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Operating Systems Solaris editing crontab with vim and using .vimrc Post 302381133 by duc904 on Thursday 17th of December 2009 08:52:15 AM
Old 12-17-2009
editing crontab with vim and using .vimrc

Hi

since we migrated from Solaris 8 to Solaris 10 I do miss a nice feature when editing crontab with vim editor: no more color highlighting after starting to edit. Well there is a hack, see below.

I did define:
export EDITOR='vim -c ":source /export/home/duc904/.vimrc"'

Under Sol8 when starting to edit crontab I did get automatically the entries highlighted with colors I did define in .vimrc .

Under Sol10 this direct way is no longer possible(?)

I have to start editing crontab:
$ crontab -e

and then in CLI mode I enter:
:source /export/home/duc904/.vimrc
and the highlighting is available.

any ideas what I have to change additionally so I do not have to source .vimrc separately?

Thanks and regards,
duc904
 

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CRON(8) 						      System Manager's Manual							   CRON(8)

NAME
cron - daemon to execute scheduled commands (Vixie Cron) SYNOPSIS
cron DESCRIPTION
Cron should be started from /etc/rc or /etc/rc.local. It will return immediately, so you don't need to start it with '&'. Cron searches /var/spool/cron for crontab files which are named after accounts in /etc/passwd; crontabs found are loaded into memory. Cron also searches for /etc/crontab and the files in the /etc/cron.d/ directory, which are in a different format (see crontab(5)). Cron then wakes up every minute, examining all stored crontabs, checking each command to see if it should be run in the current minute. When execut- ing commands, any output is mailed to the owner of the crontab (or to the user named in the MAILTO environment variable in the crontab, if such exists). Additionally, cron checks each minute to see if its spool directory's modtime (or the modtime on /etc/crontab) has changed, and if it has, cron will then examine the modtime on all crontabs and reload those which have changed. Thus cron need not be restarted whenever a crontab file is modified. Note that the Crontab(1) command updates the modtime of the spool directory whenever it changes a crontab. SEE ALSO
crontab(1), crontab(5) AUTHOR
Paul Vixie <paul@vix.com> 4th Berkeley Distribution 20 December 1993 CRON(8)
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