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NAMEfcrontab - tables for driving fcronDESCRIPTIONA fcrontab is a file containing all tables used by the fcron(8) daemon. In other words, it is the means for a user to tell the daemon "execute this command at this moment". Each user has his own fcrontab, whose commands are executed as his owner (only root can run a job as another using the option runas (see below)).Blank lines, line beginning by a hash sign (#) (which are considered comments), leading blanks and tabs are ignored. Each line in a fcrontab file can be either
Any logical line (an entry or an assignment) can be divided into several real lines (the lines which end by a newline character) by placing a backslash (\) before the newline character (\n). THE ENVIRONMENT SETTINGSThe environment settings are of the formname = value where the blanks around equal-sign (=) are ignored and optional. Trailing blanks are also ignored, but you can place the value in quotes (simple or double, but matching) to preserve any blanks in the value. When fcron executes a command, it always sets USER, and HOME as defined in /etc/passwd for the owner of the fcrontab from which the command is extracted. TZ is also defined to the value of the option timezone when this option is used. It also defines SHELL to the value of the SHELL used to run the command. Fcron uses the value of SHELL from the fcrontab if any, otherwise it uses the value from fcron.conf if any, or in last resort the value from /etc/passwd. HOME and SHELL may be overridden by settings in the fcrontab, but USER may not. Every other environment assignments defined in the user fcrontab are then made, and the command is executed. By default, fcron will send emails using the email "Content-Type:" header of "text/plain" with the "charset=" parameter set to the charmap / codeset of the locale in which fcron(8) is started up - i.e. either the default system locale, if no LC_* environment variables are set, or the locale specified by the LC_* environment variables (see locale(7)). You can use different character encodings for emailed fcron job output by setting the CONTENT_TYPE and CONTENT_TRANSFER_ENCODING variables in fcrontabs, to the correct values of the mail headers of those names. Additionally, the special variables MAILFROM and MAILTO allow you to tell fcron from/to whom it should email the command's output. Note that these are in fact equivalent to global declarations of the options mailfrom and mailto (see below). They are used for backward compatibility, and it is recommended that you use the options mailfrom and mailto directly instead. ENTRIES BASED ON ELAPSED SYSTEM UP TIMEThe entries of commands which have to be run once every m minutes of fcron's execution (which is normally the same as m minutes of system's execution) are of the form@options frequency command where frequency is a time value of the form value*multiplier+value*multiplier+...+value-in-minutes as "12h02" or "3w2d5h1". The first means "12 hours and 2 minutes of fcron execution" while the second means "3 weeks, 2 days, 5 hours and 1 minute of fcron execution". The only valid multipliers are: "VALID TIME MULTIPLIERS" meaning: multipliers: months (4 weeks): m weeks (7 days): w days (24 hours): d hours (60 minutes): h seconds: s In place of options, user can put a time value: it will be interpreted as @first(<time>). If first option is not set, the value of "frequency" is used. This kind of entry does not guarantee a time and date of execution (as the job is delayed at each startup by the time elapsed since the shutdown), but should be useful for jobs depending on the number of things done by the users (for instance, the filesystem should better be checked after a certain amount of use by the users rather than every x days, as the system may run from 1 day to x days during that x days interval). The time remaining before next execution is saved every 1800 seconds (to limit damages caused by a crash) and when fcron exits after having received a SIGTERM signal, i.e. when systems go down. Thus, this kind of entries is particularly useful for systems that don't run regularly. The syntax being very simple, it may also useful for tasks which don't need to be run at a specific time and date. See also: options first, mail, nolog, serial, lavg, nice, runas (see below). SOME EXAMPLES OF LINES BASED ON ELAPSED SYSTEM UP TIME# Get our mails every 30 minutes @ 30 getmails -all # make some security tests every 48 hours of system up time, # force a mail to be sent to root even if there is no output @mailto(root),forcemail 2d /etc/security/msec/cron-sh/security.sh ENTRIES BASED ON TIME AND DATEThe second type of fcrontab's entries begins by an optional "&", which can be immediately followed by an optional number defining the frequency of execution (this is equivalent to option runfreq) or a declaration of options; it has five time and date fields, and a shell command :&options min hrs day-of-month month day-of-week command Note that the shell command may be preceded by a user name, which is equivalent to runas(<user>): as it is only here for backward compatibility you should use option runas (see below) instead. The frequency is interpreted as: "run this command after x matches of time and date fields". The time and date fields are: "TIME AND DATE FIELDS" field: allowed values: minute: 0-59 hour: 0-23 day of month: 1-31 month: 1-12 (or names, see below) day of week: 0-7 (0 and 7 are both Sunday, or names) A field is always filled by either an asterisk (*), which acts as "first-last" range, a single number or a list. List are numbers or range separated with commas (,). For instance: "2,5,15,23". Ranges of number are of the form "<begin>-<end>", where "begin" and "end" are included. For example, "3-5" specifies the values 3, 4 and 5. You can also add an optional "/number" to a range, where the number specifies skips of the number's value through the range. For example, "0-23/2" can be used in the hours field to specify command execution every other hour. Finally, one or several "~number" can be added to turn off some specific values in a range. For example, "5-8~6~7" is equivalent to "5,8". The final form of a field is: a[-b[/c][~d][~e][...]][,f[-g[/h][~i][~j][...]]][,...] where the letters are integers. You can also use an asterisk (*) in a field. It acts for "first-last". For example, a "*" in the field minute means all minutes from minute 0 down to minute 59. Ranges can be included in a list as a single number. For instance: "2,5-10/2~6,15,20-25,30". Names can also be used for the "month" and "day of week" fields. To do so, use the first three letters of the particular day or month (case doesn't matter). Please note that names are used exactly as numbers: you can use them in a list or a range. If a day of month and a day of week are given, the command will execute only when both match with the current time and date unless option dayor is set. For example, with the line 5 10 31 * 7 echo ''echo will only be executed days which are a Sunday AND a 31th, at 10:05. See also: options dayor, bootrun, runfreq, mail, nolog, serial, lavg, nice, runas (see below). SOME EXAMPLES OF ENTRIES BASED ON TIME AND DATE# run mycommand at 12:05, 12:35, 13:05, 13:35, # 14:05 *and* 14:35 everyday & 05,35 12-14 * * * mycommand -u me -o file # get mails every hour past 20, 21, 22, and 24 minutes. 20-24~23 * * * * getmail # save our work of the day every night at 03:45 with a low priority # unless we are sunday, mail the output to jim and run that job # at startup if computer was down at 03:45 &nice(10),mailto(jim),bootrun 45 03 * * *~0 "save --our work" ENTRIES RUN PERIODICALLYThe third type of fcrontab's entries begin by a "%", followed by a keyword from one of 3 different lists, and optional options.*LY KEYWORDSThose keywords are:hourly , daily , monthly , weekly Those keywords tell fcron to run the command once from the beginning of the corresponding time interval to the end of that time interval. A time interval is, for example, the time from Monday 16:20 to Wednesday 01h43. For instance, the keyword weekly tells fcron to run a command once between Monday and Sunday each week. With this two kind of keywords, user must give the needed time fields (as defined in "Entries based on time and date" (see above)) to specify when the command should be run during each time interval: "NEEDED TIME FIELDS FOR EACH KEYWORD" Keywords: must be followed by the fields: hourly, midhourly: minutes. daily, middaily, nightly, weekly, midweekly: minutes and hours. monthly, midmonthly: minutes, hours and days. MID*LY KEYWORDSThey are similar to the "*ly" ones:midhourly , middaily , nightly , midmonthly , midweekly They work exactly has the "*ly" keywords, except that the time intervals are defined from middle to middle of the corresponding "*ly" intervals: midweekly will run a command once from Thursday to Wednesday. Note that nightly is equivalent to middaily. For example: %nightly,mail(no) * 21-23,3-5 echo "a nigthly entry" will run the command once each night either between 21:00 and 23:59, or between 3:00 and 5:59 (it will run as soon as possible. To change that, use option random) and won't send mail (because option mail is set to "no"). See also: options lavg, noticenotrun, strict, mail, nolog, serial, nice, runas, random (see below). *S KEYWORDSThey are:mins , hours , days , mons , dow Those keywords act differently, as follows: run this command once during EACH time interval specified, ignoring the fields below the keyword in the time interval definition (a hours prevents the mins field to be considered as a time interval, but it will be used to determine when the line should be run during an interval: see the note below) (dow means "day of week"). Such a keyword is followed by 5 time and date fields (the same fields used for a line based on absolute time (see above)). Furthermore, there must be some non-matching time and dates in the lines with that kind of keyword (i.e. the following is not allowed : %hours * 0-23 * * * echo "INCORRECT line!"but %hours * 0-22 * * * echo "Ok."is allowed). Note:
a single number in a field is considered as a time interval: %mins 15 2-4 * * * echowill run at 2:15, 3:15 AND 4:15 every day. But all fields below the keywords are ignored in time interval definition: %hours 15 2-4 * * * echowill run only ONCE either at 2:15, 3:15 OR 4:15. See also: option random (see below). VIXIE CRON SHORTCUTSTo ensure a good compatibility with Vixie cron, Vixie cron shortcuts are supported. Generally speaking their usage is not recommended as they lack some of the flexibility brought by fcron. Also where the precise time of execution is not critical, the use lines based on elapsed system up time is recommended instead.A task using a Vixie cron shortcut is of the form: shortcut command Below is a list of available shortcuts with their fcron equivalent: "VIXIE CRON SHORTCUTS" shortcut: meaning: fcron equivalent: suggested alternative: @reboot Run once, at startup @runatreboot,runonce(true) @yearly Run once a year 0 0 1 1 * @ 12m @annually (same as @yearly) 0 0 1 1 * @ 12m @monthly Run once a month 0 0 1 * * @ 1m @weekly Run once a week 0 0 * * 0 @ 1w @daily Run once a day 0 0 * * * @ 1d @midnight (same as @daily) 0 0 * * * @hourly Run once an hour 0 * * * * @ 1h A few examples: # run check_laptop_logs.sh at the first minute of every hour: @hourly check_laptop_logs.sh # run check_web_server.sh and check_file_server.sh every day at exactly # midnight, both at the same time: @daily check_web_server.sh @daily check_file_server.sh # run compress_home_made_app_log_files.sh at exactly midnight # on the first day of every month: @monthly compress_home_made_app_log_files.sh However you might want to replace those task definitions by something as: # run check_laptop_logs.sh after every hour of system up time: @ 60 check_laptop_logs.sh # run check_web_server.sh and check_file_server.sh every night between midnight # and 3am, one by after the other: %nightly,serial * 0-3 check_web_server.sh %nightly,serial * 0-3 check_file_server.sh # Run compress_home_made_app_log_files.sh once a month, only at night # when the load is low: @monthly,lavg(0.5) * 21-23,0-5 * compress_home_made_app_log_files.sh Last, but not least, it should be noted that tasks defined using a Vixie cron shortcut will only have the same behaviour as in Vixie cron if they are not modified by some earlier option definition. That will be the case if you import a Vixie cron crontab into fcron without modification, or if you precede the task definition by a reset, e.g.: !serial @ 10 fcron_task_1 @ 25 fcron_task_2 !reset @reboot start_unprivileged_user_program @daily cleanup_tmp.sh In the example above, serial would apply to the last two tasks if we hadn't used reset. OPTIONSThe options can be set either for every line below the declaration or for an individual line. In the first case, the setting is done on a whole line immediately after an exclamation mark (!), while it is done after a "&", a "%" or a "@" depending on the type of scheduling in the second case. Note that an option declaration in a schedule overrides the global declaration of that same option.Options are separated by commas (,) and their arguments, if any, are placed in parentheses ("(" and ")") and separated by commas. No space or surrounding (double-)quote is allowed. A declaration of options is of the form option[(arg1[,arg2][...])][,option[(arg1[...])]][...] where option is either the name of an option or its abbreviation. The options are (default value in parentheses): "VALID OPTIONS IN A FCRONTAB"
A boolean argument can be non-existent, in which case parentheses are not used and it means true; the string "true", "yes" or 1 to mean true; and the string "false", "no" or 0 to mean false. See above for explanations about time value (section "entries based on elapsed system up time"). Note that dayand and dayor are in fact the same option: a false value to dayand is equivalent to a true to dayor, and reciprocally a false value to dayor is equivalent a true value to dayand. It is the same for lavgand and lavgor. Note a special case to be handled: A job should be entered into the serial queue, *but* the previous entry for this job has not been completed yet, because of high system load or some external event. Option serialonce answers the question: should the new entry of the job be ignored? This way one can distinguish between jobs required to run a certain number of times, preferably at specified times, and tasks to be performed irrespective of their number (-> serialonce(true)), which make the system respond faster. The same considerations apply for the load average queue, and can be expressed with option lavgonce. Moreover, if the serial or the lavg queue contains respectively more than 30 and 30 jobs, any new job is refused and not run to avoid an overwhelming of system resources. In this case, an error message is logged through syslog. Finally, if jobs remain in the lavg or serial queues when fcron stops, they will be put once in the corresponding queue on startup (their order may not be conserved). AN EXAMPLE OF AN OPTION DECLARATION:!reset,serial(true),dayor,bootrun(0),mailto(root),lavg(.5,2,1.5) EXAMPLESAN EXAMPLE OF A USER FCRONTAB# use /bin/bash to run commands, ignoring what /etc/passwd says SHELL=/bin/bash # mail output to thib, no matter whose fcrontab this is !mailto(thib) # define a variable which is equivalent to " Hello thib and paul! " # here the newline characters are escaped by a backslash (\) # and quotes are used to force to keep leading and trailing blanks TEXT= " Hello\ thib and\ paul! " # we want to use serial but not bootrun: !serial(true),b(0) # run after five minutes of execution the first time, # then run every hour @first(5) 1h echo "Run every hour" # run every day @ 1d echo "fcron daily" # run once between in the morning and once in the afternoon # if systems is running at any moment of these time intervals %hours * 8-12,14-18 * * * echo "Hey boss, I'm working today!" # run once a week during our lunch %weekly * 12-13 echo "I left my system on at least once \ at lunch time this week." # run every Sunday and Saturday at 9:05 5 9 * * sat,sun echo "Good morning Thibault!" # run every even days of march at 18:00, except on 16th 0 18 2-30/2~16 Mar * echo "It's time to go back home!" # the line above is equivalent to & 0 18 2-30/2~16 Mar * echo "It's time to go back home!" # reset options to default and set runfreq for lines below !reset,runfreq(7) # run once every 7 matches (thanks to the declaration above), # so if system is running every day at 10:00, this will be # run once a week & 0 10 * * * echo "if you got this message last time 7 days ago,\ this computer has been running every day at 10:00 last week.\ If you got the message 8 days ago, then the system has been down \ one day at 10:00 since you got it, etc" # wait every hour for a 5 minutes load average under 0.9 @lavg5(0.9) 1h echo "The system load average is low" # wait a maximum of 5 hours every day for a fall of the load average @lavgand,lavg(1,2.0,3.0),until(5h) 1d echo "Load average is going down" # wait for the best moment to run a heavy job @lavgor,lavg(0.8,1.2,1.5),nice(10) 1w echo "This is a heavy job" # run once every night between either 21:00 and 23:00 or # between 3:00 and 6:00 %nightly,lavg(1.5,2,2) * 21-23,3-6 echo "It's time to retrieve \ the latest release of Mozilla!" FILES
SEE ALSOfcrontab(1),fcrondyn(1), fcrontab(5), fcron.conf(5), fcron(8). If you're learning how to use fcron from scratch, I suggest that you read the HTML version of the documentation (if your are not reading it right now! :) ): the content is the same, but it is easier to navigate thanks to the hyperlinks. AUTHORThibault Godouet <fcron@free.fr>
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