smcron(1M) System Administration Commands smcron(1M)NAMEsmcron - manage jobs in the crontab database
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sadm/bin/smcron subcommand [ auth_args] -− [subcommand_args]
DESCRIPTION
The smcron command manages jobs in the crontab(1) database.
subcommands
smcron subcommands are:
add Adds a job to the crontab(1) database. To add a job,
the administrator must have the solaris.jobs.user
authorization. To add a job to another user's crontab
file, the administrator must have the
solaris.jobs.admin authorization.
delete Deletes a job from the crontab(1) database. To delete a
job, the administrator must have the solaris.jobs.user
authorization. To delete a job from another user's
crontab file, the administrator must have the
solaris.jobs.admin authorization.
list Lists one or more jobs in the crontab(1) database. To
list all jobs, the administrator must have the
solaris.jobs.user authorization. To list a job in
another user's crontab file, the administrator must
have the solaris.jobs.admin authorization. No autho‐
rization is needed to list a user's own jobs.
modify Modifies a job in the crontab(1) database. To modify a
job, the administrator must have the solaris.jobs.user
authorization. To modify a job in another user's
crontab file, the administrator must have the
solaris.jobs.admin authorization.
OPTIONS
The smcron authentication arguments, auth_args, are derived from the
smc(1M) arg set and are the same regardless of which subcommand you
use. The smcron command requires the Solaris Management Console to be
initialized for the command to succeed (see smc(1M)). After rebooting
the Solaris Management Console server, the first Solaris Management
Console connection might time out, so you might need to retry the com‐
mand.
The subcommand-specific options, subcommand_args, must come after the
auth_args and must be separated from them by the -− option.
auth_args
The valid auth_args are -D, -H, -l, -p, -r, and -u; they are all
optional. If no auth_args are specified, certain defaults will be
assumed and the user may be prompted for additional information, such
as a password for authentication purposes. These letter options can
also be specified by their equivalent option words preceded by a double
dash. For example, you can use either -D or -−domain with the domain
argument.
-D | -−domain domain
Specifies the default domain that you want to manage. smcron
accepts only file for this option. file is also the default value.
The file default domain means that changes are local to the server.
Toolboxes can change the domain on a tool-by-tool basis; this
option specifies the domain for all other tools.
-H | -−hostname host_name:port
Specifies the host_name and port to which you want to connect. If
you do not specify a port, the system connects to the default port,
898. If you do not specify host_name:port, the Solaris Management
Console connects to the local host on port 898. You may still have
to choose a toolbox to load into the console. To override this
behavior, use the smc(1M)-B option, or set your console prefer‐
ences to load a "home toolbox" by default.
-l | -−rolepassword role_password
Specifies the password for the role_name. If you specify a
role_name but do not specify a role_password, the system prompts
you to supply a role_password. Passwords specified on the command
line can be seen by any user on the system, hence this option is
considered insecure.
-p | -−password password
Specifies the password for the user_name. If you do not specify a
password, the system prompts you for one. Passwords specified on
the command line can be seen by any user on the system, hence this
option is considered insecure.
-r | -−rolename role_name
Specifies a role name for authentication. If you do not specify
this option, no role is assumed.
-u | -−username user_name
Specifies the user name for authentication. If you do not specify
this option, the user identity running the console process is
assumed.
-−
This option is required and must always follow the preceding
options. If you do not enter the preceding options, you must still
enter the -− option.
subcommand_args
For the time-related subcommands described below, -m, -M, -t, and -w,
you can enter multiple arguments, separated only by commas. smcron will
construct crontab entries appropriate for your arguments. See EXAM‐
PLES.
Note: Descriptions and other arg options that contain white spaces must
be enclosed in double quotes.
· For subcommand add:
-c command
Specifies the command that you want to run.
-h
(Optional) Displays the command's usage statement.
-m day_of_month
(Optional) Specifies the day of the month you want to run the
job. Valid values are 1-31. If you specify both -t and -m
options, the job executes one day per month at the time speci‐
fied by -t.
-M month
(Optional) Specifies the month that you want to run the job.
Valid values are 1-12. If you specify both -t and -M options,
the job executes during the specified month at the time speci‐
fied by -t.
-n name
Specifies the unique name of the job.
-o owner
(Optional) Specifies the user name that is the owner of the
job. If you do not specify this option, the user name speci‐
fied by the -U option is assumed.
-t time_of_day
Specifies the time (in hh:mm) that you want to execute the
command. If no other time-related options are specified (-m,
-M, or -w), the job executes every day at the time specified
by -t. If you specify both -t and -w options, the job executes
one day per week at the time specified by -t. If you specify
both -t and -m options, the job executes one day per month at
the time specified by -t. If you specify both -t and -M
options, the job executes each day during the specified month
at the time specified by -t.
-w day_of_week
(Optional) Specifies the day of the week you want to execute
the command. Valid values are as follows:
· 0=Sunday
· 1=Monday
· 2=Tuesday
· 3=Wednesday
· 4=Thursday
· 5=Friday
· 6=Saturday
If you specify both -t and -w options, the job executes one
day per week at the time specified by -t.
· For subcommand delete:
-h
(Optional) Displays the command's usage statement.
-n name
Specifies the unique name of the job.
-o owner
(Optional) Specifies the user name that is the owner of the
job. If you do not specify this option, the user name speci‐
fied by the -U option is assumed.
· For subcommand list:
-f n|s|v
(Optional) Specifies the format of the output. See EXAMPLES
for examples of each output type.
· n — Displays the data in native format, as it appears in
the crontab(1) database.
·
s — Default format. Displays the data in summary format.
· v — Displays the data in verbose format.
-h
(Optional) Displays the command's usage statement.
-o owner
(Optional) Lists all jobs for the specified owner (user name).
If you do not specify this option, all jobs in the crontab(1)
database are listed.
· For subcommand modify:
-c command
(Optional) Specifies the command that you want to run.
-h
(Optional) Displays the command's usage statement.
-m day_of_month
(Optional) Specifies the day of the month you want to run the
job. Valid values are 1-31. If you specify both -t and -m
options, the job executes one day per month at the time speci‐
fied by -t.
-M month
(Optional) Specifies the month that you want to run the job.
Valid values are 1-12. If you specify both -t and -M options,
the job executes during the specified month at the time speci‐
fied by -t.
-n name
Specifies the current unique name of the job.
-N new_name
(Optional) Specifies the new unique name of the job.
-o owner
(Optional) Specifies the user name that is the owner of the
job. If you do not specify this option, the user name speci‐
fied by the -U option is assumed.
-O new_owner
(Optional) Specifies the new owner of the job.
-t time_of_day
(Optional) Specifies the time (in hh:mm) that you want to exe‐
cute the command. If no other time-related options are speci‐
fied (-m, -M, or -w), then the job executes every day at the
time specified by -t. If you specify both -t and -w options,
the job executes one day per week at the time specified by -t.
If you specify both -t and -m options, the job executes one
day per month at the time specified by -t. If you specify both
-t and -M, then the job executes each day during the specified
month at the time specified by -t.
-w day_of_week
(Optional) Specifies the day of the week you want to execute
the command. Valid values are as follows:
· 0=Sunday
· 1=Monday
· 2=Tuesday
· 3=Wednesday
· 4=Thursday
· 5=Friday
· 6=Saturday
If you specify both -t and -w options, the job executes one
day per week at the time specified by -t.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Adding a Job
The following adds a new job, owned by root, that removes the old log
files from /tmp daily at 1:30 AM.
./smcron add -H myhost -u root -p mypassword -- -n "Remove old logs" \
-t 1:30 -c "rm /tmp/*.log" -o root
Example 2: Deleting a Job
The following deletes the job Remove old logs owned by root:
./smcron delete -H myhost -u root -p mypassword -- \
-n "Remove old logs" -o root
Example 3: Listing Jobs in Native Format
The following lists all jobs in native, or crontab(1), format:
./smcron list -H myhost -u root -p mypassword -- -f n
MINUTE HOUR DATE MONTH DAY COMMAND
10 3 * * * /usr/sbin/logadm
15 3 * * 0 /usr/lib/fs/nfs/nfsfind
1 2 * * * [ -x /usr/sbin/rtc ] && /usr/sbin/rtc -c > /dev/null 2>&1
30 3 * * * [ -x /usr/lib/gss/gsscred_clean ] && /usr/lib/gss/gsscred_clean
Example 4: Listing Jobs in Standard Format
The following lists all jobs owned by lp in standard format:
./smcron list -H myhost -u root -p mypassword -- -f s -o lp
NAME::OWNER::SCHEDULE::COMMAND
NoName_1765663371::lp::Weekly on Sundays at 3:13 AM::cd /var/lp/logs;
if [ -f requests ]; then if [ -f requests.1 ]; then /bin/mv requests.1
requests.2; fi; /usr/bin/cp requests requests.1; > requests; fi
NoName_512822673::lp::Weekly on Sundays at 4:15 AM::cd /var/lp/logs;
if [ -f lpsched ]; then if [ -f lpsched.1 ]; then /bin/mv lpsched.1
lpsched.2; fi; /usr/bin/cp lpsched lpsched.1; >lpsched; fi
Example 5: Listing jobs in verbose format
The following lists all jobs in verbose format:
./smcron list -H myhost -u root -p mypassword -- -f v
NAME::OWNER::SCHEDULE::NEXT_RUN::STATUS::COMMAND
NoName_1075488942::root::Advanced::::Finished on Feb 10 3:10 with code 1
::/etc/cron.d/logchecker
databackup::root::Weekly on Sundays at 3:10 AM::3/19/00 3:10 AM
::Finished on Sep 19 3:10::/usr/lib/newsyslog
runlog::root::Daily at 2:01 AM::3/14/00 2:01 AM::Finished on Feb 11
2:01 AM::/usr/sbin/rtc
Example 6: Changing a Job
The following modifies the job Remove old logs owned by root to execute
daily at 2:00 AM:
./smcron modify -H myhost -u root -p mypassword -- -n "Remove old logs" \
-o root -t 2:00
Example 7: Specifying Multiple Time Arguments
smcron allows you to specify a range of times for all of its time-
related subcommands, -m, -M, -t, and -w. For example, the following
command:
# smcron add -u root -p xxxx -- -n cronjob1 -w 1-4,5 \
-t 12:00,13:15,14:30 -c ls
...creates the following entry in crontab:
0,15,30 12,13,14 * * 1,2,3,4,6 ls #cronjob1
This job would run on Monday through Thursday and Saturday at the fol‐
lowing times:
12:00 12:15 12:30
13:00 13:15 13:30
14:00 14:15 14:30
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
See environ(5) for a description of the JAVA_HOME environment variable,
which affects the execution of the smcron command. If this environment
variable is not specified, the /usr/java location is used. See smc(1M).
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful completion.
1 Invalid command syntax. A usage message displays.
2 An error occurred while executing the command. An error mes‐
sage displays.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │SUNWmga │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOcrontab(1), cron(1M), smc(1M), attributes(5), environ(5)NOTES
The timezone of the cron daemon sets the system-wide timezone for cron
entries. This, in turn, is by set by default system-wide using
/etc/default/init.
If some form of daylight savings or summer/winter time is in effect,
then jobs scheduled during the switchover period could be executed
once, twice, or not at all.
SunOS 5.10 24 Mar 2003 smcron(1M)