settime Command
Purpose
Updates access and modification times of a file.
Syntax
settime [ [ MMddhhmm[yy ] ] | [ -f ReferenceFile ] ] File ...
Description
settime updates the argument files with the current access and modification times by default. The file is not created if it does not exist. The settime command silently continues its operation if the file does not exist.
Note: Any
dates beyond and including the year 2038 are not valid for the settime command.
Flags
Item | Description |
---|---|
-f ReferenceFile | Use the corresponding time of ReferenceFile instead of the current time. |
Parameters
Item | Description |
---|---|
MMddhhmm[yy] | Time is specified for the settime command in the format MMddhhmm or MMddhhmmyy, where MM is a two-digit representation of the month, dd is a two-digit representation of the day of the month, hh is a two-digit representation of the hour, mm is a two-digit representation of the minute, and yy is a two-digit representation of the year. |
File | Specifies the name of a file or a space separated list of files. |
Exit Status
- 0
- The command completed successfully.
- >0
- An error occurred.
The return code from settime is the number of specified files for which the times could not be successfully modified.
Examples
- To update the access and modification times of the file "infile"
to the current time, enter:
settime infile
- To update the access and modification times of "infile" to be
the same as "reffile", enter:
settime -f reffile infile
- To update the access and modification times of multiple files,
enter:
settime file1 file2 file3
- To update the access and modification times of a file to April
9th 2002 with time 23:59, enter:
settime 0409235902 infile
Files
Item | Description |
---|---|
/usr/bin/settime | Contains the settime command. |