General :: Crontab Not Running Script?
May 17, 2010I put below line in a sh file
#!/bin/bash
HOSTS=172.16.14.1
COUNT=4
[code]...
I put below line in a sh file
#!/bin/bash
HOSTS=172.16.14.1
COUNT=4
[code]...
I am using Linux 64 bit Redhat Linux. I am trying to setup simple crontab as follow...1. Edited crontab file using crontab -e2. Listed the file once to verify it using crontab -l. This will display as.. 18 5 * * 2-3 ksh $HOME/testScript.sh > $HOME/testscript.out3. Logged in a root and restarted cron deamon using "/etc/init.d/crond restart"As per my understanding now my testScript should start running at 5:18 am Thuesday
View 3 Replies View RelatedIm new to linux, using ubuntu 10.04. I have been playing around with crontab and have no problems scheduling a job which runs a script file containing the following command:
However, when I try to do the following in the script file nothing happens..
Similarly the following doesnt do anything either:
Is there something im missing?
I have a crontab that is supposed to run 2 PHP scripts but they never run.
30 */3 * * * php /var/www/html/mkimages.php
0 */3 * * * php /var/www/html/import_historic_data.php
Both of these files are owned by root, is it a permissions thing? How can I get get cron to run the files?
I'm trying to get myself familiar with bash scripting.I created a script to delete all files and folders in a specific directory, and made an entry in crontab.Crontab will not run the script, but I can run it manually.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI am having a shell script which runs perl jobs.The script is starting the perl jobs when it is executed manually from the command line , but when the same script runs from crontab it is not starting the perl jobs.I have these things in the begining of the script
. /etc/profile
export MDX_HOME=/home/entsms
source $MDX_HOME/.bash_profile
[code]....
I am planning on running a script once every five minutes, and the syntax that comes to mind in doing this is the following:
Code:
5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 * * * * /apps/<script>.pl
Is there a better syntax to use to accomplish this task, or is the above example the way to go?
that If I am fire a crontab which is running myScriptThe crontab is runningNow if I change the source code of myScriptDo I need to restart the crontab, to take into effect mychanges Ie I want in the existing crontab to take my updated script
View 2 Replies View Relatedis it possible disabling a crontab job without deleting the crontab description entry (by crontab -e)?I could also accept to change the entry itself. Now it's:0 0 * * 0-6 /home/me/cron/script.csh
View 4 Replies View RelatedI have a problem using crontab. I have a C file which invokes a linux command. I want to execute the file using crontab. Its like whenever the system boots up and contents gets loads i want to execute this script. The problem is I don't know how to run the script using crontab. For eg if the file is present under /home/user/first.c . In order to execute this script whenever system starts wat wil be my command
View 7 Replies View RelatedCode...
I opened "crontab -e" in the Terminal and in nano I copied and pasted the first line of this copied script, leaving all the notated lines out. Each time I manually run changer by clicking and selecting "Run" it changes my Wallpaper but this does not happen automatically no matter how many times I reboot.
I have the following set up in my crontab:
Code:
# crontab -l
# m h dom mon dow command
*/5 * * * * /usr/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/perl/managed_arp_data.pl >> /var/log/arpdb.log
*/5 * * * * /usr/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/perl/infoblox_fixed_sync.pl >> /var/log/crossref.log
00 23 * * * /usr/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/perl/infoblox_host_sync.pl >> /var/log/host_sync.log
0 * * * * /usr/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/perl/infoblox_excl_sync.pl >> /var/log/excl_sync.log
None of these jobs is apparently running, however they did run on the 31st (yesterday), but not on the 30th or any other day during the last 10 days that I have logs for. I think I've set cron to run at log level 1, but I don't know where that log goes, I don't see anything like /var/log/cron
So, couple questions:
* If I do something like "sudo -s" to get a root prompt and then do a "crontab -e", which user does that crontab get executed as?
* Where should I look for cron logs?
* Anyone know why a job would run on the 31st, but not any other day?
Crontab Script Not Running?
View 4 Replies View RelatedCron seems to be running the script below (According to /var/log/syslog) but I'm not receiving the email it should send. This does work when I invoke it manually. checkraid (-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root)
Code:
#!/bin/bash
echo `/sbin/dmraid -s > /etc/check-raid/check_state`
index=0
while read line; do
[Code]...
I'm using crontab to start and stop music playback (its like start and end of a brake in school). The problem is that some of the entries should be run on even weeks and some on odd.
exp:
This should be played on even weeks
00 08 * * * audacious -p
10 08 * * * audacious -u
and this on odd
05 08 * * * audacious -p
15 08 * * * audacious -u
There are about 20 entries for even and 20 for odd. I found here on the forum that maybe this should work but for it is not working for me
00 08 * * * [[ $(expr `date +\%W` \% 2) = 0 ]] && audacious -p
If I put it like that its not working at all
Yes I have tried exporting my paths and variables aab still will not run my script. 'm sure I am doing something wrong.I have a shell script which runs a jar file. This is not working correctly. After reading around I have read this is commonly due to incorrect paths due to cron running via it's own shell instance and therefore does not have the same preferences setup as my profile does.here is what my script looks like today after several modifications:
Code:
#!/bin/bash --
. /root/.bash_profile
[code]...
I have a shell script which is configured for the user. The main task of the shell script is to email certain user with a particular result.
The shell script runs perfectly when run from a Konsole terminal and configured through a crontab generates empty entries.
Below is my crontab for my user.
Code:
# DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE - edit the master and reinstall.
# (/tmp/crontab.XXXXSyNyp1 installed on Wed Jan 6 09:14:14 2010)
# (Cron version V5.0 -- $Id: crontab.c,v 1.12 2004/01/23 18:56:42 vixie Exp $)
#!/bin/bash
[Code].....
What is the difference between the crontab located in /etc/crontab and the crontab that can be edited using crontab -e?
View 2 Replies View RelatedI have a question about using crontab with /etc/crontab...
I had a cron job that I needed to run as root. At the time I thought that sticking it in /etc/crontab would be a good idea. However, I used the crontab command to edit /etc/crontab, which I guess is not standard procedure? Specifically, I configured /etc/crontab as my local user's crontab (i.e. sudo crontab /etc/crontab) then added my cron job as I would a local user crontab (i.e. sudo crontab -e).
Originally, my cron job looked like this:
30 * * * * root /my/batch/script &> /dev/null
After adding the new cron job I started seeing errors. Something to the effect of "can't find command root" or something similar. So I removed the 'root' user definition from the cron job and the job started running fine. However, because this is /etc/crontab, there are other system related cron jobs that have been defined to run under the root account (e.g. "17 * * * * root cd / && run-parts --report /etc/cron.hourly" runs as root, etc.). So these pre-existing system cron jobs, which up until now have been running smoothly, are now generating "can't find command root" errors. But I think that the system cron jobs _are_ successfully being run someplace because logrotate seems to be working.
So what I _think_ is happening is that /etc/crontab is being run twice: once as the system crontab, and once as my sudoed local user's crontab. When I run crontab -l I see nothing, but when I run sudo crontab -l I can see the contents of /etc/crontab. I am reluctant to delete my sudoed local user's crontab, because then in the process I would be deleting the system crontab, and I do not know how I should restore the system crontab's contents. (I am still not sure as to the most appropriate way to edit the system crontab).
How can I get out of this mess? I want /etc/crontab to go back to the way it was before--running _once_ as the system crontab. As for my new cron job, I'm willing to reconfigure it anywhere so long as I am still able to run it as root. Any ideas? (I am using Ubuntu 8.04 Server LTE)
I have installed an application manager(monitoring application) on my linux server. Now, i need to have backup schedule for my application. The application itself has executive file to backup database.But when i put this file in my crontab to schedule the backup program it wont run!50 09 * * * root /opt/ME/AppManager9/bin/BackupMysqlDB.sh
View 1 Replies View RelatedI was trying to write a crontab entry using "crontab -e"
Code:
0 0 * * * cp /var/log/httpd/domains/mydomain.net.log
/home/admin/logs/mydomain.net.log
crontab is giving me this error:
Code:
"/tmp/crontab.XXXXfMOnRS":2: bad minute
errors in crontab file, can't install.
I've tried a dozen different values for the minute, but it's still giving me the same error.
I want to run a crontab job but it isnt working. I am writing in the crontab file with crontab -e Then I am waiting time but it isnt working. code...
View 6 Replies View RelatedIf I configure a crontab like below.12 3 12 4 4 cat /etc/passwd I know that the cat command will get executed at the configured time. But where will the output of that command go?If it is something like below, then out put will be routed to /tmp/file1.12 3 12 4 4 cat /etc/passwd > /tmp/file1
View 4 Replies View RelatedI setup a cron job to trigger a script that I wrote every morning at 12:00 AM, but it does not seem to be working.
This is how I edit the job using crontab -e
Why it isn't triggering at 12:00 am every night. If I run the script manually it works just fine so I know is not the script causing troubles.
I know crontab -e sets a cronjob in /var/spool/cron but how do I set a cronjob to run from /etc/crontab? Is there a command used for this or would I have to manually edit a certain file?
View 2 Replies View RelatedI want to set up a crontab so that from my machine {which is 192.168.0.99}whatever I create in a directory called "/information" {suppose some texts files}will be copied to 192.168.0.100 and 192.168.0.101's machine "/readinfo" directory at 5.30 pm. everyday."/readinfo" is directory which is accessible by all users on that machines {192.168.0.100 & 192.168.0.101}is this crontab right?30 5 * * * /bin/cp -rf /information/* 192.168.0.100:/readinfo30 5 * * * /bin/cp -rf /information/* 192.168.0.101:/readinfoI guess first these 100 and 101 machines should allow me {99} ssh connection without passowrd.
View 5 Replies View RelatedMy laptop's clock (Acer Extensa 5220) seems to be slow. I've corrected it 5 minutes forward last week and now have just corrected minute forward again. Is there a program [apart from time servers] to correct clock properly, for example, by shifting it a bit every hour? Is there already a program to put it to crontab or I should hack up a script? Or I should check more things?
I have found that HW clock is right, but system time is slow: about a second each 2.1 hours.
root@vi-notebook:~# dmesg | egrep 'clock|unstable'
[ 0.103785] Switching to clocksource tsc
[ 0.265274] Marking TSC unstable due to TSC halts in idle
[ 0.265514] Switching to clocksource acpi_pm
[ 1.321408] rtc_cmos 00:09: setting system clock to 2010-10-30 00:10:48 UTC (1288397448)
Is placing "hwlock --hctosys" to crontab a right thing?
Silly question here. My crontab looks like this:
Quote:
0 22 * * * /usr/sbin/logrotate /var/log/VRTSralus/VRTSralus.logrotate
#0-59/10 * * * * /root/memmon.sh >> /var/log/memmon.txt
0 8 * * 1 /root/SHC.sh
#0 21 * * * /root/scripts/ralus_restart.sh > /dev/null 2>&1
As you can see two of the lines are commented out. However, both commented out commands are still running. I get emails stating that the RALUS agent restarted (another mystery since it's supposed to go to dev null according to the line above), and I can see that the memmon script is also running daily. Am I missing a step? Some other place I should be looking? Commenting out lines in your crontab is pretty much a no-brainer, so I appear to have less than no brain as this is a mystery to me.
I am setting crontab to run a script every minute irrespective of the current hour's value:
Code:
[root@localhost bin]# ls
sec.php showTime.sh
[root@localhost bin]# crontab -l
1 * * * * /root/bin/showTime.sh
[root@localhost bin]#
But it is not working. Does the line mean: "Run this script every day at hour:01"?
I'm running Ubuntu server 8.04.3 with eBox on a Dell GX280. I want to power off my box automatically every night, so as root I added a crontab entry "05 1 * * * /sbin/shutdown -P now". The command runs on schedule but most days the PC goes into a coma instead of powering off. It doesn't respond to key presses or mouse movement or Ctrl-Alt-Delete, I have to push its power button to complete the shutdown. I have tried a variety of alternatives such as "/sbin/shutdown -h" and "runlevel 0", they all behave the same way
View 14 Replies View Related