how do I check in bash whether a file was created more than x time ago?

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时光说笑
时光说笑 2020-12-22 18:24

I want to check in linux bash whether a file was created more than x time ago.

let\'s say the file is called text.txt and the time is 2 hours.

 if [         


        
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  • 2020-12-22 19:04

    I use

    file_age() {
        local filename=$1
        echo $(( $(date +%s) - $(date -r $filename +%s) ))
    }
    
    is_stale() {
        local filename=$1
        local max_minutes=20
        [ $(file_age $filename) -gt $(( $max_minutes*60 )) ]
    }
    
    if is_stale /my/file; then
        ...
    fi
    
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  • 2020-12-22 19:13

    Creation time isn't stored.

    What are stored are three timestamps (generally, they can be turned off on certain filesystems or by certain filesystem options):

    • Last access time
    • Last modification time
    • Last change time

    a "Change" to the file is counted as permission changes, rename etc. While the modification is contents only.

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  • 2020-12-22 19:16

    I always liked using date -r /the/file +%s to find its age.

    You can also do touch --date '2015-10-10 9:55' /tmp/file to get extremely fine-grained time on an arbitrary date/time.

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  • 2020-12-22 19:18

    Using the stat to figure out the last modification date of the file, date to figure out the current time and a liberal use of bashisms, one can do the test that you want based on the file's last modification time1.

    if [ "$(( $(date +"%s") - $(stat -c "%Y" $somefile) ))" -gt "7200" ]; then
       echo "$somefile is older then 2 hours"
    fi
    

    While the code is a bit less readable then the find approach, I think its a better approach then running find to look at a file you already "found". Also, date manipulation is fun ;-)


    1. As Phil correctly noted creation time is not recorded, but use %Z instead of %Y below to get "change time" which may be what you want.

    [Update]

    For mac users, use stat -f "%m" $somefile instead of the Linux specific syntax above

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  • 2020-12-22 19:20

    Consider the outcome of the tool 'stat':

      File: `infolog.txt'
      Size: 694         Blocks: 8          IO Block: 4096   regular file
    Device: 801h/2049d  Inode: 11635578    Links: 1
    Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--)  Uid: ( 1000/     fdr)   Gid: ( 1000/     fdr)
    Access: 2009-01-01 22:04:15.000000000 -0800
    Modify: 2009-01-01 22:05:05.000000000 -0800
    Change: 2009-01-01 22:05:05.000000000 -0800
    

    You can see here the three dates for Access/modify/change. There is no created date. You can only really be sure when the file contents were modified (the "modify" field) or its inode changed (the "change" field).

    Examples of when both fields get updated:

    "Modify" will be updated if someone concatenated extra information to the end of the file.

    "Change" will be updated if someone changed permissions via chmod.

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  • 2020-12-22 19:22

    Although ctime isn't technically the time of creation, it quite often is.

    Since ctime it isn't affected by changes to the contents of the file, it's usually only updated when the file is created. And yes - I can hear you all screaming - it's also updated if you change the access permissions or ownership... but generally that's something that's done once, usually at the same time you put the file there.

    Personally I always use mtime for everything, and I imagine that is what you want. But anyway... here's a rehash of Guss's "unattractive" bash, in an easy to use function.

    #!/bin/bash
    function age() {
       local filename=$1
       local changed=`stat -c %Y "$filename"`
       local now=`date +%s`
       local elapsed
    
       let elapsed=now-changed
       echo $elapsed
    }
    
    file="/"
    echo The age of $file is $(age "$file") seconds.
    
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