I have the following bash script:
clean-tmp.sh
#!/bin/bash
tmpreaper 1h /tmp --test > ./tmpreaper.log
When I run it in the terminal using ./clean-tmp.sh
, it writes to the file ./tmpreaper.log
.
I added the script to the list of cron jobs using crontab -e
:
*/5 * * * * cd /home/cron-jobs && ./clean-tmp.sh
I then checked cron's logs and this entry is in there every 5 minutes:
Feb 19 00:45:01 ip-172-31-23-184 CRON[1475]: (ubuntu) CMD (cd /home/cron-jobs && ./clean-tmp.sh)
But it's no longer writing to ./tmpreaper.log
.
What on earth am I doing wrong?
tmpreaper
not being in cron's PATH. If it's in/usr/local/bin
for example, that's not there by default..sh
-- UNIX executables don't generally have extensions; you runls
, notls.elf
, after all; and.sh
in particular implies thatsh
is an adequate interpreter to run something, whereas#!/bin/bash
contradicts that by indicating that bash is its intended interpreter)./usr/sbin/tmpreaper
instead of justtmpreaper
. I figured out where it was by usingwhich tmpreaper
. See this link for more info: askubuntu.com/questions/47800/… Feel free to post an answer.type
instead ofwhich
-- whilewhich
is an external command that looks through the PATH,type
is built into the shell and can inspect its internal state, finding what a command would do even if it's not in a PATH lookup (identifying aliases, functions, etc).PATH
line in your crontab -- any variable assignment you put in the header will be exported to the environment. Thus,PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/sbin
or such at the top of your crontab will ensure that contents in/usr/sbin
can be found for all scripts launched by cron.