[CentOS] OT ? Shell script
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell at gmail.com
Sun Dec 4 23:08:29 UTC 2005
On Sun, 2005-12-04 at 15:35, Jonathan Wright wrote:
> Robert wrote:
> > Considering my nebulous request and your apparent lack of expertise in
> > applied clairvoyance, fine.
> > The "3rd Monday" part is used in generating reminders to a each of a
> > group of OldFarts that gets together monthly to inventory aches, pains
> > and, yes, empty chairs. The "Sunday before" requirement will be used to
> > run a script (already working) to create a series of image files
> > containing critical stuff, to be burned (manually) to DVDs to go with me
> > to the meeting, to be given to a trusted person for safekeeping.
> >
> > The following is what I have now, stripped down to the bare essentials
> > for clarity(?):
>
> Looking at the way you've done it, you could to it like this:
>
> if [$(date +%d) == $(date +%d -d $(date +%Y\/%m)/$((21-$(($(date +%w -d $(date +%Y\/%m)/21)-1)))))];
> then
> // do 3rd Monday stuff...
> elif [$(date +%d) == $(date +%d -d $(date +%Y\/%m)/$((21-$(($(date +%w -d $(date +%Y\/%m)/21))))))];
> then
> // do Sunday before stuff
> else
> // do nothing :)
> fi
>
> and therefore run the NSS.sh script directly.
My math is too fuzzy to decipher that. How about running this
every Sunday from cron?
DOM=`date --date=tomorrow +%d`
if [ "$DOM" -lt 15 -o "$DOM" -gt 21 ]
then exit
fi
..rest of script goes here...
I think that means today's %d must be between 14 and 20,
but the concept is handy because the string you hand
date= can be something like 'today + 2 weeks' if you
need to track things that fall into next month.
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell at gmail.com
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