Difference between revisions of "Redhat7:date"
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== date command == | == date command == | ||
| + | |||
| + | <syntaxhighlight> | ||
| + | #Display current time and date | ||
| + | date --utc | ||
| + | #set date | ||
| + | date +%F -s YYYY-MM-DD | ||
| + | #set time | ||
| + | date +%T -s HH:MM:SS | ||
| + | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
Revision as of 17:19, 20 February 2015
Types of Clocks
There are two separate clocks on a system, and most modern OS's distinguish between them.
- Real-Time Clock - Also know as the hardware clock, this clock runs independently of the OS, and continues even when the system is shotdown
- System Clock - Maintained by the kernel of the OS. This can be set to use Univerisal Time (UTC) or the local time. It is recommended to us UTC.
timedatectl command
As with the other ctl command the timedateclt works in a similar way.
#Display current time and date
timedatectl
#set date
timedatectl set-time YYYY-MM-DD
#set time
timedatectl set-time HH:MM:SS
# set time zone
timedatectl list-timezones
timedaectl set-timezone time_zone
# Synchronise using ntp
timedatectl set-ntp boolean
date command
#Display current time and date
date --utc
#set date
date +%F -s YYYY-MM-DD
#set time
date +%T -s HH:MM:SS