I want to get the details of the last run cron job. If the job is interrupted due to some internal problems, I want to re-run the cron job.
Note: I don't have superuser privilege.
You can see the date, time, user and command of previously executed cron jobs using:
grep CRON /var/log/syslog
This will show all cron jobs. If you only wanted to see jobs run by a certain user, you would use something like this:
grep CRON.*\(root\) /var/log/syslog
Note that cron logs at the start of a job so you may want to have lengthy jobs keep their own completion logs; if the system went down halfway through a job, it would still be in the log!
Edit: If you don't have root access, you will have to keep your own job logs. This can be done simply by tacking the following onto the end of your job command:
&& date > /home/user/last_completed
The file /home/user/last_completed
would always contain the last date and time the job completed. You would use >>
instead of >
if you wanted to append completion dates to the file.
You could also achieve the same by putting your command in a small bash or sh script and have cron execute that file.
#!/bin/bash
[command]
date > /home/user/last_completed
The crontab for this would be:
* * * * * bash /path/to/script.bash
sudo grep CRON /var/log/syslog
to see them, or replace root
with the user you want to see jobs from in the second command in my answer.
syslog
path on my CentOS, but it directly in /var/log/cron
file instead
/var/log/cron
contains cron job logs. But you need a root privilege to see.
/var/log/cron
. Source: cronitor.io/cron-reference/where-are-cron-logs-stored
CentOs,
sudo grep CRON /var/log/cron