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Do I have to restart cron after changing the crontable file?

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  • 11
    Not to disregard @leonbloy's answer, but I found that implementing my linux's first cron job (a correctly formatted per minute job) didn't action until the system was rebooted. sudo service cron restart wasn't tested.
    – geotheory
    Jul 2, 2014 at 9:56
  • 4
    @geotheory yikes I sure hope I don't have to restart my prod server any time I update my crontab (and I don't).
    – jcollum
    Nov 8, 2016 at 20:46

12 Answers 12

821

No.

From the cron man page:

...cron will then examine the modification time on all crontabs and reload those which have changed. Thus cron need not be restarted whenever a crontab file is modified

But if you just want to make sure its done anyway,

sudo service cron reload

or

/etc/init.d/cron reload
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  • 13
    If using cron.d folder, symlinked crontabs will not be reloaded. How can I force a reload? Jan 10, 2014 at 18:00
  • 16
    Ah it's that easy. It's now sudo service cron restart. Jan 10, 2014 at 18:25
  • 22
    Better option is reload - it can be initiated by non-root user: /etc/init.d/cron reload
    – Tharok
    May 6, 2014 at 4:50
  • 16
    @CMCDragonkai Possibly crond instead of cron. Jul 21, 2015 at 12:48
  • 60
    The only problem with this answer is that it's not always true. See geotheory's comment underneath the question. I, too, was bit by this. I made a change to the crontab file via sudo crontab -e, saved the change by Ctrl + X, and went away assuming cron would pick it up (due to this answer being so highly upvoted). Then, days later my client reports that the cron is still running on the old cycle. So - honestly - if you want to be safe - just restart either cron or the system, and don't play around with wasted time testing, which you'll have to do despite this highly-upvoted answer. Oct 14, 2015 at 22:53
79

On CentOS with cPanel sudo /etc/init.d/crond reload does the trick.

On CentOS7: sudo systemctl start crond.service

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  • 5
    Thanks for the CentOs 7 line Dec 15, 2017 at 2:50
  • 4
    // , To reload crond, rather than just start it on the increasingly horrible systemd, run sudo systemctl reload crond.service. Oct 3, 2018 at 18:26
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    @NathanBasanese Reloading cron on SystemD now is considered black magic: sudo systemctl reload crond fails with Failed to reload cron.service: Job type reload is not applicable for unit cron.service. (Ubuntu 18.04). Read: Heads off, we all are pwned by the syndrome: "SystemD, there can be only one". If reload is not done automagically behind the scenes, you are bust! Do not even think about fixing it, like you did for the last 3 (or more) decades! Read: The world of Windows has finally swallowed Debian: If there's something strange under the hood, what you gonna do? Restart!
    – Tino
    Jan 16, 2019 at 19:55
  • Restart is more than just reload. Isn't there a clean reload option available for Centos?
    – Ωmega
    Apr 18, 2019 at 19:46
  • @Tino you can install cronie
    – Bob
    Jun 19, 2019 at 11:30
47

I had a similar issue on 16.04 VPS Digital Ocean. If you are changing crontabs, make sure to run

sudo service cron restart 
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  • 1
    I see only reload is enough. No need restart. Thanks. :) Jan 13, 2020 at 6:43
  • 1
    In my case Rasperian with PI zero and changes in /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root I had to use restart
    – mikep
    Aug 10, 2021 at 11:30
  • Had the same problem as @mikep on an old openSUSE 10 machine. Only restart worked.
    – mgutt
    Oct 5, 2021 at 8:08
21

Commands for RHEL/Fedora/CentOS/Scientific Linux user

  1. Start cron service

    • To start the cron service, use: /etc/init.d/crond start

    • OR RHEL/CentOS 5.x/6.x user: service crond start

    • OR RHEL/Centos Linux 7.x user: systemctl start crond.service

  2. Stop cron service

    • To stop the cron service, use: /etc/init.d/crond stop

    • OR RHEL/CentOS 5.x/6.x user: service crond stop

    • OR RHEL/Centos Linux 7.x user: systemctl stop crond.service

  3. Restart cron service

    • To restart the cron service, use: /etc/init.d/crond restart

    • OR RHEL/CentOS 5.x/6.x user: service crond restart

    • OR RHEL/Centos Linux 7.x user: systemctl restart crond.service

Commands for Ubuntu/Mint/Debian based Linux distro

  1. Debian Start cron service

    • To start the cron service, use: /etc/init.d/cron start

    • OR sudo /etc/init.d/cron start

    • OR sudo service cron start

  2. Debian Stop cron service

    • To stop the cron service, use: /etc/init.d/cron stop

    • OR sudo /etc/init.d/cron stop

    • OR sudo service cron stop

  3. Debian Restart cron service

    • To restart the cron service, use: /etc/init.d/cron restart

    • OR sudo /etc/init.d/cron restart

    • OR sudo service cron restart

Source: https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-linux-unix-start-restart-cron/

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17

Depending on distribution, using "cron reload" might do nothing. To paste a snippet out of init.d/cron (debian squeeze):

reload|force-reload) log_daemon_msg "Reloading configuration files for periodic command scheduler" "cron"
    # cron reloads automatically
    log_end_msg 0
    ;;

Some developer/maintainer relied on it reloading, but doesn't, and in this case there's not a way to force reload. I'm generating my crontab files as part of a deploy, and unless somehow the length of the file changes, the changes are not reloaded.

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  • perhaps HUPping the process works in systems with service reload disabled?
    – teknopaul
    Feb 8, 2023 at 17:13
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  1. If file /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root edited via SFTP client - service cron restart needed. Reload service not work.

  2. If edited file /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root via console linux (nano, mc) - restart NOT needed.

  3. If edited cron via crontab -e - restart NOT needed.

12

try this one for centos 7 : service crond reload

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  • 1
    Or systemctl reload crond
    – pooya13
    Jun 19, 2020 at 20:02
7

Try this out: sudo cron reload It works for me on ubuntu 12.10

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    Doesn't work on my Raspberry Pi 3+ with Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS
    – Jan
    Apr 19, 2019 at 8:25
5

Try this: service crond restart, Hence it's crond not cron.

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    crond unrecognized service. It work with cron for me. my OS is Ubuntu 18.04 Dec 31, 2019 at 5:17
4

There are instances wherein cron needs to be restarted in order for the start up script to work. There's nothing wrong in restarting the cron.

sudo service cron restart

3

On CentOS (my version is 6.5) when editing crontab you must close the editor to reflect your changes in CRON.

crontab -e

After that command You can see that new entry appears in /var/log/cron

Sep 24 10:44:26 ***** crontab[17216]: (*****) BEGIN EDIT (*****)

But only saving crontab editor after making some changes does not work. You must leave the editor to reflect changes in cron. After exiting new entry appears in the log:

Sep 24 10:47:58 ***** crontab[17216]: (*****) END EDIT (*****)

From this point changes you made are visible to CRON.

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Ubuntu 18.04 * Usage: /etc/init.d/cron {start|stop|status|restart|reload|force-reload}

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