NAME
cron
—
daemon to execute scheduled commands
(Vixie Cron)
SYNOPSIS
cron |
[-j jitter]
[-J rootjitter]
[-s ] [-o ]
[-x
debugflag[,...]] |
DESCRIPTION
Thecron
utility should be started from
/etc/rc or /etc/rc.local. It
will return immediately, so you don't need to start it with '&'.
The cron
utility searches
/var/cron/tabs for crontab files which are named
after accounts in /etc/passwd; crontabs found are
loaded into memory. The cron
utility also searches
for /etc/crontab which is in a different format (see
crontab(5)).
The cron
utility then wakes up every
minute, examining all stored crontabs, checking each command to see if it
should be run in the current minute. Before running a command from a
per-account crontab file, cron
checks the status of
the account with
pam(3) and skips the command if the account is unavailable, e.g.,
locked out or expired. Commands from /etc/crontab
bypass this check. When executing commands, any output is mailed to the
owner of the crontab (or to the user named in the
MAILTO
environment variable in the crontab, if such
exists).
Additionally, cron
checks each minute to
see if its spool directory's modification time (or the modification time on
/etc/crontab) has changed, and if it has,
cron
will then examine the modification time on all
crontabs and reload those which have changed. Thus
cron
need not be restarted whenever a crontab file
is modified. Note that the
crontab(1) command updates the modification time of the spool
directory whenever it changes a crontab.
Available options:
-j
jitter- Enable time jitter. Prior to executing commands,
cron
will sleep a random number of seconds in the range from 0 to jitter. This won't affect superuser jobs (see-J
). A value for jitter must be between 0 and 60 inclusive. Default is 0, which effectively disables time jitter.This option can help to smooth down system load spikes during moments when a lot of jobs are likely to start at once, e.g., at the beginning of the first minute of each hour.
-J
rootjitter- Enable time jitter for superuser jobs. The same as
-j
except that it will affect jobs run by the superuser only. -s
- Enable special handling of situations when the GMT offset of the local
timezone changes, such as the switches between the standard time and
daylight saving time.
The jobs run during the GMT offset changes time as intuitively expected. If a job falls into a time interval that disappears (for example, during the switch from standard time) to daylight saving time or is duplicated (for example, during the reverse switch), then it's handled in one of two ways:
The first case is for the jobs that run every at hour of a time interval overlapping with the disappearing or duplicated interval. In other words, if the job had run within one hour before the GMT offset change (and cron was not restarted nor the crontab(5) changed after that) or would run after the change at the next hour. They work as always, skip the skipped time or run in the added time as usual.
The second case is for the jobs that run less frequently. They are executed exactly once, they are not skipped nor executed twice (unless cron is restarted or the user's crontab(5) is changed during such a time interval). If an interval disappears due to the GMT offset change, such jobs are executed at the same absolute point of time as they would be in the old time zone. For example, if exactly one hour disappears, this point would be during the next hour at the first minute that is specified for them in crontab(5).
-o
- Disable the special handling of situations when the GMT offset of the
local timezone changes, to be compatible with the old (default) behavior.
If both options
-o
and-s
are specified, the option specified last wins. -x
debugflag[,...]- Enable writing of debugging information to standard output. One or more of
the following comma separated debugflag identifiers
must be specified:
bit
- currently not used
ext
- make the other debug flags more verbose
load
- be verbose when loading crontab files
misc
- be verbose about miscellaneous one-off events
pars
- be verbose about parsing individual crontab lines
proc
- be verbose about the state of the process, including all of its offspring
sch
- be verbose when iterating through the scheduling algorithms
test
- trace through the execution, but do not perform any actions
FILES
- /etc/crontab
- System crontab file
- /etc/pam.d/cron
- pam.conf(5) configuration file for
cron
- /var/cron/tabs
- Directory for personal crontab files
SEE ALSO
AUTHORS
Paul Vixie <paul@vix.com>