#/bin/bash # date command is all we need, as shown: #date -d '2007-011-01 17:30:24' '+%:z' #+01:00 HEAD=timetest_head.template TAIL=timetest_tail.template # remove the tailing "./" and the extension of this script OUTPUT="$(echo "$0" | sed 's;^./;;' | cut -d'.' -f1).lua" #rename OUTPUT from generate to test OUTPUT="$(echo "$OUTPUT" | sed 's;generate;test;')" echo "Generating $OUTPUT ..." cat $HEAD > $OUTPUT # Logic to generate the script for year in 2016 2017 2020; do echo "For $year ..." for month in 3 10; do for day in {1..31}; do for hour in {0..23}; do for minutes in {0..59}; do for seconds in {0..59}; do timestmp="$year-$month-$day $hour:$minutes:$seconds" date -d "$timestmp" "+%F %T" >> /dev/null if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "--Time $timestmp is not valid" >> $OUTPUT else # Result of date looks like +01:00 # Grep extracts the hour, then remove the plus in front and at the end remove leading zeros offset=$(date -d "$timestmp" '+%:z' | grep -o "+[0-9]*" | sed 's/+//' | sed 's/^0//') dayofweek=$(date -d "$timestmp" '+%u') # Generate the lua test command, like: checkTime(2015, 1, 1, 10, 11, 12, 0, 1) echo "checkTime($year, $month, $day, $hour, $minutes, $seconds, $dayofweek, $offset)" >> $OUTPUT fi done done done done done done cat $TAIL >> $OUTPUT echo "---------------------------" echo "Usage:" echo "Call >lua $OUTPUT< in the terminal to execute the test" exit 0