I wanted to find out how long a particular operatiion, such asa backup, took to execute. I also wanted the number of hours, minutes and seconds, not just the seconds.
This subroutine will return a string like this:
02:33:59
There's probably a better way, I just couldn't find one...
sub get_et {
my $et = shift;
my ($days,$hours,$minutes,$seconds,$dstr);
my $sec = 1;
my $min = $sec * 60;
my $hour = $min * 60;
my $day = $hour * 24;
$et -= ($day * $days) if $days = int($et / $day);
$et -= ($hour * $hours) if $hours = int($et / $hour);
$et -= ($min * $minutes) if $minutes = int($et / $min);
$seconds = $et;
$dstr = sprintf(qq{$days Day%s, }, $days > 1 ? 's' : '') if $days;
$et = sprintf(qq{%.2d:%.2d:%.2d},$hours,$minutes,$seconds);
return $dstr . $et;
}
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