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z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

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at<br />

hh:mmam Morning, 12-hour clock<br />

hh:mmam zone Morning, 12-hour clock in given time zone<br />

hh:mmpm Afternoon, 12-hour clock<br />

hh:mmpm zone Afternoon, 12-hour clock in given time zone<br />

noon Noon<br />

midnight Midnight<br />

next Current time, next day that meets date and increment<br />

now Current time today<br />

All minute specifications are optional. For example, to specify an at job to run at<br />

1:00 p.m., you can enter<br />

at 1pm<br />

Currently, the z/<strong>OS</strong> shell only supports the time zones GMT, CUT, UTC, and ZULU,<br />

all of which stand for Coordinated Universal Time (often called Greenwich Mean<br />

Time). If you do not specify a zone, at interprets times with respect to the TZ<br />

variable.<br />

Appendix I, “Setting the Local Time Zone with the TZ Environment Variable”<br />

explains how to set the local time zone with the TZ environment variable.<br />

Possible date formats are shown in the following list:<br />

Format Meaning<br />

month day month is the full name, or the three-letter abbreviation (as in<br />

January or Jan)<br />

month day, year<br />

day and year given as appropriate numbers<br />

weekday weekday is the full name or the three-letter abbreviation (as in<br />

Monday or Mon)<br />

today Current day<br />

tomorrow Next day<br />

The increment is added to the time and date you specify with the preceding parts of<br />

timespec. It has the format + n units where n is a number and units is one of the<br />

following:<br />

minute minutes hour hours<br />

day days week weeks<br />

month months year years<br />

Here are some sample time specifications:<br />

0655<br />

1855<br />

18:55<br />

6:55pm<br />

6:55 pm Jan 10<br />

now + 3 hours<br />

noon tomorrow<br />

midnight Friday<br />

24 z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>V1R9.0</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> <strong>System</strong> <strong>Services</strong> <strong>Command</strong> Reference

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