This would run on the first 15 days of a given month at 1am.
(I presume this is correct - your definition of "every 15 days a month" is slightly ambiguous)
Hi everyone,
I am trying to automate one process on Solaris OS.
This is what happens at the moment.
Every night at 19:30 and every hour after that we run a script that checks the status of databases. That script runs and prints if db's are OK at the end it states how many were down.
I am... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a ksh scrip (x) that scans a directory and does actions when a file arrives in this directory.
My question is what is the best way to schedule x?
1. Use cron tab and create a task running forever
2. Creat another ksh script (y) that runs (x) in a non-terminating loop
Which... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need to write script which will read a value from XML file and schedule crontab accordingly.
I have an XML file which has a key value structure where the entries is:
<Param Name="executionInterval" Value="600" />
600 means that the crontab should be scheduled to run every 600 sec.
... (0 Replies)
Hi guys,
I am new guy for unix. I need help writing the following shell script.
My requirement is:
I have few pl/sql procedures(lets say 10). I want to run some of them (say 5) parallally in the background and once these are completed trigger the next ones one after other.
Could some one... (13 Replies)
Hi,
How can we run/schedule a shell script. Since there is no access to cron at this point of time we have to think other way out to run a script every hour.
How can we achieve this. Need advice.
How about using sleep,autosys etc...the script should trigger off every hour...which sends... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
My OS is Solaris 10. I want to schedule a job which i need to run between morining 6 to eve 6 once for every 2 hours. This is what i did.
0 6-18 * * 1-5 /monitor.sh
It runs for every hour how to make it for every two hours ......
Thanks,
Firestar. (1 Reply)
All,
Running the below script independently is working fine with no issue but once I am scheduling it in cron on my Linux environment it is not working.
Can anyone look into this and let me know what I have to modify here to schedule it properly.
09 03 * * 4 ksh 'cd... (1 Reply)
Hi,
We can schedule a new job using crontab -e.
is there any other way to achieve the same(opening the file directly and add an entry).
I have tried to access /var/spool/crontabs directory. But i am getting permission denied error,
Please help me. Thanks (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have my script in below path in UNIX
/storage/sas_source/SDTM-Development/FileWatcher/filewatcher.sh
I want to schedule it to run every 30 secs.
Please let me know the steps to do it.
Thanks. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: prats_7678
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
kep_reload
KEP_RELOAD(1) General Commands Manual KEP_RELOAD(1)NAME
kep_reload - Update Predict's Keplerian elements
SYNOPSIS
kep_reload
DESCRIPTION
KEP_RELOAD is a simple utility that forces an immediate reload of PREDICT's Keplerian database through a socket connection while PREDICT is
running in server mode. It is especially useful in environments where PREDICT runs continuously, and periodic Keplerian element updates
are made outside of PREDICT, such as through scripts run through a crontab.
The "kepupdate" script found in this directory is an example of a Keplerian element update script that can be run on an automated basis
through a crontab. It is designed to be placed in your home directory under a subdirectory called "cronjobs". It downloads Keplerian
orbital data from www.celestrak.com using the HTTP protocol. (The "wget" utility, available from the Free Software Foundation, is
required, and is included in many Linux distrubutions.)
Type crontab -e to edit your crontab. Simply add the following entry:
0 8 * * * kepupdate
and your orbital database will update each morning at 8:00 AM (provided you have a network connection at that time).
See the crontab man page for more information on editing your crontab.
AUTHOR
This man page was written by A. Maitland Bottoms, AA4HS, for Debian GNU/Linux.
31 August 2003 KEP_RELOAD(1)