From: Green, Simon (Simon.Green@EU.ALTRIA.COM)
Date: Tue Mar 02 2004 - 12:53:46 EST
You can experiment and find out for yourself - always the best way! - using
the "touch" command.
I *think* it's simply whenever it would be confusing otherwise. So anything
before 1st of April last year will show as XXX 2003; not simply anything one
year old.
-- Simon Green Altria ITSC Europe Ltd AIX-L Archive at https://new-lists.princeton.edu/listserv/aix-l.html New to AIX? http://publib-b.boulder.ibm.com/redbooks.nsf/portals/UNIX N.B. Unsolicited email from vendors will not be appreciated. Please post all follow-ups to the list. > -----Original Message----- > From: Kumar, Praveen (cahoot) [mailto:Praveen.Kumar@CAHOOT.COM] > Sent: 02 March 2004 17:33 > To: aix-l@Princeton.EDU > Subject: Basic ls -l query > > > Hello, > In the output of ls -l when will i get the time > stamp of file > with an year. Is it that if the file is 1 year old from the > current day or > how is it? I understand that it is a silly question but i > want to be clear > with this..
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