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Date:      Tue, 20 Aug 2002 10:39:02 -0400
From:      "MET" <met@uberstats.com>
To:        "'mpd'" <mpd@rochester.rr.com>
Cc:        "'freebsd-questions-en'" <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   RE: A simple Shell script Question || Printing the date in a file name
Message-ID:  <001c01c24857$5a563930$6901a8c0@SURVIVAL>
In-Reply-To: <20020820142301.GA20099@rochester.rr.com>

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Got it -- thanks.

~ Matthew

-----Original Message-----
From: mpd [mailto:mpd@rochester.rr.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2002 10:23 AM
To: MET
Cc: 'freebsd-questions-en'
Subject: Re: A simple Shell script Question || Printing the date in a
file name


On Tue, Aug 20, 2002 at 10:17:23AM -0400, MET wrote:
> I have a simple shell script that archives and compresses the output 
> of a PHP script and then moves it to another location.  However, every

> time it runs it replaces the backup that was previously there.  So 
> naturally to keep this from happening the file names have to be 
> different.  So I wanted to print the date in a file name. For example
> 
> 	filename-8-20-2002.tar.bz2
> 
> So how might I do that?
> 
> I'm archiving/compressing like this - and that's when I'd like the 
> date to be appended to the name.
> 
> 	tar cjf Gunks-{insert date}.tar.bz2 Gunks.txt

something like this should work:

#!/bin/sh

BAK=Gunks-`date "+%m-%d-%Y"`.tar.bz2
tar cjf $BAK Gunks.txt

> 
> ~ Matthew
> 

mike
-- 
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"IT IS A GOOD THING WE ESCAPED FROM THE OZONE LAYER!!!!!!!"
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