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
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
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 ‘da
Andreas Kuhlen via Postfix-users:
> Hello,
>
> currently, some dates appear in American format. As can be seen at the
> end of the line below:
>
> 2024-12-15T09:48:57.200203+01:00 mail postfix/anvil[919910]: statistics:
> max cache size 1 at Dec 15 09:45:36
Postfix uses the RFC 5322 date-time
On 15/12/24 20:06, Andreas Kuhlen via Postfix-users wrote:
Hello,
currently, some dates appear in American format. As can be seen at the
end of the line below:
2024-12-15T09:48:57.200203+01:00 mail postfix/anvil[919910]: statistics:
max cache size 1 at Dec 15 09:45:36
Is it possible to cha