For a POSIX compatible method you can make a temporary file with touch
, using the time from date
, after subtracting one hour with awk
, and use find
's -newer
operand to compare files with the temporary file.
TIME=`date "+%Y %m %d %H %M" | awk '
BEGIN{split("31 28 31 30 31 30 31 31 30 31 30 31",M)}
{
if ($4 == 0) { # hour underflow
if ($3 == 1) { # day underflow
if ($2 == 1) { # month underflow
$1--;
$2 = 12;
} else $2--;
if ($1 % 4 == 0 && $2 == 2) $3 = 29; # leap year
else $3 = M[$2];
} else $3--;
$4 = 23;
} else $4--;
printf "%04u%02u%02u%02u%02u\n", $1, $2, $3, $4, $5;
}'`
touch -t "$TIME" some-temporary-file
find . -type f -newer some-temporary-file
rm some-temporary-file
To get a temporary file name you can use a utility such as mktemp
, you can specify a file, or you can append random numbers to a file name.
Quite a few versions of find
have the -mmin
extension, or something like it.
find . -type f -mmin -60
Some versions of date
have a variable output.
FILE=`mktemp -t one-hour-ago-`
touch -t `date -v -1h +%Y%m%d%H%M` "$FILE"
find . -type f -newer "$FILE"
rm "$FILE"
And some versions of touch
have adjustment flags.
FILE=`mktemp -t one-hour-ago-`
touch "$FILE"
touch -A -010000 "$FILE"
find . -type f -newer "$FILE"
rm "$FILE"
find --version
could be a good thing. Perhaps you are not using the proper find command.