Hello, We are pleased to announce the new version of GNU time 1.9.
The `time' command runs another program, then displays information about the resources used by that program, collected by the system while the program was running. This version incorporates two patches which have been used in downstream GNU/Linux distributions for many years. Please report any problem you may experience to the bug-t...@gnu.org mailing list. Happy Hacking! - Assaf [on behalf of GNU Time maintainers] =========================================== The new version is available for download here: https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/time/time-1.9.tar.gz To reduce load on the main server, you can use this redirector service which automatically redirects you to a mirror: https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/time/time-1.9.tar.gz =========================================== The checksums of the archive are: $ sha1sum time-1.9.tar.gz 75068c26abbed3ad3980685bae21d7202d288317 time-1.9.tar.gz $ sha256sum time-1.9.tar.gz fbacf0c81e62429df3e33bda4cee38756604f18e01d977338e23306a3e3b521e time-1.9.tar.gz =========================================== To verify the integrity of the archive using GPG signature, download both the archive and the detatched signature file: https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/time/time-1.9.tar.gz https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/time/time-1.9.tar.gz.sig Then, run a command like this: gpg --verify time-1.9.tar.gz.sig If that command fails because you don't have the required public key, then run this command to import it: gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-keys 0A11B61D3657B901 and rerun the 'gpg --verify' command. =========================================== * Noteworthy changes in release 1.9 (2018-03-12) [stable] ** Improvements time now reports percent CPU usage for programs lasting less then 1 second. previously, time would report '??%' if programs lasted less than 1 second. (adopted from Fedora). ** Changes in behaviour "time -p" no longers adds the "Command exited with non-zero status" message. This is a backward-incompatible change for better POSIX compliance. Many downstream distributions previously patched 'time' to behave this way (Debian added '-q', Fedora patched '-p'). -- If you have a working or partly working program that you'd like to offer to the GNU project as a GNU package, see https://www.gnu.org/help/evaluation.html.