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bppllist -L

J_H_Is_gone
Level 6

Can anybody explain this to me.

when doing the bppllist -L at the command line I get the following info for a schedule

 

Daily Windows:

Day          Open       Close       W-Open      W-Close

Sunday       000:00:00  000:00:00

Monday       019:30:00  031:00:00   043:30:00   055:00:00

Tuesday      019:30:00  031:00:00   067:30:00   079:00:00

Wednesday    019:30:00  031:00:00   091:30:00   103:00:00

Thursday     019:30:00  031:00:00   115:30:00   127:00:00

Friday       000:00:00  000:00:00

Saturday     000:00:00  000:00:00

 

so can anybody explain the 3100 hours and 4330 hours?

 

just what is this telling me?

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions

Darren_Dunham
Level 6

First two columns are start and stop time based on the day, second two columns are start and stop time based on the week.

 

If your window spans midnight, then the close time is the next day, so it will be greater than 24 hours.

 

4330 is your start time (19:30) plus the day since it's Monday 19:30 + 24:00 => 43:30.  Each of the numbers in your W-Open (and W-Close) columns is 24 hours greater since it's a day later.

 

-- 

Darren

View solution in original post

3 REPLIES 3

Darren_Dunham
Level 6

First two columns are start and stop time based on the day, second two columns are start and stop time based on the week.

 

If your window spans midnight, then the close time is the next day, so it will be greater than 24 hours.

 

4330 is your start time (19:30) plus the day since it's Monday 19:30 + 24:00 => 43:30.  Each of the numbers in your W-Open (and W-Close) columns is 24 hours greater since it's a day later.

 

-- 

Darren

J_H_Is_gone
Level 6
thanks for the info.

Stumpr2
Level 6

 

I have seen some creative uses of the W-Open and W-Close for populating a spreadsheet to determine timeframes that new policies can utilize.