Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting I want to send an email after cron job Post 302936210 by countrydj on Monday 23rd of February 2015 07:59:44 PM
Old 02-23-2015
Hi Guys...
Thanks for your help.
I couldn't get blackrageous's suggestion to work, probably due to me being thick.
However, I did get RudiC's suggestion to work, with slight modification:
Code:
<BODY /bin/mail -s " $TS Wholesaler TEST backup finished" jc@ukzone.com

BODY being the name of the file containing the instructions.

I now need to make some text BOLD. Can anybody advise me how this is done in the BODY text file.

Many thanks for your help up to now.

John C
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Sun Solaris version 10: cron job does not send the default message.

Hi all, Our servers were on Sun Solaris 8.1, anytime a cron job executed the user ran that job received a email of job's output. I think that the default and Administrator did not setup anything. However, when we upgraded the OS to Sun Solaris ver.10, the cron job is no longer send a email... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmnguyen
2 Replies

2. AIX

Cron Job notification email

Hi, I'm fairly new to Aix and am looking for some help on the following. I have setup a cron job under root and want it to send the email once it's run to an external email address. I can get it to send the output in an email to me by using mail on the end of the crontab entry. But I would... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: elmesy
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Cron Job Automated Email Alternatives?

Hi guys, not sure if this would be the right place for this but I dont where else it would go... I'm new to Unix too, so please bare with me :) I guess first up some background on the situation. We have some scripts that run as cron jobs which monitor and check the health, etc of our servers.... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: BrianD
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Send an email once a job is completed

Hi, The HPCs I used earlier used PBS (Portable Batch System) to schedule when I was running various jobs and it had an option to send me an email once a job is completed. I'm wondering whether this is possible for any other process (without the use of PBS). For example, I'm running some codes... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: lost.identity
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Echo print in different lines within email sent by Cron job

Hi all, I think this could have a simple solution, just I canīt get it so far. I have the script below that includes several echo commands in order to show that every part of the script have been executed. A cron job executes this script and when is completed the output is sent by email. ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cgkmal
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Send a file through email using cron as an attachment

Hi All, I want to send a file as an attachment through cron job.Is this possible using cronjob nd if it i, can you please let me know how to do this? Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: NARESH1302
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to avoid cron job output to send to the junk email folder?

Hi i created a cron job which invoke a shell script and output some content via email. Some times these output are sent to the junk email folder. i want these mails to be sent to inbox with some specific font. what i have to do? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: vidhyaS
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to run a script using cron job and send the output as attachment via e-mail using unix

how to run a script using cron job and send the output as attachment via e-mail using unix. please help me. how my cron job entry should be? As of now my cron job entry is to run the script at specific time, 15 03 * * * /path/sample.sh | mail -s "Logs" email_id In the above entry, what... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: vidhyaS
8 Replies

9. Solaris

Solaris cron job email generation not required

Hi, How do we stop default cron job emails bein generated in Solaris 10? All our cron entries are ending with /dev/null 2>&1 but still emails are being generated. And all these emails are nuisance, as they are also get relayed to our local network sendmail MTA server (for system email... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: hasan.kamali
14 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script that will send an email if the cron job did not run.

Team, Would like to know what is the best script that will send you an email if cronjob did not run. Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kenshinhimura
4 Replies
LOGPROF(8)							     AppArmor								LOGPROF(8)

NAME
aa-logprof - utility program for managing AppArmor security profiles SYNOPSIS
aa-logprof [-d /path/to/profiles] [-f /path/to/logfile] [-m <mark in logfile>] OPTIONS
-d --dir /path/to/profiles The path to where the AppArmor security profiles are stored -f --file /path/to/logfile The path to the location of the logfile that contains AppArmor security events. -m --logmark "mark" aa-logprof will ignore all events in the system log before the specified mark is seen. If the mark contains spaces, it must be surrounded with quotes to work correctly. DESCRIPTION
aa-logprof is an interactive tool used to review AppArmor's complain mode output and generate new entries for AppArmor security profiles. Running aa-logprof will scan the log file and if there are new AppArmor events that are not covered by the existing profile set, the user will be prompted with suggested modifications to augment the profile. When aa-logprof exits profile changes are saved to disk. If AppArmor is running, the updated profiles are reloaded and if any processes that generated AppArmor events are still running in the null-complain-profile, those processes are set to run under their proper profiles. Responding to AppArmor Events aa-logprof will generate a list of suggested profile changes that the user can choose from, or they can create their own, to modifiy the permission set of the profile so that the generated access violation will not re-occur. The user is then presented with info about the access including profile, path, old mode if there was a previous entry in the profile for this path, new mode, the suggestion list, and given these options: (A)llow, (D)eny, (N)ew, (G)lob last piece, (Q)uit If the AppArmor profile was in complain mode when the event was generated, the default for this option is (A)llow, otherwise, it's (D)eny. The suggestion list is presented as a numbered list with includes at the top, the literal path in the middle, and the suggested globs at the bottom. If any globs are being suggested, the shortest glob is the selected option, otherwise, the literal path is selected. Picking includes from the list must be done manually. Hitting a numbered key will change the selected option to the corresponding numbered entry in the list. If the user selects (N)ew, they'll be prompted to enter their own globbed entry to match the path. If the user-entered glob does not match the path for this event, they'll be informed and have the option to fix it. If the user selects (G)lob last piece then, taking the currently selected option, aa-logprof will remove the last path element and replace it with /*. If the last path element already was /*, aa-logprof will go up a directory level and replace it with /**. This new globbed entry is then added to the suggestion list and marked as the selected option. So /usr/share/themes/foo/bar/baz.gif can be turned into /usr/share/themes/** by hitting "g" three times. If the user selects (A)llow, aa-logprof will take the current selection and add it to the profile, deleting other entries in the profile that are matched by the new entry. Adding r access to /usr/share/themes/** would delete an entry for r access to /usr/share/themes/foo/*.gif if it exists in the profile. If (Q)uit is selected at this point, aa-logprof will ignore all new pending capability and path accesses. After all of the path accesses have been handled, logrof will write all updated profiles to the disk and reload them if AppArmor is running. New Process (Execution) Events If there are unhandled x accesses generated by the execve(2) of a new process, aa-logprof will display the parent profile and the target program that's being executed and prompt the user to select and execute modifier. These modifiers will allow a choice for the target to: have it's own profile (px), inherit the parent's profile (ix), run unconstrained (ux), or deny access for the target. See apparmor.d(5) for details. If there is a corresponding entry for the target in the qualifiers section of /etc/apparmor/logprof.conf, the presented list will contain only the allowed modes. The default option for this question is selected using this logic-- # if px mode is allowed and profile exists for the target # px is default. # else if ix mode is allowed # ix is default # else # deny is default aa-logprof will never suggest "ux" as the default. ChangeHat Events If unknown change_hat(2) events are found, the user is prompted to add a new hat, if the events should go into the default hat for this profile based on the corresponding entry in the defaulthat section of logprof.conf, or if the following events that run under that hat should be denied altogether. Capability Events If there are capability accesses, the user is shown each capability access and asked if the capability should be allowed, denied, or if the user wants to quit. See capability(7) for details. BUGS
None. Please report any you find to bugzilla at <http://bugzilla.novell.com>. SEE ALSO
klogd(8), auditd(8), apparmor(7), apparmor.d(5), change_hat(2), logprof.conf(5), aa-genprof(1), aa-complain(1), aa-enforce(1), and <http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/project/?apparmor>. NOVELL
/SUSE 2008-06-11 LOGPROF(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:40 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy