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I'm trying to run the time command for a file on a virtual machine running Fedora 19 64-bit and I get the message "/usr/bin/time: No such file or directory". I tried googling, but it appears it's something that I should already have. How do I get this on my computer?

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  • If an answer solved your problem, make sure you mark it as the accepted answer :-) Aug 11, 2017 at 19:02

3 Answers 3

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For those on a raspberry pi or similar debian-based distributions, I found that I could install the package time (sudo apt install time) to obtain access to the time command.

Edit: For Fedora-based systems, the package name might be different. Try a dnf search time, followed by a sudo dnf install {package_name}. I don't have a Fedora machine immediately to hand to get the exact package name from.

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    On my Ubuntu machine I was able to install time only after running sudo apt-get update
    – Anatoly
    Oct 14, 2019 at 9:53
  • "dnf install time" worked for me on rocky9. Jan 28 at 13:25
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bash/zsh/modern shells usually implement a basic time command as a builtin. So it won't exist on the filesystem, but time mycommand should work.

If you want the "proper" time command (with more options eg: -l/-v), then you'll need to install it via apt/yum/etc. You'll need to run it as /usr/bin/time mycommand so the shell-builtin doesn't get invoked.

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It might be in other locations. I'd start by typing:

which time

This command will give you the path to time, if it's anywhere in your path.

If you need to build it yourself, you can get the source here:

http://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Time

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  • I downloaded it and followed the instructions in the INSTALL file, but I got an error: "/usr/bin/install: cannot create regular file 'usr/local/bin/time': Permission denied make: *** [install-binPrograms] Error 1" I also tried running the "which time" command, but the output was "which: no time in " followed by a directory in parenthesis. Nov 29, 2013 at 4:13
  • Your system administrator seems to have blocked you from installing. Install with sudo if you can. Otherwise, you're going to need to contact your sysadmin to give you permissions to do this.
    – russellm
    Nov 29, 2013 at 4:21
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    But, would it be the same than /usr/bin/time? Referencing this answer to one of my questions, at least in Debian-based distros, /usr/bin/time is not exactly the same than the time available in environment PATH...
    – SebasSBM
    Mar 20, 2019 at 7:56

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