tag 14146 notabug thanks On 04/05/2013 03:13 AM, Ivan Lombardi Borgia wrote: > Good morning, > > for the 1th of April 2013 the command *date *has this interesting behaviour: > * > * > *$ date* > *Mon Apr 1 00:22:31 CEST 2013* > *$ date -d 'yesterday'* > *Sat Mar 30 23:22:38 CET 2013* Did you notice the change in the time zone name from CEST to CET, based on daylight savings? > That doesn't happen for year 2012 and 2014. Yeah, because daylight savings in your timezone falls on a different date in those years. > If you need more information just ask and I will try to respond as soon as > possible. You are hitting a typical usage problem. This is not a bug in date, but in your usage of it; you are failing to account that "yesterday" translates to "24 hours ago", but that 24 hours ago close to midnight when crossing over a 23-hour day (thanks to daylight savings) can cross 2 calendar days. For more information, including the tip to base relative date computation on noon instead of close to midnight, see the FAQ: https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/faq/coreutils-faq.html#The-date-command-is-not-working-right_002e As such, I'm closing this as not a bug, although you may feel free to continue replying if you have further questions. -- Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266 Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org