As a system administrator, you may need to run some programs automatically at regular intervals or execute one or more commands at a specified time in the future. Your Linux system includes the facilities to schedule jobs to run at any future date or time you want. You can set up the system to perform a task periodically or just once. Here are some typical tasks you can perform by scheduling jobs on your Linux system:
Back up the files in the middle of the night
Download large files in the early morning when the system is not busy
Send yourself messages as reminders of meetings
Analyze the system logs periodically and look for any abnormal activities
You can perform these tasks by using the
at command or the crontab facility of Red Hat Linux. The next few sections introduce these job-scheduling features of Red Hat Linux.
You can use the
at command to schedule the execution of one or more commands at a later time. The
atd daemon-a program designed to process jobs submitted using
at -executes the commands at the specified time, and mails the output to you.
Insider Insight |
Before you try out the at command, note that the following configuration files control, which users can schedule tasks using the at command: |
/etc/at.allow contains the names of the users who may submit jobs using the
at command.
/etc/at.deny contains the names of users not allowed to submit jobs using the
at command.
If these files are not present, or if there is an empty
/etc/at.deny file, any user can submit jobs using the
at command. The default in Red Hat Linux is an empty
/etc/at.deny file, so anyone can use the
at command. If you do not want some users to use
at , simply list those usernames in the
/etc/at.deny file.
To use
at to schedule a one-time job for execution at a later time, follow these steps:
Run the
at command with the date or time when you want your commands executed. When you press Enter, the
at > prompt appears, as follows:
at 21:30 at>
This is the simplest way to indicate the time when you want to execute one or more commands-simply specify the time in a 24-hour format. In this case, you want to execute the commands at 9:30 p.m. tonight (or tomorrow, if it's already past 9:30 p.m.). You can, however, specify the execution time in many different ways (see Table 20-3 for examples).
At the
at > prompt, type the commands you want to execute as if typing input at the shell prompt. After each command, press Enter and continue with the next command. When you are finished entering the commands you want to execute, press Ctrl-D to indicate the end. Here is an example showing a single command:
at> ps at> <EOT> job 1 at 2003-01-21 21:30
After you press Ctrl-D, the
at command responds with a job number and the date and time when the job will execute.
Command |
When the Job Is Run |
---|---|
at now |
Immediately |
at now + 15 minutes |
15 minutes from the current time |
at now + 4 hours |
4 hours from the current time |
at now + 7 days |
7 days from the current time |
at noon |
At noontime today (or tomorrow, if already past noon) |
at now next hour |
Exactly 60 minutes from now |
at now next day |
At the same time tomorrow |
at 17:00 tomorrow |
At 5:00 p.m. tomorrow |
at 4:45pm |
At 4:45 p.m. today (or tomorrow, if already past 4:45 p.m. ) |
at 3:00 Aug 16, 2003 |
At 3:00 a.m. on August 16, 2003 |
After you enter one or more jobs, you can view the current list of scheduled jobs with the
atq command:
atq 4 2003-04-19 03:00 a 5 2003-08-16 21:57 a 6 2003-10-26 16:45 a
The first field on each line shows the job number-the same number that the
at command displays when you submit the job. The next field shows the year, month, day, and time of execution. The last field shows the jobs pending in the queue named
a .
If you want to cancel a job, use the
atrm command to remove that job from the queue. When removing a job with the
atrm command, refer to the job by its number, as follows:
atrm 4
This deletes job 4 scheduled for 3:00 a.m. April 19, 2003.
When a job executes, the output is mailed to you. Type mail to read your
mail and to view the output from your jobs.
Note that
at is useful for scheduling jobs that need to run irregularly-for instance, if you want to clean up the
/var/logs directory because the
/var filesystem is over 85 percent full, you might use
at to archive the old log files and then delete them to reclaim the disk space.
Although
at is good for running commands at a specific time, it's not useful for running a program automatically at repeated intervals. You have to use
crontab to schedule such recurring jobs, also called cron jobs because they are processed by the
cron daemon (
crond ). You need to do this, for example, if you want to back up your files to tape at midnight every day.
Two files control who can schedule cron jobs using
crontab :
/etc/cron.allow contains the names of the users who may submit jobs using the
crontab command.
/etc/cron.deny contains the names of users not allowed to submit jobs using the
crontab command.
If the
/etc/cron.allow file exists, only users listed in this file can schedule cron jobs. If only the
/etc/cron.deny file exists, users listed in this file cannot schedule cron jobs. Neither file exists in Red Hat Linux, so any user can submit cron jobs.
You schedule recurring jobs by placing job information in a file with a specific format and submitting this file with the
crontab command. The cron daemon-
crond -checks the job information every minute and executes the recurring jobs at the specified times.
Any output from the job is mailed to the user who submits the job. (In the submitted job-information file, you may specify a different recipient for the mailed output.)
To submit a cron job, perform the following steps:
Prepare a shell script (or an executable program in any programming language) that can perform the recurring task you want to perform. You can skip this step if you want to execute an existing program periodically.
Prepare a text file with information about the times when you want the shell script or program (from Step 1) to execute. Submit this file using
crontab . You can submit several recurring jobs with a single file. Each line with timing information about a job has a standard format with six fields-the first five specify when the job runs, and the sixth and subsequent fields constitute the actual command that runs. For example, here is a line that executes the
myjob shell script in a user's home directory at 5 minutes past midnight each day:
5 0 * * * $HOME/myjob
Table 20-4 shows the meaning of the first five fields. Note that an asterisk (*) means all possible values for that field. Also, an entry in any of the first five fields can be a single number, a comma-separated list of numbers, a pair of numbers separated by a dash (indicating a range of numbers), or an asterisk.
Field Number |
Meaning of Field |
Acceptable Range of Values* |
---|---|---|
1 |
Minute |
0-59 |
2 |
Hour of the day |
0-23 |
3 |
Day of the month |
0-31 |
4 |
Month |
1-12 (1 means January, 2 means February, and so on) or the names of months using the first letters (Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec) |
5 |
Day of the week |
0-6 (0 means Sunday, 1 means Monday, and so on) or the three-letter abbreviations of the week (Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat) |
* An asterisk in a field means all possible values for that field. For example, if an asterisk appears in the third field, the job is executed every day.
Suppose the text file
jobinfo (in the current directory) contains the job information. Submit this information to crontab with the following command:
crontab jobinfo
That's it! You should be set with the cron job. From now on, the cron job should run at regular intervals (as specified in the job information file), and you should receive mail messages with the output from the job.
To verify that the job is indeed scheduled, type the following command:
crontab -l
The output of the
crontab -l command shows the cron jobs currently installed in your name. To remove your cron jobs, type crontab -r.
If you log in as
root , you can also set up, examine, and remove cron jobs for any user. To set up cron jobs for a user, use this command:
crontab -u username filename
Here,
username is the user for whom you install the cron jobs, and
filename is the file that contains information about the jobs.
Use the following form of
crontab command to view the cron jobs for a user:
crontab -u username -l
The cron daemon (
crond ) also executes the cron jobs listed in the systemwide cron-job file
/etc/crontab . Here's the default
/etc/crontab file in Red Hat Linux (type cat /etc/crontab to view the file):
SHELL=/bin/bash PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin MAILTO=root HOME=/ # run-parts 01 * * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.hourly 02 4 * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.daily 22 4 * * 0 root run-parts /etc/cron.weekly 42 4 1 * * root run-parts /etc/cron.monthly
The first four lines set up several environment variables for the jobs listed in this file. Note that the
MAILTO environment variable specifies the user who receives the mail message with the output from the cron jobs in this file.
The line that begins with a
# is a comment line. The four lines following the run-parts comment execute the
run-parts shell script (located in the
/usr/bin directory) at various times with the name of a specific directory as argument. Each of the arguments to run-parts-
/etc/cron.hourly ,
/etc/cron.daily ,
/etc/cron.weekly , and
/etc/cron.monthly -are directories. Essentially,
run-parts executes all scripts located in the directory that you provide as an argument. This means that you can place scripts in these directories and get
crond to execute them at the appointed time. For example, a script placed in the
/etc/cron.daily gets executed at a certain time every day. Table 20-5 lists the directories and when they are executed. You have to look at the scripts in these directories to learn what gets executed at these periodic intervals.
To remove a user's cron jobs, use the following command:
crontab -u username -r
Directory Name |
Contents |
---|---|
/etc/cron.hourly |
Scripts executed every hour |
/etc/cron.daily |
Scripts executed each day at 4:02 a.m. |
/etc/cron.weekly |
Scripts executed weekly on Sunday at 4:22 a.m. |
/etc/cron.monthly |
Scripts to be executed at 4:42 a.m. on the first day of each month |