man/cat1p/touch.1p.txt

touch(P) touch(P)
 
 
 
 
 
NAME
       touch - change file access and modification times
 
SYNOPSIS
       touch [-acm][ -r ref_file| -t time] file...
 
DESCRIPTION
       The touch utility shall change the modification times,
       access times, or both of files. The modification time
       shall be equivalent to the value of the st_mtime member
       of the stat structure for a file, as described in the
       System Interfaces volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001; the
       access time shall be equivalent to the value of
       st_atime.
 
       The time used can be specified by the -t time option-
       argument, the corresponding time fields of the file ref-
       erenced by the -r ref_file option-argument, or the
       date_time operand, as specified in the following sec-
       tions. If none of these are specified, touch shall use
       the current time (the value returned by the equivalent
       of the time() function defined in the System Interfaces
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001).
 
       For each file operand, touch shall perform actions
       equivalent to the following functions defined in the
       System Interfaces volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001:
 
       If file does not exist, a creat() function call is made
       with the file operand used as the path argument and the
       value of the bitwise-inclusive OR of S_IRUSR, S_IWUSR,
       S_IRGRP, S_IWGRP, S_IROTH, and S_IWOTH used as the mode
       argument.
 
       The utime() function is called with the following argu-
       ments: <ol type="a">
 
       The file operand is used as the path argument.
 
       The utimbuf structure members actime and modtime are
       determined as described in the OPTIONS section.
 
OPTIONS
       The touch utility shall conform to the Base Definitions
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility
       Syntax Guidelines.
 
       The following options shall be supported:
 
       -a Change the access time of file. Do not change the
              modification time unless -m is also specified.
 
       -c Do not create a specified file if it does not
              exist. Do not write any diagnostic messages con-
              cerning this condition.
 
       -m Change the modification time of file. Do not
              change the access time unless -a is also speci-
              fied.
 
       -r ref_file
              Use the corresponding time of the file named by
              the pathname ref_file instead of the current
              time.
 
       -t time
              Use the specified time instead of the current
              time. The option-argument shall be a decimal num-
              ber of the form:
 
 
              [[CC]YY]MMDDhhmm[.SS]
 
       where each two digits represents the following:
 
       MM The month of the year [01,12].
 
       DD The day of the month [01,31].
 
       hh The hour of the day [00,23].
 
       mm The minute of the hour [00,59].
 
       CC The first two digits of the year (the century).
 
       YY The second two digits of the year.
 
       SS The second of the minute [00,60].
 
 
       Both CC and YY shall be optional. If neither is given,
       the current year shall be assumed. If YY is specified,
       but CC is not, CC shall be derived as follows:
          If YY is: CC becomes:
          [69,99] 19
          [00,68] 20
 
       Note: It is expected that in a future version of
              IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 the default century inferred
              from a 2-digit year will change. (This would
              apply to all commands accepting a 2-digit year as
              input.)
 
 
       The resulting time shall be affected by the value of the
       TZ environment variable. If the resulting time value
       precedes the Epoch, touch shall exit immediately with an
       error status. The range of valid times past the Epoch
       is implementation-defined, but it shall extend to at
       least the time 0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds, January 1,
       2038, Coordinated Universal Time. Some implementations
       may not be able to represent dates beyond January 18,
       2038, because they use signed int as a time holder.
 
       The range for SS is [00,60] rather than [00,59] because
       of leap seconds. If SS is 60, and the resulting time, as
       affected by the TZ environment variable, does not refer
       to a leap second, the resulting time shall be one second
       after a time where SS is 59. If SS is not given a value,
       it is assumed to be zero.
 
 
       If neither the -a nor -m options were specified, touch
       shall behave as if both the -a and -m options were spec-
       ified.
 
OPERANDS
       The following operands shall be supported:
 
       file A pathname of a file whose times shall be modi-
              fied.
 
 
STDIN
       Not used.
 
INPUT FILES
       None.
 
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables shall affect the
       execution of touch:
 
       LANG Provide a default value for the internationaliza-
              tion variables that are unset or null. (See the
              Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,
              Section 8.2, Internationalization Variables for
              the precedence of internationalization variables
              used to determine the values of locale cate-
              gories.)
 
       LC_ALL If set to a non-empty string value, override the
              values of all the other internationalization
              variables.
 
       LC_CTYPE
              Determine the locale for the interpretation of
              sequences of bytes of text data as characters
              (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-
              byte characters in arguments).
 
       LC_MESSAGES
              Determine the locale that should be used to
              affect the format and contents of diagnostic mes-
              sages written to standard error.
 
       NLSPATH
              Determine the location of message catalogs for
              the processing of LC_MESSAGES .
 
       TZ Determine the timezone to be used for interpret-
              ing the time option-argument. If TZ is unset or
              null, an unspecified default timezone shall be
              used.
 
 
ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       Default.
 
STDOUT
       Not used.
 
STDERR
       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic
       messages.
 
OUTPUT FILES
       None.
 
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
       None.
 
EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values shall be returned:
 
        0 The utility executed successfully and all
              requested changes were made.
 
       >0 An error occurred.
 
 
CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
       Default.
 
       The following sections are informative.
 
APPLICATION USAGE
       The interpretation of time is taken to be seconds since
       the Epoch (see the Base Definitions volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 4.14, Seconds Since the
       Epoch). It should be noted that implementations conform-
       ing to the System Interfaces volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 do not take leap seconds into
       account when computing seconds since the Epoch. When
       SS=60 is used, the resulting time always refers to 1
       plus seconds since the Epoch for a time when SS=59.
 
       Although the -t time option-argument specifies values in
       1969, the access time and modification time fields are
       defined in terms of seconds since the Epoch (00:00:00 on
       1 January 1970 UTC). Therefore, depending on the value
       of TZ when touch is run, there is never more than a few
       valid hours in 1969 and there need not be any valid
       times in 1969.
 
       One ambiguous situation occurs if -t time is not speci-
       fied, -r ref_file is not specified, and the first oper-
       and is an eight or ten-digit decimal number. A portable
       script can avoid this problem by using:
 
 
              touch -- file
 
       or:
 
 
              touch ./file
 
       in this case.
 
EXAMPLES
       None.
 
RATIONALE
       The functionality of touch is described almost entirely
       through references to functions in the System Interfaces
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001. In this way, there is no
       duplication of effort required for describing such side
       effects as the relationship of user IDs to the user
       database, permissions, and so on.
 
       There are some significant differences between the touch
       utility in this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 and those
       in System V and BSD systems. They are upwards-compatible
       for historical applications from both implementations:
 
       In System V, an ambiguity exists when a pathname that is
       a decimal number leads the operands; it is treated as a
       time value. In BSD, no time value is allowed; files may
       only be touched to the current time. The -t time con-
       struct solves these problems for future conforming
       applications (note that the -t option is not historical
       practice).
 
       The inclusion of the century digits, CC, is also new.
       Note that a ten-digit time value is treated as if YY,
       and not CC, were specified. The caveat about the range
       of dates following the Epoch was included as recognition
       that some implementations are not able to represent
       dates beyond 18 January 2038 because they use signed int
       as a time holder.
 
       The -r option was added because several comments
       requested this capability. This option was named -f in
       an early proposal, but was changed because the -f option
       is used in the BSD version of touch with a different
       meaning.
 
       At least one historical implementation of touch incre-
       mented the exit code if -c was specified and the file
       did not exist. This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       requires exit status zero if no errors occur.
 
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       Applications should use the -r or -t options.
 
SEE ALSO
       date , the System Interfaces volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, creat(), time(), utime(), the Base
       Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, <sys/stat.h>
 
COPYRIGHT
       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in
       electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition,
       Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operat-
       ing System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Speci-
       fications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the Insti-
       tute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and
       The Open Group. In the event of any discrepancy between
       this version and the original IEEE and The Open Group
       Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard
       is the referee document. The original Standard can be
       obtained online at http://www.open-
       group.org/unix/online.html .
 
 
 
POSIX 2003 touch(P)