AT(1) COMMAND REFERENCE AT(1) NAME at - execute commands at a later time SYNOPSIS at [ -m ] [ -v ] time [ day ] [ filename ] DESCRIPTION At squirrels away a copy of the named file (standard input default) to be used as input to sh (1sh) (or csh (1csh) if you normally use it) at a specified later time. A cd command to the current directory is inserted at the beginning, followed by assignments to all environment variables (excepting the variable TERMCAP, which is useless in this context.) When the script is run, it uses the user and group ID of the creator of the copy file. The time is one to four digits, with the optional suffixes A, P, N, or M for AM, PM, noon or midnight, respectively. Semicolons separating hours and minutes are allowed. One and two digit numbers are taken to be hours, three and four digits to be hours and minutes. If no letters follow the digits, a 24 hour clock time is understood. The optional day is either a month name followed by a day number, or a day of the week; if the word "week" follows invocation is moved seven days further off. Names of months and days may be recognizably truncated. At programs are executed by periodic execution of the command /usr/lib/atrun from cron (8). The granularity of at depends upon how often atrun is executed. Standard output or error output is lost unless redirected. OPTIONS -m Send mail notification when at job is run. -v Verbose. Prints the name of the file containing your at job. The filename contains the date at which the job is scheduled to run. EXAMPLES Examples of legitimate commands are: at 8am jan 24 cmdfile at 1530 fr week cmdfile where cmdfile contains sh (csh) commands. FILES /usr/lib/atrun Executor (run by cron(8)) Printed 5/12/88 1
AT(1) COMMAND REFERENCE AT(1) /usr/spool/at/yy.ddd.hhhh.* Activity for year yy, day dd, hour hhhh lasttimedone Last hhhh past Activities in progress VARIABLES SHELL The user's login shell. If it is /bin/csh, that shell is used to execute commands. RETURN VALUE [NO_ERRS] Command completed without error. [USAGE] Incorrect command line syntax. Execution terminated. [NP_ERR] An error occurred that was not a system error. Execution terminated. [P_ERR] A system error occurred. Execution terminated. See intro(2) for more information on system errors. CAVEATS Due to the granularity of the execution of /usr/lib/atrun, there may be bugs in scheduling things almost exactly 24 hours into the future. Only twenty jobs may be scheduled to run in a single minute. All subsequent jobs will be rescheduled for the next minute that has open slots. SEE ALSO calendar(1), csh(1csh), pwd(1), sh(1sh), sleep(1), and cron(8). Printed 5/12/88 2
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