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DELAY(1)		       OneGeek Software			      DELAY(1)

NAME
       delay - counts down a specified number of seconds.

SYNOPSIS
	 delay [options] <length> [-- command]
	 delay [options] until <timespec> [-- command]

DESCRIPTION
       The delay program counts down a length of time specified on the command
       line. By default, it prints out the time remaining once a second. The
       rate and style of printing can be controlled using options to the pro‐
       gram. This includes the ability to supress the printing entirely. It
       also somewhat supports delaying for fractional seconds.

       Delay attempts to compensate for the time it spends printing the
       updates. There should be no error that is a multiple of the time spent
       delaying. (There is a bit of error on the startup and termination of
       the program, but that's unavoidable.)

       There are several ways that the time to delay can be specified. The
       first is that it can be specified as an absolute length of time to
       delay. This can be in several formats. All of the following formats are
       allowable. (And equivalent.)

	 delay 1d 2:03:04.5
	 delay 1d 2h 3m 4.5s
	 delay 93785.5

       Please note that the fractional seconds code will only work for actual
       fractional seconds. So, doing things like '0.5h' will delay for half a
       second, and not for half an hour as one may expect. (But don't rely on
       this behavior, as it may change in future versions.)

       The second format is for a time to delay until be specified. The time
       parsing code is derived from that used it at, and as a result the time
       specifications should be described on at(1). For example:

	 delay until 4 pm
	 delay until noon tomorrow
	 delay until midnight 13 september 2000
	 delay until now + 5 minutes

       Please note that the parsing code has a resolution of a minute. So, the
       last specification would calculate the 5 minutes from the beginning of
       the current minute, and delay to that absolute point in time. If you
       need more precision, you can use the first time format, which allows an
       the delay length to be specified precisely.

       If delay sees "--" while parsing it's command line, it stops argument
       processing. Instead, the argument after the "--" is interpreted as a
       command to be run when delay completes, and any further arguments are
       used as arguments to that command. For example:

	 delay until 9:30 -- cdplay

OPTIONS
       Delay allows you to use command line options to control aspects of its
       behavior. Here's a list:

       -q  This enables quiet mode. This prevents delay from outputting the
	   time remaining as it usually does. (This is the default if delay is
	   called with "sleep" as part of the program name.)

       -m  This enables a minimalistic count of the time remaining, with only
	   the number of seconds left being displayed. This was the default
	   for delay 1.0.

       -d  This enables the default display. The day, hour, minute, and second
	   are all broken out into seperate entrys. (This is the default,
	   except for the cases where -q is the default.)

       -v  This enables a more verbose mode of display. (It adds some explani‐
	   tory text, as compared to -d.)

       -c  This allows you to specify a custom time prompt. Printf-style for‐
	   matting is performed, with the following being allowed as the pos‐
	   sible percent substitutions:

	     %d	    Days remaining
	     %h	    Hours remaining (modulo 24)
	     %m	    Minutes remaining (modulo 60)
	     %s	    Seconds remaining (modulo 60)
	     %n	    Total seconds remaining

	   For best results, you'll want to make sure that your custom format
	   stays the same length throughout the count. Printf-style formatting
	   is done on these codes. Use of percent-codes other than the ones
	   listed above will lead to undefined behavior. (Crashes, usually.)

	   The following escapes are also supported:

	     \n	    Newline
	     \r	    Carriage Return
	     \b	    Backspace
	     \\	    Backslash
	     \%	    Percent

	   Since the custom format no longer implicitly begins with a carriage
	   return, it usually makes sense to either begin a custom code with
	   \r or end it with \n.

	   The standard formats can be expressed as custom codes. Here's a
	   list of translations.

	     -m	   \r% 8n
	     -d	   \r% 3d %02h:%02m:%02s
	     -v	   \rTime Remaining: %d days, %02h:%02m:%02s.

       -C  This option enables the display of time remaining in big ugly
	   curses numerals. This only displays the hours, minutes, and seconds
	   remaining, although the number of hours to go may range above 24.

       -u  This option takes a single parameter, the time in seconds between
	   updates of the time remaining. It need not be a factor of the delay
	   length. It defaults to 1 second, and must be at least that value.

       -b  If this option is given, a bell character will be sent when time
	   expires. This may be useful in cases where an xterm is send to de-
	   iconify on a bell.

       -V  If given, delay will display it's version and a short copyright
	   message, and will then exit.

BUGS
       The default format is only good for delays of less than 1000 days.

       Improper use of the -c option can lead to various problems, and may
       even have some security implications.

       execvp(2) is used to run the command, and this may run programs in the
       current directory rather than fully respecting your path. Please see
       execvp(2) for more details.

AUTHOR
       Tom Rothamel <tom-delay@onegeek.org>

WEB SITE
       The delay web site is located at:

	       http://onegeek.org/~tom/software/delay/

SEE ALSO
       sleep(1), printf(3), at(1)

3rd Berkeley Distribution	  2002-02-09			      DELAY(1)
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