In at, now means at this time today. Specifying now and tomorrow gives conflicting specifications for when the job should be run. If you want to run a job every day at about noon, you can start it off some morning by saying:
Code:
at -f /home/myscript.sh noon < my.daily
and use the command:
Code:
at -f /home/myscript.sh noon tomorrow < my.daily
in myscript.sh to have it schedule itself to run again the next day.
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
Hello,
I want to know about job scheduling utilities available in unix. It should not be responsible just for starting the job like in case of cron but should also be able to handle the execution of jobs.
Regards,
Ritesh (1 Reply)
I am working on UNIX AIX system, with Oracle OS.
We are not supposed to use any tools to schedule our unix shell scripts.
Basically we have to make use of Oracle tables and Shell scripts to manage dependencies, restartability, scheduling, parallelizing,etc.
If anyone has worked/ is working... (1 Reply)
I am working on UNIX AIX system, with Oracle OS.
We are not supposed to use any tools to schedule our unix shell scripts.
Basically we have to make use of Oracle tables and Shell scripts to manage dependencies, restartability, scheduling, parallelizing,etc.
If anyone has worked/ is working... (4 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I am new to Unix,
Please tell me how to schedule a job to be executed on saturday,sunday and on friday night 8:00 PM onwards.
and also how to change the password of oracle user every year through unix?
Please help me to resolve this issue...
Regards,
Mahesh Raghunandanan (1 Reply)
Hi,
I want to schedule a job through Autosys (in Linux server) to run on 1st day of every 3rd month(gap of 90 days). Please someone help me to achive my above requirement
Example:
Run the sample.sh on 01-Jan-2009, 01-Apr-2009, 01-Jul-2009, 01-Oct-2009.
Thanks in advance (4 Replies)
I am scheduling job using Datastage tool, which tool is installed on solaris server.
I can able to schedule jobs/sequences, its not trigering at specified scheduling trigerring time.
but at specified job not starting automatically. Till that specified schedule time, i can able to see that the job... (6 Replies)
I am writing a script to run the jobs on demand, like when i am done with some online updates i want to run the sheduler script to schedule the job 1 by 1. It executes the following way
sched.ksh <data file>
The data file will have the jobs to be executed in the order to be executed and... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I am new to unix and i have a task in front of me.
The code part is "android update sdk" . I need to crontab this process.
Hence i have written a script that runs the above command and sends a mail once the update is done. The problem with the automation is the installer asks for a... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kashyap
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
atrm
atrm(1) General Commands Manual atrm(1)NAME
atrm - Removes jobs spooled by at
SYNOPSIS
atrm [-a] [-f | -i] [job_number...] | [user...]
The atrm command removes jobs that were created with the at command.
OPTIONS
Removes all jobs belonging to the person invoking atrm. If invoked by a privileged user, all jobs on the queue are removed. Suppresses
the printing of all information about the jobs being removed. Prompts before a job is removed; a response of y, or the locale's equivalent
of y, causes the job to be removed. Obsolete version of -a.
DESCRIPTION
If one or more job numbers is specified, atrm attempts to remove only those jobs.
If one or more usernames is specified, all jobs belonging to those users are removed. This form of invoking atrm is useful only if you
have superuser authority.
EXAMPLES
To remove job number 62169200.a, created by user chinn, from the queue created by the at command, enter: atrm chinn.62169200.a
Note that specifies an at job for sh. (.f specifies an at job for csh, and specifies an at job for ksh.)
FILES
Main cron directory. List of allowed users. List of denied users. Spool area. Queue description file for at, batch, and cron.
SEE ALSO
Commands: at(1), atq(1), cron(8)
Files: queuedefs(4)atrm(1)