Here's another one-liner way, that avoids duplicates
(crontab -l 2>/dev/null | fgrep -v "*/1 * * * * your_command"; echo "*/1 * * * * your_command") | crontab -
And here's a way to do JohnZ's answer and avoid no crontab for user
message, or if you need to operate in a set -eu
type environment and can't have anything return a failure (in which case the 2>/dev/null
part is optional):
( (crontab -l 2>/dev/null || echo "") ; echo "0 * * * * your_command") | sort -u - | crontab -
Or if you want to split things up so that they're more readable:
new_job="0 * * * * your_command"
preceding_cron_jobs=$(crontab -l || echo "")
(echo "$preceding_cron_jobs" ; echo "$new_job") | sort - | uniq - | crontab -
Or optionally remove any references to your_command (ex: if the schedule has changed, you only want it ever cron'ed once). In this case we no longer need uniq
(added bonus, insertion order is also preserved):
new_job="0 * * * * your_command"
preceding_cron_jobs=$(crontab -l || echo "")
preceding_cron_jobs=$(echo "$preceding_cron_jobs" | grep -v your_command )
(echo "$preceding_cron_jobs" ; echo "$new_job") | crontab -