESTERDAY=`TZ=GMT+24 date +%d-%m-%Y`;
     echo $YESTERDAY;
7
date -d "yesterday" '+%Y-%m-%d'

or

date=$(date -d "yesterday" '+%Y-%m-%d')
echo $date
1
  • 1
    That results in date: illegal option: -d on Solaris. Your answer that relies on non-portable GNU extensions to the POSIX-standard date utility for a question about the non-GNU Solaris platform. Commented Jan 19, 2020 at 16:57
4

Use Perl instead perhaps?

perl -e 'print scalar localtime( time - 86400 ) . "\n";'

Or, use nawk and (ab)use /usr/bin/adb:

nawk 'BEGIN{printf "0t%d=Y\n", srand()-86400}' | adb

Came across this too ... insane!

/usr/bin/truss /usr/bin/date 2>&1 | nawk -F= '/^time\(\)/ {gsub(/ /,"",$2);printf "0t%d=Y\n", $2-86400}' | adb
4

date --date='-1 day'

3

Not very sexy but might do the job:

perl -e 'my ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) = localtime(time - 86400);$year += 1900; $mon+= 1; printf ("YESTERDAY: %04d%02d%02d \n", $year, $mon, $mday)'

Formated from "martin clayton" answer.

3

short answer (GNU format):

date +%Y-%m-%d -d "-2 day"

if you are using OSX, but you need create for GNU compatible, install coreutils first

brew install coreutils

then edit your profile with:

#gnu coreutils first
export PATH="/usr/local/opt/coreutils/libexec/gnubin:$PATH"

re-start your terminal, and now you able to use GNU format!

2

You could do a simple calculation, pimped with an regex, if the chosen date format is 'YYYYMM':

echo $(($(date +"%Y%m") - 1)) | sed -e 's/99$/12/'

In January of 2020 it will return 201912 ;-) But, it's only a workaround, when date does not have calculation options and other dateinterpreter options (e.g. using perl) not available ;-)

1
yesterday=`date -d "-1 day" %F`

Puts yesterday's date in YYYY-MM-DD format into variable $yesterday.

1
#!/bin/bash
OFFSET=1;
eval `date "+day=%d; month=%m; year=%Y"`
# Subtract offset from day, if it goes below one use 'cal'
# to determine the number of days in the previous month.
day=`expr $day - $OFFSET`
if [ $day -le 0 ] ;then
month=`expr $month - 1`
if [ $month -eq 0 ] ;then
year=`expr $year - 1`
month=12
fi
set `cal $month $year`
xday=${$#}
day=`expr $xday + $day`
fi
echo $year-$month-$day
4
  • +1 for correction, interesting method, even though it's a bit verbose. Commented Nov 10, 2009 at 10:31
  • 1
    Hi medoix, I am not able to find the meaning of ${$#}. I know that $# stands for the number of arguments to a script/function. But I am not able to relate to this. Please help.
    – Karthick S
    Commented Feb 1, 2012 at 8:25
  • This doesn't work for the previus day on change of month . For example today is 1 July , 2013 , the result being printed out is 2013-6-1347, whereas the expected result is 2013-6-30
    – misguided
    Commented Jun 30, 2013 at 22:57
  • Instead of the 3 lines between the "fi" try "day=echo $(cal $month $year)|tr ' ' '\n'|tail -n 1" Commented Jul 10, 2013 at 10:18
1

DST aware solution:

Manipulating the Timezone is possible for changing the clock some hours. Due to the daylight saving time, 24 hours ago can be today or the day before yesterday.

You are sure that yesterday is 20 or 30 hours ago. Which one? Well, the most recent one that is not today.

echo -e "$(TZ=GMT+30 date +%Y-%m-%d)\n$(TZ=GMT+20 date +%Y-%m-%d)" | grep -v $(date +%Y-%m-%d) | tail -1

The -e parameter used in the echo command is needed with bash, but will not work with ksh. In ksh you can use the same command without the -e flag.

When your script will be used in different environments, you can start the script with #!/bin/ksh or #!/bin/bash. You could also replace the \n by a newline:

echo "$(TZ=GMT+30 date +%Y-%m-%d)
$(TZ=GMT+20 date +%Y-%m-%d)" | grep -v $(date +%Y-%m-%d) | tail -1
0

Try the below code , which takes care of the DST part as well.

if [ $(date +%w) -eq $(date -u +%w) ]; then
  tz=$(( 10#$gmthour - 10#$localhour ))
else
  tz=$(( 24 - 10#$gmthour + 10#$localhour ))
fi
echo $tz
myTime=`TZ=GMT+$tz date +'%Y%m%d'`

Courtsey Ansgar Wiechers

0

For my case I needed a portable solution to get the number of seconds since the epoch one hour ago, and this worked on both ubuntu and macOS:

$(( $(date +%s) - 3600 ))

Explaining this:

  • $(( )) is doing an arithmetic expansion
  • date +%s seems to be a portable way to get seconds since epoch
  • 3600 seconds in an hour

Hope this helps!

-2
date +%Y:%m:%d|awk -vFS=":" -vOFS=":" '{$3=$3-1;print}'
2009:11:9
1
  • What about if today is the 1st January? Commented Nov 10, 2009 at 21:42

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