Hello Wietse,
Thanks for the explanation and your patience, that explains a lot for
me. It really is a bit confusing with the different date and time
formats, depending on the system locales and the different RFCs. I'm not
that familiar with the subject after all. But that must still come for me.
Andreas
Am 15.12.2024 um 15:52 schrieb Wietse Venema via Postfix-users:
Andreas Kuhlen via Postfix-users:
Postfix uses the RFC 5322 date/time format, you say. On the subject of
RFC 5322 date/time format, I can find the following in the ?date? man page:
?-R, --rfc-email
????????????? output date and time in RFC 5322 format.? Example: Mon,
14 Aug 2006 02:34:56 -0600
And when I enter the command ?date -R? on my computer, I get the
following output:
~$ date -R
Sun, 15 Dec 2024 15:14:38 +0100
And the Date header of an email shows:
Date: Sun, 15 Dec 2024 07:57:12 -0500 (EST)
However, Postfix displays the American date notation, which is not a
specification in RFC 5322. Is that correct? I'm asking this to
understand this.
The date-time format in message headers is defined in RFC 5322
(message formats), and cited in RFC 5321 (SNTP protocol).
Protocols exist to make systems interoperable, instead of islands
with their own incompatible data formats.
The date-time format of anvil(8) time stamps is relevant only for
the system where they are logged, and thus the format cn be changed
without affecting interoperability.
Wietse
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