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Operating Systems Solaris Best practise for keeping cronjobs across 2 servers in sync Post 302985234 by javanoob on Monday 7th of November 2016 12:48:24 PM
Old 11-07-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by Don Cragun
Are there any cron jobs on your system that need to run on the stand-by server? If not, have you considered disabling cron on the stand-by server and enable it when there is a switch from stand-by to active.
Hi Don,

Thanks for your reply and sorry for coming back late.
Yes, there are certain standalone cronjobs that needs to be run on the standby server. Thus i am not able to disable cronjob entirely.

Hence my thinking was to sync the cron scripts over and cron entries from the primary over. When there is a failover, i will manually add them (cut/paste) into the crontab in standby

Not sure if there is any other better way to do so..

Regards,
Noob

---------- Post updated at 12:48 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:46 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by MadeInGermany
Do you have a shell command that shows if active or standby?
Then you can have identical crontab entries.
For example your shell command is "activecommand" and has an exit status zero when active, otherwise non-zero.
Code:
* * * * * if activecommand; then actualcroncommand; fi

Hi MadeInGermany,
Thanks for your insight !
I can make a simple function/script that return active or standby, but how do we keep the cron entries in sync on both servers ?

is it a manual work (e.g. when you add in nodeA, do the same on nodeB) ?

Regards,
Noob
 

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CRONTAB(1)							   User Commands							CRONTAB(1)

NAME
crontab - maintains crontab files for individual users SYNOPSIS
crontab [-u user] file crontab [-u user] [-l | -r | -e] [-i] [-s] crontab -n [ hostname ] crontab -c DESCRIPTION
Crontab is the program used to install, remove or list the tables used to serve the cron(8) daemon. Each user can have their own crontab, and though these are files in /var/spool/, they are not intended to be edited directly. For SELinux in MLS mode, you can define more crontabs for each range. For more information, see selinux(8). In this version of Cron it is possible to use a network-mounted shared /var/spool/cron across a cluster of hosts and specify that only one of the hosts should run the crontab jobs in the particular directory at any one time. You may also use crontab(1) from any of these hosts to edit the same shared set of crontab files, and to set and query which host should run the crontab jobs. Running cron jobs can be allowed or disallowed for different users. For this purpose, use the cron.allow and cron.deny files. If the cron.allow file exists, a user must be listed in it to be allowed to use cron If the cron.allow file does not exist but the cron.deny file does exist, then a user must not be listed in the cron.deny file in order to use cron. If neither of these files exists, only the super user is allowed to use cron. Another way to restrict access to cron is to use PAM authentication in /etc/security/access.conf to set up users, which are allowed or disallowed to use crontab or modify system cron jobs in the /etc/cron.d/ directory. The temporary directory can be set in an environment variable. If it is not set by the user, the /tmp directory is used. OPTIONS
-u Appends the name of the user whose crontab is to be modified. If this option is not used, crontab examines "your" crontab, i.e., the crontab of the person executing the command. Note that su(8) may confuse crontab, thus, when executing commands under su(8) you should always use the -u option. If no crontab exists for a particular user, it is created for him the first time the crontab -u command is used under his username. -l Displays the current crontab on standard output. -r Removes the current crontab. -e Edits the current crontab using the editor specified by the VISUAL or EDITOR environment variables. After you exit from the editor, the modified crontab will be installed automatically. -i This option modifies the -r option to prompt the user for a 'y/Y' response before actually removing the crontab. -s Appends the current SELinux security context string as an MLS_LEVEL setting to the crontab file before editing / replacement occurs - see the documentation of MLS_LEVEL in crontab(5). -n This option is relevant only if cron(8) was started with the -c option, to enable clustering support. It is used to set the host in the cluster which should run the jobs specified in the crontab files in the /var/spool/cron directory. If a hostname is supplied, the host whose hostname returned by gethostname(2) matches the supplied hostname, will be selected to run the selected cron jobs subsequently. If there is no host in the cluster matching the supplied hostname, or you explicitly specify an empty hostname, then the selected jobs will not be run at all. If the hostname is omitted, the name of the local host returned by gethostname(2) is used. Using this option has no effect on the /etc/crontab file and the files in the /etc/cron.d directory, which are always run, and considered host-specific. For more information on clustering support, see cron(8). -c This option is only relevant if cron(8) was started with the -c option, to enable clustering support. It is used to query which host in the cluster is currently set to run the jobs specified in the crontab files in the directory /var/spool/cron , as set using the -n option. SEE ALSO
crontab(5), cron(8) FILES
/etc/cron.allow /etc/cron.deny STANDARDS
The crontab command conforms to IEEE Std1003.2-1992 (``POSIX''). This new command syntax differs from previous versions of Vixie Cron, as well as from the classic SVR3 syntax. DIAGNOSTICS
An informative usage message appears if you run a crontab with a faulty command defined in it. AUTHOR
Paul Vixie <vixie@isc.org> Colin Dean <colin@colin-dean.org> cronie 2012-11-22 CRONTAB(1)
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