05-08-2019
So the way the title is formulated has an impact... hmmm
But asking a question, a suggestion or help in plain english doesn't mean to be verbose, you expect that in the body...
This may relaunch the debate on compiling some knowledge we have here, I tried to see what it can represent, and was frightened by the amount of time and the judgement effort it asks when you have many solutions... But not impossible, to not be drowned by the load it would ask a serious team work to share the tasks, and I believe the first thing to do is to create a list of Q , the most frequent ones and important that needs to be answered, then each of us take one Q and search the forum for the answers provided here...
The group effort again is to decide after in what form we deliver the lot
A fundamental question, links to good solutions, then adding variation the the themes? Do we vote for best solution and provide alternatives?
This will only make sense if we choose the correct Q/A which represent the most of beginners in UNIX world challenges, it might if we formulate correctly the title and make an effort in body content help unix.com gain lost popularity, maybe also diminish workload in replying again and again to the same questions...
This also make me wonder if replies like: Searching the forum you would have found this solution to you Q <link to unix.com solution> are being now penalised and so we are doomed to answer systematically which means the above effort for a helpful Q/A effort would be vain...
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
rt-crontool-4
rt-crontool(1) Request Tracker Reference rt-crontool(1)
NAME
rt-crontool - Command-line interface to Request Tracker
SYNOPSIS
# find all active tickets in the queue 'general' and set their priority to 99 if they are overdue:
rt-crontool
--search RT::Search::ActiveTicketsInQueue --search-arg general
--condition RT::Condition::Overdue
--action RT::Action::SetPriority --action-arg 99
--verbose
# Escalate tickets
rt-crontool
--search RT::Search::ActiveTicketsInQueue --search-arg general
--action RT::Action::EscalatePriority
DESCRIPTION
This script is a tool to act on tickets from an external scheduling tool, such as cron.
Security:
This tool allows the user to run arbitrary perl modules from within RT. If this tool were setgid, a hostile local user could use this tool
to gain administrative access to RT. It is incredibly important that nonprivileged users not be allowed to run this tool. It is suggested
that you create a non-privileged unix user with the correct group membership and RT access to run this tool.
OPTIONS
search
Specify the search module you want to use
search-arg
An argument to pass to --search
condition
Specify the condition module you want to use
condition-arg
An argument to pass to --condition
action
Specify the action module you want to use
action-arg
An argument to pass to --action
template
Specify name or id of template(s) you want to use
transaction
Specify if you want to use either 'first', 'last' or 'all' transactions
transaction-type
Specify the comma separated list of transactions' types you want to use
log Adjust LogToScreen config option
verbose
Output status updates to STDOUT
perl v5.14.2 2013-05-22 rt-crontool(1)