Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Is this possible with cronjobs? Post 302336911 by collatz on Thursday 23rd of July 2009 05:19:40 AM
Old 07-23-2009
Is this possible with cronjobs?

Hi there,

i've a question about cronjobs. I'm creating a concept for a centralized logging repository using log4j/log4net. Sadly the appenders I want to use (fileappenders) aren't telegram based but need a permanent stream to the repository. Because I can not assure this I want to log these logs local on the machines and copy them via cronjob.

Since these log files can become really huge, and I need an update of those logs all 30-60minutes on the repository, I'm looking for a possibility to only copy the new entries which are not yet on the repository. Because if I would always copy the complete file, there would be an extreme overhead of network traffic.

Is there any possibility to solve this?

Thanks in advance for your help.


Greetings and have a nice day,

collatz
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

cronjobs

hi How can I add a cronjob to the crontab file? to execute a shel script named testScript.sh every day at 00:00. Thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tamer
3 Replies

2. AIX

Cronjobs

We recently upgrade from AIX 4.3.3 to AIX 5.3, We noticed that some cronjobs that run for our programmers did not fire off this morning. You can crontab -l and -e and see the jobs. Did AIX 5.3 change something? Thanks Mike (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mcastill66
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Delete Duplicate Cronjobs

I set up same cronjobs in two different users to generate messages at 5:30 AM Not Its generating duplicate messages. I want to delete the cron entries set up in the first user, but I am unable to view the entries in that user. I tried to find the process Id, but its not showing any id Could... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nskworld
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Setting cronjobs...

Hi, We have 4 jobs to be run every month on different times - * a daily job runs once in 2 days at 3PM *a weekly runs every thursday at 3PM * a monthly runs last day of month either 30 or 31st at 3PM * 4th job runs on 3rd of every month at 3Pm How can I set the crontab for these 4 jobs... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: krworks
4 Replies

5. Linux

Cronjobs stopped working

Hi All, I am user of a Linux machine and I have approximatly 15 cronjobs scheduled in my crontab. Yesterday my administrator made LDAP active on my userid and all the things are doing fine after that. But all cronjobs for my user id stored in my crontab have stopped working after that. Could... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bisla.yogender
1 Replies

6. Solaris

cronjobs not running.

hi friends, how to check if the cronjobs is not running and how to make it run again. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cromohawk
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

cronjobs stopped working

Hello people, I had these cronjobs scheduled in some Unix boxes which were running fine until yesterday.But then the password was changed for that user id and then the jobs stopped working. As far as i know cron jobs run from super user. I am completely lost over here now. Thanks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: King Nothing
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Setting up cronjobs

hello all, I have a shell script and I need to schedule it in crontab, I have the next line: 06 16 * * 1,2,3,4,5 /usr/bin/ksh /path/path/name.sh > /path/path/name.log first, I scheduled from Monday to Friday but it doesn't run, the log file is empty.. any idea why is causing this?... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: Geller
14 Replies

9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

cronjobs orphan processes

Our cron job stats its started on Oct20 % ps -ef | grep cron root 1442044 1 0 Oct 20 - 25:23 /usr/sbin/cron All the below jobs aixmf,aixgh are triggered from cron only. user pid ppid date time cmd gaix 1581282 1 35 16:33:01 - 20:56... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: karnan
1 Replies

10. Solaris

How to find all Cronjobs?

Hey Guys, i've got a big issue... I've to find all running scripts in all crontabs. Is there a possibility to display all crontabs of each user? What i've already tried? The following script: for user in $(cut -f1 -d: /etc/passwd); do crontab -l $user; done I'm already root but i didn't... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Marcusg562
3 Replies
svnadmin(1)						   Subversion Command Line Tool 					       svnadmin(1)

NAME
svnadmin - Subversion repository administration tool SYNOPSIS
svnadmin command repos-path [args] OVERVIEW
svnadmin is a tool to perform administrative operations on a Subversion repository. A Subversion repository contains the revision history of a directory tree. The revision history includes file changes and log messages as well as move and copy operations that were applied at some time in the past to the tree. svnadmin operations are typically carried out by an administrator. The svn(1) tool handles operations for normal users of the source controlled resource. COMMANDS
create repos-path Create a new, empty repository at repos-path. For example, a repository can be created with the command: $ svnadmin create /var/svn Importing a source tree into the repository created above is possible with the svn(1) command : $ svn import file:///var/svn . new_proj createtxn repos-path -rbase_rev Create a new transaction based on base_rev. dump repos-path [ -rlower-rev[:upper-rev] ] [--incremental] Dump the contents of filesystem to stdout in a 'dumpfile' portable format, sending feedback to stderr. Dump revisions lower-rev through upper-rev. If no revisions are given, all revision trees are dumped. If just lower-rev is given, that one revision tree is dumped. A 'dumpfile' is used to convert between incompatible repository formats. If --incremental is passed, then the first revi- sion dumped will be a diff against the previous revision, instead of the usual fulltext. load repos-path Read a 'dumpfile'-formatted stream from stdin, committing new revisions into the repository's filesystem. Send progress feedback to stdout. lscr repos-path path [ --copies ] Print, one-per-line and youngest-to-eldest, the revisions in which path was modified. Use the --copies flag to allow this operation to cross copy history while searching for revisions. (For directories, this is, for now, almost guaranteed to be uninteresting. Also, path must exist in the HEAD of the repository.) lstxns repos_path Print all txn names. recover repos_path Run the Berkeley DB recovery procedure on a repository. WARNING: only run this when you are SURE you're the only process accessing the repository. Requires exclusive access. rmtxns repos-path txn-name [ ... ] Delete the transaction(s) named txn-name. setlog repos-path -rrev file Set the log-message on revision rev to the contents of file. Be careful with this option. Log messages are stored as revision properties. The history of revision properties is not saved. This command will permanently overwrite the previous log message. SEE ALSO
svn(1) svn r3206 22 Sept 2002 svnadmin(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:40 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy