FAKETIME(1) | wolfcw | FAKETIME(1) |
faketime - manipulate the system time for a given command
faketime [options] timestamp program [arguments...]
The given command will be tricked into believing that the current system time is the one specified in the timestamp. Filesystem timestamps will also be reported relative to this timestamp. The wall clock will continue to run from this date and time unless specified otherwise (see advanced options). Actually, faketime is a simple wrapper for libfaketime, which uses the LD_PRELOAD mechanism to load a small library which intercepts system calls to functions such as time(2) and fstat(2). This wrapper exposes only a subset of libfaketime's functionality; please refer to the README file that came with faketime for more details and advanced options, or have a look at http://github.com/wolfcw/libfaketime
faketime 'last Friday 5 pm' /bin/date faketime '2008-12-24 08:15:42' /bin/date faketime -f '+2,5y x10,0' /bin/bash -c 'date; while true; do echo $SECONDS ; sleep 1 ; done' faketime -f '+2,5y x0,50' /bin/bash -c 'date; while true; do echo $SECONDS ; sleep 1 ; done' faketime -f '+2,5y i2,0' /bin/bash -c 'while true; do date ; sleep 1 ; done' In this single case all spawned processes will use the same global clock without restarting it at the start of each process. (Please note that it depends on your locale settings whether . or , has to be used for fractional offsets)
The simple timestamp format used by default applies the /bin/date -d command to parse user-friendly specifications such as 'last friday'. When using the faketime option -f, the timestamp specified on the command line is directly passed to libfaketime, which enables a couple of additional features such as speeding the clock up or slowing it down for the target program. It is strongly recommended that you have a look at the libfaketime documentation. Summary:
When using relative time offsets or start-at timestamps (see ADVANCED TIMESTAMP FORMAT above and option -f), the clock speed can be adjusted, i.e. time may run faster or slower for the executed program. For example, "+5y x10" will set the faked time 5 years into the future and make the time pass 10 times as fast (one real second equals 10 seconds measured by the program). Similarly, the flow of time can be slowed, e.g. using "-7d x0,2", which will set the faked time 7 days in the past and set the clock speed to 20 percent, i.e. it takes five real world seconds for one second measured by the program. Again, depending on your locale, either "x2.0" or "x2,0" may be required regarding the delimiter. You can also make faketime to advance the reported time by a preset interval upon each time() call independently from the system's time using "-7d i2,0", where "i" is followed by the increase interval in seconds.
Faking times for multiple programs or even system-wide can be simplified by using ~/.faketimerc files and /etc/faketimerc. Please refer to the README that came with faketime for warnings and details.
Faking of filesystem timestamps may be disabled by setting the NO_FAKE_STAT environment variable to a non-empty value.
Please see the README and NEWS files for contributors.
Due to limitations of the LD_PRELOAD mechanism, faketime will not work with suidroot and statically linked programs. While timestamps and time offsets will work for child processes, speeding the clock up or slowing it down might not work for child processes spawned by the executed program as expected; a new instance of libfaketime is used for each child process, which means that the libfaketime start time, which is used in speed adjustments, will also be re-initialized. Some programs may dynamically load system libraries, such as librt, at run-time and therefore bypass libfaketime. You may report programs that do not work with libfaketime, but only if they are available as open source.
Please use https://github.com/wolfcw/libfaketime/issues
Copyright © 2003-2013 by the libfaketime authors.
There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. You may redistribute copies of faketime under the
terms of the GNU General Public License.
For more information about these matters, see the file named COPYING.
November 2017 | faketime 0.9.7 |