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This is a huge annoyance. Whilst in older wget versions (even stated so in the man page) the whole error code functionality had never worked reliably, current wget versions appear to have it working TOO reliably.

I have a cron job that might be dubbed a sort of "poor man's RSS", set up for a blog that has no RSS option. I'd just poll it every 15 minutes for new pages to come. (that is, when it's currently at random-blog.net/entry2147.html, and I have 2148 stored in a variable and built my crontab from it, I will get 404s UNTIL the entry2148.html page exists. (which is usually the case in less than 20 hours)

BUT...

cron tends to become a bit TOO verbose whenever wget returns a "not found" (404) (exit code 8):

(CRON) error grandchild #98765 failed with error code 8

Well I know that, don't I?! I know that page does not YET exist, but I do not need cron to tell me that with every run! I've scoured the net for answers but there was nowhere any idea how to suppress these unnecessary messages while keeping my syslog tidy.

Unfortunately, there is no way to tell wget to simply output a code 0 despite "failure" (well, except for hacking it)

Any ideas about this problem, anyone?

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  • Try putting an exit 0 on the last line of your shell script. Apr 16, 2012 at 23:01
  • @wildplasser You should probably put that as an answer, not a comment.
    – Neil
    Apr 16, 2012 at 23:22

1 Answer 1

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You could wrap the stuff inside a shell-script, that ignores the actual exit code and exits with a 0 return. It could look like:

#!/bin/sh

cd /home/me/mycrondir

wget -flags tralalala tweedledom  2>&1 >>/home/me/mycrondir/myerrorlog.log

exit 0
#Eof

If wget (or other binaries you need) is not in the $PATH (as provided by cron) you could add these at the top of this script, like

PATH=/opt/bin:$PATH; export PATH
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  • Thanks! I will try that! And no, I'm not going to extend PATH just for that, I will simply call it as /usr/bin/wget or on another machine, /usr/local/bin/wget. crontab also allows me to use full paths doesn't it ;-) Apr 18, 2012 at 17:41

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