09-28-2015
Instead of doing /path/to/script.sh, you'd do sudo /path/to/script.sh Otherwise you can use the line you had.
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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi. I'm trying to output the current date to a cronjob log file. Nothing seems to work, echo $(date), echo `date` or just date in the script. I'm using /sbin/sh
Any ideas? Thanks, John (2 Replies)
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Hi,
I am confused with the entries in my cron log, I'm not sure what exactly these commands are doing, any body can show me the way to get understanding of what these entries mean:> CMD: $TFADMIN /usr/lib/uucp/uudemon.poll > /dev/null
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Hi,
I can use 'crontabs –e' and do all the scheduling I like. However I would like to auto send myself just the cronjobs logs that fail. That is to say the PIDs that fail and the related lines with those PID’s only. (Not the full set of logs) Has anyone done this work? Or does an AIX 5.3 tool... (0 Replies)
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Cameron,
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi friends
well m facing a different sort of issue in my cron.
i hav set job like this
30 09 * * 1 /bin/backup14M
01 14 * * 1 /bin/backup14N
20 18 * * 1 /bin/backup14E
that is for every Monday at three different times.
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Hello,
I'm wondering how to change the log level to level 2 for cron without manually have to restart it with every boot.
I didn't thing this would be hard to find, but searching has cause me to come up empty.
System is Ubuntu Karmic/9.10
With thanks,
Narnie (6 Replies)
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Hi
Iam new to unix .please help me in writing a script.Suppose there are 100 scripts in a cron file which are scheduled to run at different times,different dates . I need to monitor all the scripts daily whether they ran or not if ran whether its sucessfully ran or not .
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Hi, all!
I was working on my Debian, minding my own business but then I wanted to see what happened if the same user was included on both cron.allow and cron.deny :p
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Hi
Please would it be right to log the errors from a script running in cron in the following manner:
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
makesh
MAKESH(1) General Commands Manual MAKESH(1)
NAME
makeSH - a .SH script maker
SYNOPSIS
makeSH files
DESCRIPTION
MakeSH examines one or more scripts and produces a .SH file that, when run under sh, will produce the original script. The .SH script so
produced has two sections containing code destined for the output. The first section has variable substitutions performed on it (taking
values from config.sh), while the second section does not. MakeSH does not know which variables you want to have substituted, so it puts
the whole script into the second section. It's up to you to insert any variable substitutions in the first section for any values you want
from config.sh.
You should run makeSH from within your top-level directory and use the relative path to the file as an argument, so that the "Extracting
..." line printed while running the produced .SH file later on will give that same path.
AUTHOR
Larry Wall <lwall@netlabs.com>
SEE ALSO
pat(1), metaconfig(1), makedist(1).
BUGS
It could assume that variables from metaconfig's Glossary need to be initialized in the first section, but I'm too lazy to make it do that.
LOCAL MAKESH(1)