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I googling for search time stamp in kernel, not uptime.
Here are really good tips for how convert uptime to real time.
http://linuxaria.com/article/how-to-make-dmesg-timestamp-human-readable
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; my @dmesg_new = (); my $dmesg = "/bin/dmesg"; my @dmesg_old = `$dmesg`; my $now = time(); my $uptime = `cat /proc/uptime | cut -d"." -f1`; my $t_now = $now - $uptime; sub format_time { my @time = localtime $_[0]; $time[4]+=1; # Adjust Month $time[5]+=1900; # Adjust Year return sprintf '%4i-%02i-%02i %02i:%02i:%02i', @time[reverse 0..5]; } foreach my $line ( @dmesg_old ) { chomp( $line ); if( $line =~ m/\[\s*(\d+)\.(\d+)\](.*)/i ) { # now - uptime + sekunden my $t_time = format_time( $t_now + $1 ); push( @dmesg_new , "[$t_time] $3" ); } } print join( "\n", @dmesg_new ); print "\n";
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