NAME
is_epoch - Guess if the given string could be an epoch time.
NAME
is_epoch - guess if the given number is an epoch
SYNOPSIS
is_epoch [OPTIONS] number [number ...]
EXAMPLES
Default is year 0001 to 9999, which is probably too much output. To get less, change the min and max values:
$ is_epoch 1234567890 --min 2007 --max 2017
2016-12-22T00:22:36Z (1234567890, decimal, dos)
2009-02-13T23:31:30Z (1234567890, decimal, unix)
2007-03-16T23:31:30Z (1234567890, decimal, google_calendar)
You can also ask for JSON output instead.
$ is_epoch 1234567890 --min 2007 --max 2017 --output=as_json
{"1234567890":{"decimal":{"dos":"2016-12-22T00:22:36Z","unix":"2009-02-13T23:31:30Z","google_calendar":"2007-03-16T23:31:30Z"}}}
To make it more readable, just pipe it json_xs or jq whatever your favorite JSON prettifier is.
$ is_epoch 1234567890 --min 2007 --max 2017 --output=as_json | json_xs
{
"1234567890" : {
"decimal" : {
"unix" : "2009-02-13T23:31:30Z",
"dos" : "2016-12-22T00:22:36Z",
"google_calendar" : "2007-03-16T23:31:30Z"
}
}
}
Most things are looking for a decimal or hexadecimal string, but you can also put a whole UUID in and it will grab the parts that make the date-time.
$ is_epoch 33c41a44-6cea-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0
2017-07-20T01:24:40.472634Z (33c41a44-6cea-11e7-907b-a6006ad3dba0, uuid_v1, uuid_v1)
OPTIONS
- --debug
-
Prints extra messages.
- --help
-
Prints a brief help message and exits.
- --man
-
Prints the manual page and exits.
- --max_date=STRING
-
Maximum date to print out. Default is 9999-12-31T23:59:59Z. It's just a string compare, so you can include as little or as much of an ISO-8601 date as you want (e.g., --max_date=2017).
- --min_date=STRING
-
Minimum date to print out. Default is 0001-01-01T00:00:00Z. It's just a string compare, so you can include as little or as much of an ISO-8601 date as you want (e.g., --min_date=2017).
- --output=STRING
-
Output format (as_string or as_json). Default as_string.
- --verbose
-
Prints results in more detail.
DESCRIPTION
is_epoch will guess if any of the conversions from Time::Moment::Epoch gives a reasonable date for the given numbers.
VERSION
version 1.003002
AUTHOR
Tim Heaney <heaney@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2017 by Tim Heaney.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.