I'm using the 'at' command in order to create 3 directories, just a dumb bash script:
#!/bin/bash
for i in {1..3}
do
mkdir dir$i
done
Everything is ok if I execute that script directly on terminal, but when I use 'at' command as follows:
at -f g.sh 18:06
It only creates one directory named dir{1..3}
, taking interval not as an interval but as a list with one element {1..3}
. According to this I think my mistake is using bash script due to at
executes commands using /bin/sh but I'm not sure.
Please tell me if I'm right and I would appreciate some alternative to my code since even it is useless I'm curious to know what's wrong with at and bash.
at
executes the commands from fileg.sh
at the given time. It will read each commands from this file. It's like doingsh g.sh
. Instead tryat 18:06 <<< "/full/path/to/g.sh"
.