mtime is one of the three timestamps in Unix that are maintained for each file in most of the filesystems.
Purpose of mtime
The real purpose of the mtime timestamp is to track the last time of changing the contents of a file. Various commands will allow you to access this information later. For example, ls command allows showing list of files along with their last modification times (it's also possible to get ls to confirm the last access time (atime timestamp)for any file).
mtime example
Here's how you can see mtime in real life. Let's create a file named example.txt and get a full ls listing on it:
greys@ubuntu:~$ date Fri Sep 28 10:25:40 IST 2012 greys@ubuntu:~$ > example.txt greys@ubuntu:~$ ls -l example.txt -rw-r--r-- 1 greys greys 0 2012-09-28 10:25 example.txt
As you can see, the last modification of the "example.txt" file is 10:25am.
Now let's wait a minute:
greys@ubuntu:~$ sleep 60
…confirm the file's mtime is still the same:
greys@ubuntu:~$ ls -l example.txt -rw-r--r-- 1 greys greys 0 2012-09-28 10:25 example.txt
… and now make the change by adding a line "change" to our file:
greys@ubuntu:~$ echo "change" >> example.txt
And if we check the file's mtime timestamp, it will be updated – in my case 10:27am:
greys@ubuntu:~$ ls -l example.txt -rw-r--r-- 1 greys greys 7 2012-09-28 10:27 example.txt
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