How do I add X days to date and get new date?

I have Linux ( RH 5.3) machine

I need to add/calculate 10 days plus date so then I will get new date (expiration date))

for example

 # date 
 Sun Sep 11 07:59:16 IST 2012

So I need to get

     NEW_expration_DATE = Sun Sep 21 07:59:16 IST 2012

Please advice how to calculate the new expiration date ( with bash , ksh , or manipulate date command ?)

Answers:

Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

Method 1

You can just use the -d switch and provide a date to be calculated

date
Sun Sep 23 08:19:56 BST 2012
NEW_expration_DATE=$(date -d "+10 days")
echo $NEW_expration_DATE
Wed Oct 3 08:12:33 BST 2012
  -d, --date=STRING
          display time described by STRING, not ‘now’

This is quite a powerful tool as you can do things like

date -d "Sun Sep 11 07:59:16 IST 2012+10 days"
Fri Sep 21 03:29:16 BST 2012

or

TZ=IST date -d "Sun Sep 11 07:59:16 IST 2012+10 days"
Fri Sep 21 07:59:16 IST 2012

or

prog_end_date=`date '+%C%y%m%d' -d "$end_date+10 days"`

So if $end_date = 20131001 then $prog_end_date = 20131011.

Method 2

You can use “+x days” as format string:

$ date -d "+10 days"

Method 3

In Mac OS (and maybe other BSD distros):

$ date -v -1d

In order to get 1 day back date using date command:

$ date -v -1d

It will give (current date -1) means 1 day before .

$ date -v +1d

This will give (current date +1) means 1 day after.

Similarly below written code can be used in place of “d” to find out year,month etc.

y-Year
m-Month 
w-Week 
d-Day 
H-Hour 
M-Minute  
S-Second

Method 4

As previous answers, you can use the -d switch like :

date -d "$myDate + 10 days"

But you need to be careful with the time zone!

An exemple of something that can go wrong :
If you want to get an interval for a day like [start of day, end of day] for the “8 march 2020” with the timezone at Montreal, where the DST start at 2:00:00 am, you could do

startDate=$(date --iso-8601=n -d "8 march 2020 00:00:00.000000001")
endDate=$(date --iso-8601=n -d "$startDate + 1 day")

but instead of

startDate → "2020-03-08T00:00:00,000000001-0500"
endDate   → "2020-03-09T00:00:00,000000001-0400"

you’ll get 1 hour of the 9 march 2020

startDate → "2020-03-08T00:00:00,000000001-0500"
endDate   → "2020-03-09T01:00:00,000000001-0400"

To fix that, you could do the following :

# Returns the difference between two dates' local time offsets. E.g. : "3600" or "- 1800"
getLocalTimeOffsetDiffInSeconds() {

    # Get the offset in the following format: -0530 for -05h30min
    localOffset1=$(date -d "$1" +%z)
    localOffset2=$(date -d "$2" +%z)

    # Get the offset in seconds
    localOffsetInSec1=$(echo $localOffset1 | sed -E 's/^([+-])(..)(..)/scale=2;01(2 * 3600 + 3 * 60)/' | bc)
    localOffsetInSec2=$(echo $localOffset2 | sed -E 's/^([+-])(..)(..)/scale=2;01(2 * 3600 + 3 * 60)/' | bc)

    # Compute diff
    diffOffsetInSec=$(echo "$localOffsetInSec2 - $localOffsetInSec1" | bc)

    # Add a space between the sign and the value, so it can be used by the command "date".
    echo "$diffOffsetInSec" | sed -E 's/([+-])(.*)/1 2/'
}

  startDate=$(date --iso-8601=n -d "8 march 2020 00:00:00.000000001")
  endDate=$(date --iso-8601=n -d "$startDate + 1 day")

  # Fixes endDate if the DST changed between the two dates.

  dstDiff=$(getLocalTimeOffsetDiffInSeconds "$startDate" "$endDate")

  # dateFix will be a string to remove the dstDiff from the date in a format
  # that can be understood by the command "date". E.g. "3600 seconds" or "- 3600 seconds".
  dateFix=$(echo "$(echo "- $dstDiff" | bc | sed -E 's/([+-])(.*)/1 2/')")
  endDate=$(date --iso-8601=n -d "$endDate $dateFix seconds")

Method 5

I gave up on the GNU date command due to timezone confusion, and went to python.

python -c "import datetime, dateutil.parser; print((dateutil.parser.parse("$myDate") + datetime.timedelta(days=10)).isoformat())"

Maybe it’s overkill, but it’s straightforward to read, understand and modify as needed.

dateutil.parser.parse is not part of the python standard library, so you have to pip install dateutil; alternatively you can use datetime.datetime.fromisoformat, but you need to be more careful about formats.


All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

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