zic(1M) manual page
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zic - time zone compiler
zic [ -v ] [ -d directory ] [ -l localtime
] [ filename ... ]
SUNWcsu
zic reads text from
the file(s) named on the command line and creates the time conversion information
files specified in this input. If a filename is ‘-’, the standard input is
read.
Input lines are made up of fields. Fields are separated by any number
of white space characters. Leading and trailing white space on input lines
is ignored. A number-sign (#) indicates a comment and extends to the end
of the line. White space characters and number-signs may be enclosed within
double quotes (" ") if they are to be used as part of a field. Any line
that is blank (after comment stripping) is ignored. Non-blank lines are expected
to be of one of three types: rule lines, zone lines, or link lines.
A
rule line has the form:
Rule | NAME | FROM | TO | TYPE | IN | ON | AT | SAVE | LETTER/S |
For example:
Rule | USA | 1969 | 1973 | - | Apr | lastSun | 2:00 | 1:00 | D |
The fields that make up a rule
line are:
- NAME
- Gives the (arbitrary) name of the set of rules this rule
is part of.
- FROM
- Gives the first year in which the rule applies. The word
minimum (or an abbreviation) means the minimum year with a representable
time value. The word maximum (or an abbreviation) means the maximum year
with a representable time value.
- TO
- Gives the final year in which the rule
applies. In addition to minimum and maximum (as above), the word only (or
an abbreviation) may be used to repeat the value of the FROM
field.
- TYPE
- Gives the type of year in which the rule applies. If TYPE
is ‘-’ then the
rule applies in all years between FROM
and TO
inclusive; if TYPE
is
uspres, the rule applies in U.S. Presidential election years; if TYPE
is
nonpres, the rule applies in years other than U.S. Presidential election
years. If TYPE
is something else, then zic executes the command
- yearistype
year type
- to check the type of a year:
- an exit status of 0 means that the
year is of the given type; an exit status of 1 means that the year is not
of the given type.
- IN
- Names the month in which the rule takes effect. Month names may be
abbreviated.
- ON
- Gives the day on which the rule takes effect. Recognized forms include:
- the fifth of the month
- lastSun
- the last Sunday in the month
- lastMon
- the
last Monday in the month
- Sun>=8
- first Sunday on or after the eighth
- Sun<=25
- last Sunday on or before the 25th
- Names of days of the week may be abbreviated
or spelled out in full.
- Note: There can not be spaces within the ON
field.
- AT
- Gives the time of day at which the rule takes effect. Recognized forms
include:
- time in hours
- 2:00
- time in hours and minutes
- 15:00
- 24-hour format
time (for times after noon)
- 1:28:14
- time in hours, minutes, and seconds
- Any of these forms may be followed by the letter
- w if the given time is
local ‘wall clock’ time or s if the given time is local ‘standard’ time; in
the absence of w or s, wall clock time is assumed.
- SAVE
- Gives the amount
of time to be added to local standard time when the rule is in effect. This
field has the same format as the AT
field (without the w and s suffixes).
- LETTER/S
- Gives the ‘variable part’ (for example, the ‘S’ or ‘D’ in ‘EST’ or ‘EDT’
of time zone abbreviations to be used when this rule is in effect. If this
field is ‘-’, the variable part is null.
A zone line has the form:
Zone | NAME | GMTOFF | RULES/SAVE | FORMAT | [UNTIL] |
For
example:
Zone | Australia/South-west | 9:30 | CST | 1992 Mar 15 | 12:00 |
The fields
that make up a zone line are:
- NAME
- The name of the time zone. This is the
name used in creating the time conversion information file for the zone.
- GMTOFF
- The amount of time to add to GMT to get standard time in this
zone. This field has the same format as the AT
and SAVE
fields of rule
lines; begin the field with a minus sign if time must be subtracted from
GMT.
- RULES/SAVE
- The name of the rule(s) that apply in the time zone or, alternately,
an amount of time to add to local standard time. If this field is ‘-’ then
standard time always applies in the time zone.
- FORMAT
- The format for time
zone abbreviations in this time zone. The pair of characters %s is used
to show where the ‘variable part’ of the time zone abbreviation goes.
- UNTIL
- The time at which the GMT offset or the rule(s) change for a location.
It is specified as a year, a month, a day, and a time of day. If this is
specified, the time zone information is generated from the given GMT offset
and rule change until the time specified.
- The next line must be a
- ‘continuation’
line; this has the same form as a zone line except that the string ‘Zone’
and the name are omitted, as the continuation line will place information
starting at the time specified as the UNTIL
field in the previous line
in the file used by the previous line. Continuation lines may contain an
UNTIL
field, just as zone lines do, indicating that the next line is a
further continuation.
A link line has the form:
For
example:
The LINK-FROM
field should appear as
the NAME
field in some zone line; the LINK-TO
field is used as an alternate
name for that zone.
Except for continuation lines, lines may appear in any
order in the input.
- -v
- Complain if a year that appears in a data file is outside the
range of years representable by system time values (0:00:00 a.m. GMT, January
1, 1970, to 3:14:07 a.m. GMT, January 19, 2038).
- -d directory
- Create time conversion
information files in the directory directory rather than in the standard
directory /usr/share/lib/zoneinfo.
- -l timezone
- Use the time zone timezone as local time. zic will act as if
the file contained a link line of the form:
Link timezone localtime
- /usr/share/lib/zoneinfo
- standard directory used for created files
time(1)
, ctime(3C)
For
areas with more than two types of local time, you may need to use local
standard time in the AT
field of the earliest transition time’s rule to
ensure that the earliest transition time recorded in the compiled file
is correct.
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