tag 14622 moreinfo thanks On 06/14/2013 10:22 PM, Lien, John wrote: > I tried following X86 version of "gdate", and it received different result as the 'gnudate", can you explain the difference? It seems that "gnudate: is correct. > > Following "gdate" is running Solaris 5.10 on X86 UNIX host; "gnudate" is running on Solaris 5.8 on Sun-Fire_V240. > > /usr/local/bin/gdate --date '20130614 14:46:43 + 1 sec' '+%y%m%d:%H%M%S' > 130614:094544 > > /usr/local/bin/gnudate --date '20130614 14:46:43 + 1 sec' '+%y%m%d:%H%M%S' > 130614:144644 Most likely, the difference lies in the version of coreutils that you are using. Please also tell use 'gdate --version' and 'gnudate --version'. And remember that we have improved the parser over time, so it may be that your gdate binary is from an older build that had a bug fixed in the version compiled into your gnudate binary. For example, this NEWS entry for coreutils 6.9.90 looks like it might be relevant: date -d now accepts strings of the form e.g., 'YYYYMMDD +N days', in addition to the usual 'YYYYMMDD N days'. -- Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266 Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org