Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting running a bash script even after logging out from the current session Post 302571684 by nks342 on Tuesday 8th of November 2011 03:29:01 AM
Old 11-08-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by jayan_jay
For your above scenario, go with cron entry ..

Guide: Crontab - Quick Reference
Hi ,
Can you please guide me for corntab entry ...how it would be if I want my SFTP script should run every day, after 1 hour ....and even I log out from my session..!!Thanks in advance
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Have a script running even with the shell logging out

Hi all, I wish to have a script running even if my session is disconnected. I've tried calling another session within it and using sudo to a different user, but it didn't work - as it was expected to do so :rolleyes: I guess I'll have to work with "nohup" command, right ? trying with the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: 435 Gavea
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Running a script without a terminal session

I'm trying to figure out how I can run a script "myScript.sh" in such a way that if my remote network connection gets disconnected, the script doesn't stop functioning. Right now I log in, run "./myScript.sh" and watch my output get pumped to a log file for about 10 hours. Only problem is that... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jjinno
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Running a script for every ftp session

Hello all, I have written a shell script which would prompt the user to enter some name and a folder would be created by that name. This script should run automatically when the users provide there credentials during a FTP session and for every FTP session. And after they have provided there... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: h3llh0l3
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

running script in ftp session

Dear Friends, I have this script CAP2_Launcher on suntest server. this script needs two input files in order to process them and produces an output files. I've created .bat file from windows to access the server and transfer the input files needed by the script and execute the script then pull... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sfaqih
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

bash telnet session logging

I'm looking at allowing remote telnet into my server. like any security-minded administrator, I want to log what my users type on the telnet session. I'm using the script command to generate transcripts of the users session. I have /etc/profile set to automatically start the script command... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramnet
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Execute commands from script in current bash session

I have a file as follows: cat /etc/mxg/ssh-hostsmx.example1.com.au:2225 mx2.example2.com.au:2225 mx.example3.com.au:2225 mail.example4.com.au:2225 mail.example5.org.au:2225 mail.example6.com.au:2225I want to dynamically create aliases for quick access to these servers from bash. I wrote... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jelloir
4 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Export script to current session

Hi, I have a script called bash$> cat -ev setprofile.sh alias rm='rm -i'$ $ The alias does not take effect unless i run the script as bash$> . ./setprofile.sh What do I have to do in-order to simply run (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: shifahim
9 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

running a script in a ftp session

Hi guys, I am using a script that run ftp and transfer file from my source server to the destination server. Since i have transferred my files to the destination server, now i want to run a script at the destination server. Could you please help me regarding how to run a script in a ftp... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: jaituteja
7 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

[Solved] The SCRIPT command - Can we see the log file of a running session?

Hello. This is my situation. script .anything ls -l . ---How can I see the content of .anything using (i.e) cat .anything? If not possible can someone suggest a sequence to simulate a console-recorder to "observ" from a RUNNING script session? Thanks Paolo Please use code tags... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: paolfili
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Running a script on remote server kills my login session

Hi there, I'm trying to run a script remotely on a server in a particular directory named after hostname which already exists, my login session gets killed as soon as I run the below command. Not sure what is wrong, is there a better way to do it ? Note: I can also use nohup command to run... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: mbak
14 Replies
DateTime::Event::Cron(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				DateTime::Event::Cron(3pm)

NAME
DateTime::Event::Cron - DateTime extension for generating recurrence sets from crontab lines and files. SYNOPSIS
use DateTime::Event::Cron; # check if a date matches (defaults to current time) my $c = DateTime::Event::Cron->new('* 2 * * *'); if ($c->match) { # do stuff } if ($c->match($date)) { # do something else for datetime $date } # DateTime::Set construction from crontab line $crontab = '*/3 15 1-10 3,4,5 */2'; $set = DateTime::Event::Cron->from_cron($crontab); $iter = $set->iterator(after => DateTime->now); while(1) { my $next = $iter->next; my $now = DateTime->now; sleep(($next->subtract_datetime_absolute($now))->seconds); # do stuff... } # List of DateTime::Set objects from crontab file @sets = DateTime::Event::Cron->from_crontab(file => '/etc/crontab'); $now = DateTime->now; print "Now: ", $now->datetime, " "; foreach (@sets) { my $next = $_->next($now); print $next->datetime, " "; } # DateTime::Set parameters $crontab = '* * * * *'; $now = DateTime->now; %set_parms = ( after => $now ); $set = DateTime::Event::Cron->from_cron(cron => $crontab, %set_parms); $dt = $set->next; print "Now: ", $now->datetime, " and next: ", $dt->datetime, " "; # Spans for DateTime::Set $crontab = '* * * * *'; $now = DateTime->now; $now2 = $now->clone; $span = DateTime::Span->from_datetimes( start => $now->add(minutes => 1), end => $now2->add(hours => 1), ); %parms = (cron => $crontab, span => $span); $set = DateTime::Event::Cron->from_cron(%parms); # ...do things with the DateTime::Set # Every RTFCT relative to 12am Jan 1st this year $crontab = '7-10 6,12-15 10-28/2 */3 3,4,5'; $date = DateTime->now->truncate(to => 'year'); $set = DateTime::Event::Cron->from_cron(cron => $crontab, after => $date); # Rather than generating DateTime::Set objects, next/prev # calculations can be made directly: # Every day at 10am, 2pm, and 6pm. Reference date # defaults to DateTime->now. $crontab = '10,14,18 * * * *'; $dtc = DateTime::Event::Cron->new_from_cron(cron => $crontab); $next_datetime = $dtc->next; $last_datetime = $dtc->previous; ... # List of DateTime::Event::Cron objects from # crontab file @dtc = DateTime::Event::Cron->new_from_crontab(file => '/etc/crontab'); # Full cron lines with user, such as from /etc/crontab # or files in /etc/cron.d, are supported and auto-detected: $crontab = '* * * * * gump /bin/date'; $dtc = DateTime::Event::Cron->new(cron => $crontab); # Auto-detection of users is disabled if you explicitly # enable/disable via the user_mode parameter: $dtc = DateTime::Event::Cron->new(cron => $crontab, user_mode => 1); my $user = $dtc->user; my $command = $dtc->command; # Unparsed original cron entry my $original = $dtc->original; DESCRIPTION
DateTime::Event::Cron generated DateTime events or DateTime::Set objects based on crontab-style entries. METHODS
The cron fields are typical crontab-style entries. For more information, see crontab(5) and extensions described in Set::Crontab. The fields can be passed as a single string or as a reference to an array containing each field. Only the first five fields are retained. DateTime::Set Factories See DateTime::Set for methods provided by Set objects, such as "next()" and "previous()". from_cron($cronline) from_cron(cron => $cronline, %parms, %set_parms) Generates a DateTime::Set recurrence for the cron line provided. See new() for details on %parms. Optionally takes parameters for DateTime::Set. from_crontab(file => $crontab_fh, %parms, %set_parms) Returns a list of DateTime::Set recurrences based on lines from a crontab file. $crontab_fh can be either a filename or filehandle reference. See new() for details on %parm. Optionally takes parameters for DateTime::Set which will be passed along to each set for each line. as_set(%set_parms) Generates a DateTime::Set recurrence from an existing DateTime::Event::Cron object. Constructors new_from_cron(cron => $cronstring, %parms) Returns a DateTime::Event::Cron object based on the cron specification. Optional parameters include the boolean 'user_mode' which indicates that the crontab entry includes a username column before the command. new_from_crontab(file => $fh, %parms) Returns a list of DateTime::Event::Cron objects based on the lines of a crontab file. $fh can be either a filename or a filehandle reference. Optional parameters include the boolean 'user_mode' as mentioned above. Other methods next() next($date) Returns the next valid datetime according to the cron specification. $date defaults to DateTime->now unless provided. previous() previous($date) Returns the previous valid datetime according to the cron specification. $date defaults to DateTime->now unless provided. increment($date) decrement($date) Same as "next()" and "previous()" except that the provided datetime is modified to the new datetime. match($date) Returns whether or not the given datetime (defaults to current time) matches the current cron specification. Dates are truncated to minute resolution. valid($date) A more strict version of match(). Returns whether the given datetime is valid under the current cron specification. Cron dates are only accurate to the minute -- datetimes with seconds greater than 0 are invalid by default. (note: never fear, all methods accepting dates will accept invalid dates -- they will simply be rounded to the next nearest valid date in all cases except this particular method) command() Returns the command string, if any, from the original crontab entry. Currently no expansion is performed such as resolving environment variables, etc. user() Returns the username under which this cron command was to be executed, assuming such a field was present in the original cron entry. original() Returns the original, unparsed cron string including any user or command fields. AUTHOR
Matthew P. Sisk <sisk@mojotoad.com> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2003 Matthew P. Sisk. All rights reserved. All wrongs revenged. This program is free software; you can distribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
DateTime(3), DateTime::Set(3), DateTime::Event::Recurrence(3), DateTime::Event::ICal(3), DateTime::Span(3), Set::Crontab(3), crontab(5) perl v5.14.2 2010-06-10 DateTime::Event::Cron(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:50 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy