parsedate(3) - NetBSD Manual Pages

PARSEDATE(3)            NetBSD Library Functions Manual           PARSEDATE(3)


NAME
parsedate -- date parsing function
LIBRARY
System Utilities Library (libutil, -lutil)
SYNOPSIS
#include <util.h> time_t parsedate(const char *datestr, const time_t *time, const int *tzoff);
DESCRIPTION
The parsedate() function parses a date and time from datestr described in English relative to an optional time point, and an optional timezone off- set (in minutes behind/west of UTC) specified in tzoff. If time is NULL then the current time is used. If tzoff is NULL, then the current time zone is used. The datestr is a sequence of white-space separated items. The white- space is optional if the concatenated items are not ambiguous. The string contains data which can specify a base time (used in conjunction with the time parameter, totally replacing that parameter's value if suf- ficient data appears in datestr to do so), and data specifying an offset from the base time. Both of those are optional. If no data specifies the base time, then parsedate simply uses the value given by *time (or now). If there is no offset data then no offset is applied. An empty datestr, or a datestr containing nothing but whitespace, is equivalent to midnight at the start of the day specified by *time (or today). The following words have the indicated numeric meanings: last = -1, this = 0, first, next, or one = 1, second is unused so that it is not confused with ``seconds'', two = 2, third or three = 3, fourth or four = 4, fifth or five = 5, sixth or six = 6, seventh or seven = 7, eighth or eight = 8, ninth or nine = 9, tenth or ten = 10, eleventh or eleven = 11, twelfth or twelve = 12. The following words are recognized in English only: AM, PM, a.m., p.m., midnight, mn, noon. The months: january, february, march, april, may, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, and common abbreviations for them. When a month name (or its ordinal number) is given, the number of some particular day of that month is required to accompany it. This is generally true of any data that specifies a period with a duration longer than a day, so simply specifying a year, or a month, is invalid, as also is specifying a year and a month. The days of the week: sunday, monday, tuesday, wednesday, thursday, friday, saturday, and common abbreviations for them. Weekday names are typically ignored if any other data is given to specify the date, even if the name given is not the day on which the specified date occurred. Time units: year, month, fortnight, week, day, hour, minute, min, second, sec, tomorrow, yesterday. Timezone names: gmt (+0000), ut (+0000), utc (+0000), wet (+0000), bst (+0100), wat (-0100), at (-0200), nft (-0330), nst (-0330), ndt (-0230), ast (-0400), adt (-0300), est (-0500), edt (-0400), cst (-0600), cdt (-0500), mst (-0700), mdt (-0600), pst (-0800), pdt (-0700), yst (-0900), ydt (-0800), hst (-1000), hdt (-0900), cat (-1000), ahst (-1000), nt (-1100), idlw (-1200), cet (+0100), met (+0100), mewt (+0100), mest (+0200), swt (+0100), sst (+0200), fwt (+0100), fst (+0200), eet (+0200), bt (+0300), it (+0330), ist (+0530), ict (+0700), wast (+0800), wadt (+0900), awst (+0800), awdt (+0900), cct (+0800), sgt (+0800), hkt (+0800), jst (+0900), cast (+0930), cadt (+1030), acst (+0930), acdt (+1030), east (+1000), eadt (+1100), aest (+1000), aedt (+1100), gst (+1000), nzt (+1200), nzst (+1200), nzdt (+1300), idle (+1200). The timezone names simply specify an offset from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) and do not imply validating the time/date to be reasonable in any zone that happens to use the abbreviation specified. A variety of unambiguous dates are recognized: 9/10/69 For years between 69-99 we assume 1900+ and for years between 0-68 we assume 2000+. 2006-11-17 An ISO-8601 date. Note that when using the ISO-8601 format date and time with the `T' designator to separate date and time-of-day, this must appear at the start of the input string, with no preceding whitespace. Other modifiers may optionally follow. 67-09-10 The year in an ISO-8601 date is always taken literally, so this is the year 67, not 2067. 10/1/2000 October 1, 2000; the common, but bizarre, US format. 20 Jun 1994 23jun2001 1-sep-06 Other common abbreviations. 1/11 The year can be omitted. A missing year is taken from the *time value, or ``now'' if time is NULL. Again, this is the US month/day format (the 11th of January). Standard e-mail (RFC822, RFC2822, etc) formats and the output from date(1), and asctime(3) are all supported as input, as is cvs date format (where years < 100 are treated as 20th century). Times can also be specified in common forms: 10:01 10:12pm 12:11:01.000012 12:21-0500 Fractions of seconds (after a decimal point, or comma) are parsed, but ignored. If no time is given, midnight on the specified date is assumed. If a time is given without a date, that time on the day specified by *time (or now) is used. Missing minutes, or seconds, are taken to be zero. A variety of forms for relative items to specify an offset from the base time are also supported: -1 month last friday one week ago this thursday next sunday +2 years Note that, as a special case for midnight with the name of a day only, ``midnight tuesday'' implies 00:00 at the beginning of Tuesday, (the midnight before Tuesday) whereas ``Sat mn'' implies 00:00 at the end of Saturday (midnight after Saturday) (i.e. early Sunday morning). Seconds since epoch, UTC, (also known as UNIX time) are also supported to specify the base time: E.g.: @735275209 to specify: Tue Apr 20 03:06:49 UTC 1993 provided that the value given is within the range that can be represented as a struct tm. Negative values (times before the epoch) are permitted, but no other significant data as part of the base time - the value given specifies year, month, day, hour, minute, and second, there is no more. An offset from this base time may still be included. Thus ``@735275209 +2 months 5 hours 15 minutes'' produces a time_t which represents ``Sun Jun 20 08:21:49 UTC 1993''. Text in datestr enclosed in parentheses `(' and `)' is treated as a com- ment, and ignored. Parentheses nest (the comment ends when there have been the same number of closing parentheses as there were opening paren- theses.) There is no escape character in comments, `)' always ends (or decreases the nesting level of) the comment.
RETURN VALUES
parsedate() returns the number of seconds passed since, or before (if negative,) the Epoch, or -1 if the date could not be parsed properly. A non-error result of -1 can be distinguished from an error by setting errno to 0 before calling parsedate(), and checking the value of errno afterwards.
ENVIRONMENT
If the tzoff parameter is given as NULL, then: TZ The timezone to which the input is relative, when no zone informa- tion is otherwise specified in the datestr input.
SEE ALSO
date(1), touch(1), errno(2), ctime(3), eeprom(8)
HISTORY
The parser used in parsedate() was originally written by Steven M. Bellovin while at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. It was later tweaked by a couple of people on Usenet. Completely overhauled by Rich $alz and Jim Berets in August, 1990. Further mangled during its residence with NetBSD. The parsedate() function first appeared in NetBSD 4.0.
BUGS
1 The parsedate() function is not re-entrant or thread-safe. 2 The parsedate() function assumes years less than 0 mean - year, and in non ISO formats, that years less than 69 mean 2000 + year, otherwise years less than 100 mean 1900 + year. That is except in the CVS for- mat, where years less than 100 mean 1900 + year. 3 The parsedate() function accepts ``12 am'' where ``12 midnight'' is correct, and similarly ``12 pm'' for ``12 noon''. The correct forms are also accepted. 4 There are various weird cases that are hard to explain, but are never- theless considered correct. 5 It is very hard to specify years BC, and in any case, conversions of times before the commencement of the modern Gregorian calendar (when that occurred depends upon location, but late 16th century is a rough guide) are suspicious at best, and depending upon context, often just plain wrong. 6 Despite what is stated above, ``next'' is actually 2. The input ``next January'', instead of producing a timestamp for January of the follow- ing year, produces one for January 2nd, of the current year. Use cau- tion with ``next'' it rarely does what humans expect. For example, on a Sunday ``next sunday'' means the following Sunday (7 days hence) whereas ``next monday'' means the monday that follows that (8 days hence) rather than ``tomorrow'' or just ``Mon'' (without the ``next'') which is the nearest subsequent Monday. NetBSD 10.1 May 16, 2021 NetBSD 10.1

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