On 08/31/2016 08:04 AM, Frank Farance wrote: > On 2016-08-31 08:09, Markus Hoenicka wrote: >> At 2016-08-31 13:41, Schwarz, Konrad was heard to say: >>> Sorry for the previous incomplete mail. >>> >>> So my problem is that date(1) outputs AM/PM style dates, whereas ls -l >>> uses 24 hour times. >>> >>> $ ls -l rtos_benchmark.lst >>> -rwxr-xr-x+ 1 mchn1350 Domain Users 263 Aug 31 13:14 rtos_benchmark.lst* >>> $ date >>> Wed, Aug 31, 2016 1:39:35 PM >>> $ echo $LC_TIME >>> >>> $ echo $LANG >>> en_US.UTF-8 >>> >>> Shouldn't they be using the same format? Not necessarily. ls hardcodes its default representation for files younger than 6 months to: "%b %e %H:%M" while date hardcodes its default representation to: nl_langinfo(_DATE_FMT) > > Furthermore, I'd say that the default output of "date" should look like > the Linux one, which is the way it has looked on UNIX for about 40 years: > > Linux: Wed Aug 31 08:56:10 EDT 2016 > Cygwin: Wed, Aug 31, 2016 08:54:49 > > In other words, on Cygwin: get rid of the commas, put back the timezone. Sounds like the bug is in cygwin1.dll's nl_langinfo() function for returning a date format with spurious commas. -- Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266 Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org