106

Some cygwin commands are .exe files, so you can run them with the standard Windows Scheduler, but others don't have an .exe extension so can't be run from DOS (it seems like).

For example I want updatedb to run nightly.

How do I make cron work?

8 Answers 8

97

You need to also install cygrunsrv so you can set cron up as a windows service, then run cron-config.

If you want the cron jobs to send email of any output you'll also need to install either exim or ssmtp (before running cron-config.)

See /usr/share/doc/Cygwin/cron-*.README for more details.

Regarding programs without a .exe extension, they are probably shell scripts of some type. If you look at the first line of the file you could see what program you need to use to run them (e.g., "#!/bin/sh"), so you could perhaps execute them from the windows scheduler by calling the shell program (e.g., "C:\cygwin\bin\sh.exe -l /my/cygwin/path/to/prog".)

2
  • 3
    Tip: use cronevents command to view the events (from the windows evengs log). They are never discarded, I would prune the logs every few months. Oct 2, 2016 at 1:35
  • There's some extended docs here, on how to get around the setuid problem: davidjnice.com/cygwin_cron_service.html Apr 4, 2018 at 11:23
79

You have two options:

  1. Install cron as a windows service, using cygrunsrv:

    cygrunsrv -I cron -p /usr/sbin/cron -a -n
    
    net start cron
    

    Note, in (very) old versions of cron you need to use -D instead of -n

  2. The 'non .exe' files are probably bash scripts, so you can run them via the windows scheduler by invoking bash to run the script, e.g.:

    C:\cygwin\bin\bash.exe -l -c "./full-path/to/script.sh"
    
7
  • 4
    I especially liked the bash.exe method. Thanks. Dec 20, 2011 at 22:57
  • 4
    B.T.W, I needed to specify the path as a unix-style path - for updatedb my entire command scheduled with windows task scheduler looked like... c:\cygwin\bin\bash.exe -l -c "/usr/bin/updatedb" Dec 20, 2011 at 23:07
  • 2
    I definitely recommend the method in this answer. I was able to use C:\cygwin\bin\bash.exe -l -c "C:\full-path\to\script.sh" on windows 7.
    – Jazzepi
    Feb 8, 2012 at 0:59
  • 2
    if this does not work you might want to replace -D by -n: cygrunsrv -I cron -p /usr/sbin/cron -a -D
    – Benlitz
    Nov 27, 2013 at 16:50
  • 4
    What's the point of using the -l option (login shell) if you're running a script. Scripts are normally run by non-login, non-interactive shells - such shells don't source /etc/profile, ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bashrc, which doesn't really make sense for scripts. The -c option is also unnecessary, it's for specifying a command, a script is just a file and can be fed to bash directly. So, it becomes C:\cygwin\bin\bash.exe "./path/to/script.sh". Oct 2, 2016 at 1:33
27

hat tip http://linux.subogero.com/894/cron-on-cygwin/

Start the cygwin-setup and add the “cron” package from the “Admin” category.

We’ll run cron as a service by user SYSTEM. Poor SYSTEM therefore needs a home directory and a shell. The “/etc/passwd” file will define them.

$ mkdir /root
$ chown SYSTEM:root /root
$ mcedit /etc/passwd
SYSTEM:*:......:/root:/bin/bash

The start the service:

$ cron-config
Do you want to remove or reinstall it (yes/no) yes
Do you want to install the cron daemon as a service? (yes/no) yes
Enter the value of CYGWIN for the daemon: [ ] ntsec
Do you want the cron daemon to run as yourself? (yes/no) no
Do you want to start the cron daemon as a service now? (yes/no) yes

Local users can now define their scheduled tasks like this (crontab will start your favourite editor):

$ crontab -e  # edit your user specific cron-table HOME=/home/foo
PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:$PATH
# testing - one per line
* * * * *   touch ~/cron
@reboot     ~/foo.sh
45 11 * * * ~/lunch_message_to_mates.sh

Domain users: it does not work. Poor cron is unable to run scheduled tasks on behalf of domain users on the machine. But there is another way: cron also runs stuff found in the system level cron table in “/etc/crontab”. So insert your suff there, so that SYSTEM does it on its own behalf:

$ touch /etc/crontab
$ chown SYSTEM /etc/crontab
$ mcedit /etc/crontab
HOME=/root
PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:$PATH
* * * * *   SYSTEM touch ~/cron
@reboot     SYSTEM rm -f /tmp/.ssh*

Finally a few words about crontab entries. They are either environment settings or scheduled commands. As seen above, on Cygwin it’s best to create a usable PATH. Home dir and shell are normally taken from “/etc/passwd”.

As to the columns of scheduled commands see the manual page.

If certain crontab entries do not run, the best diagnostic tool is this:

$ cronevents
3
  • 1
    There's no reason to set CYGWIN to ntsec. It is obsolete. cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/using-cygwinenv.html
    – yam655
    Nov 24, 2011 at 1:42
  • How do you run Cygwin as SYSTEM?
    – niken
    Aug 25, 2016 at 18:37
  • Although we use cygwin sshd with ad authentication, I was unable to get cron working the same way or with passwd -R. Only way it worked for me was to run cron as a service for a designated user and do all cron jobs with this user. (Cygwin 2.8.0)
    – MortenB
    May 16, 2017 at 9:07
9

Just wanted to add that the options to cron seem to have changed. Need to pass -n rather than -D.

cygrunsrv -I cron -p /usr/sbin/cron -a -n
3

Applied the instructions from this answer and it worked Just to point out a more copy paste like answer ( because cygwin installation procedure is kind of anti-copy-paste wise implemented )
Click WinLogo button , type cmd.exe , right click it , choose "Start As Administrator". In cmd prompt:

 cd <directory_where_i_forgot_the setup-x86_64.exe> cygwin installer:
 set package_name=cygrunsrv cron
 setup-x86_64.exe -n -q -s http://cygwin.mirror.constant.com -P %package_name%

Ensure the installer does not throw any errors in the prompt ... If it has - you probably have some cygwin binaries running or you are not an Windows admin, or some freaky bug ...

Now in cmd promt:

 C:\cygwin64\bin\cygrunsrv.exe -I cron -p /usr/sbin/cron -a -D   

or whatever full file path you might have to the cygrunsrv.exe and start the cron as windows service in the cmd prompt

 net start cron

Now in bash terminal run crontab -e

set up you cron entry an example bellow:

        #sync my gdrive each 10th minute
    */10 * * * * /home/Yordan/sync_gdrive.sh

    # * * * * * command to be executed
    # - - - - -
    # | | | | |
    # | | | | +- - - - day of week (0 - 6) (Sunday=0)
    # | | | +- - - - - month (1 - 12)
    # | | +- - - - - - day of month (1 - 31)
    # | +- - - - - - - hour (0 - 23)
    # +--------------- minute
3
  • set package_name=cygrunsrv cron did not work I had to install them separately. Kept getting " cygrunsrv: Given path doesn't point to a valid executable"
    – rob
    Feb 19, 2015 at 16:22
  • Service would not start but looking in /var/log/cron.log showed that -D should be -n. Running "c:\cygwin64\bin\cygrunsrv.exe -R cron" and then "c:\cygwin64\bin\cygrunsrv.exe -I cron -p /usr/sbin/cron -a -n" fixed it.
    – rob
    Feb 20, 2015 at 10:30
  • 1
    cygrunsrv: Error installing a service: OpenSCManager: Win32 error 5: Access is denied.
    – niken
    Aug 25, 2016 at 18:45
3

I figured out how to get the Cygwin cron service running automatically when I logged on to Windows 7. Here's what worked for me:

Using Notepad, create file C:\cygwin\bin\Cygwin_launch_crontab_service_input.txt with content no on the first line and yes on the second line (without the quotes). These are your two responses to prompts for cron-config.

Create file C:\cygwin\Cygwin_launch_crontab_service.bat with content:

@echo off
C:
chdir C:\cygwin\bin
bash  cron-config < Cygwin_launch_crontab_service_input.txt

Add a Shortcut to the following in the Windows Startup folder: Cygwin_launch_crontab_service.bat

See http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/1401-startup-programs-change.html if you need help on how to add to Startup. BTW, you can optionally add these in Startup if you would like:

Cygwin

XWin Server

The first one executes

C:\cygwin\Cygwin.bat

and the second one executes

C:\cygwin\bin\run.exe /usr/bin/bash.exe -l -c /usr/bin/startxwin.exe
2

The correct syntax to install cron in cygwin as Windows service is to pass -n as argument and not -D:

cygrunsrv --install cron --path /usr/sbin/cron --args -n

-D returns usage error when starting cron in cygwin:

$

$cygrunsrv --install cron --path /usr/sbin/cron --args -D

$cygrunsrv --start cron

cygrunsrv: Error starting a service: QueryServiceStatus: Win32 error 1062:

The service has not been started.

$cat /var/log/cron.log

cron: unknown option -- D

usage: /usr/sbin/cron [-n] [-x [ext,sch,proc,parc,load,misc,test,bit]]

$

Below page has a good explanation.

Installing & Configuring the Cygwin Cron Service in Windows: https://www.davidjnice.com/cygwin_cron_service.html

P.S. I had to run Cygwin64 Terminal on my Windows 10 PC as administrator in order to install cron as Windows service.

0
Getting updatedb to work in cron on Cygwin -- debugging steps
1) Make sure cron is installed.
 a) Type 'cron' tab tab and look for completion help.
   You should see crontab.exe, cron-config, etc.  If not install cron using setup.
2) Run cron-config.  Be sure to read all the ways to diagnose cron.
3) Run crontab -e
 a) Create a test entry of something simple, e.g.,
   "* * * * * echo $HOME >> /tmp/mycron.log" and save it.
4) cat /tmp/mycron.log.  Does it show cron environment variable HOME
   every minute?
5) Is HOME correct?  By default mine was /home/myusername; not what I wanted.
   So, I added the entry
   "HOME='/cygdrive/c/documents and settings/myusername'" to crontab.
6) Once assured the test entry works I moved on to 'updatedb' by
   adding an entry in crontab.
7) Since updatedb is a script, errors of sed and find showed up in
   my cron.log file.  In the error line, the absolute path of sed referenced
   an old version of sed.exe and not the one in /usr/bin.  I tried changing my
   cron PATH environment variable but because it was so long crontab
   considered the (otherwise valid) change to be an error.  I tried an
   explicit much-shorter PATH command, including what I thought were the essential
   WINDOWS paths but my cron.log file was empty.  Eventually I left PATH alone and
   replaced the old sed.exe in the other path with sed.exe from /usr/bin.
   After that updatedb ran to completion.  To reduce the number of
   permission error lines I eventually ended up with this:
   "# Run updatedb at 2:10am once per day skipping Sat and Sun'
   "10 2  *  *  1-5  /usr/bin/updatedb --localpaths='/cygdrive/c' --prunepaths='/cygdrive/c/WINDOWS'"

Notes: I ran cron-config several times throughout this process
       to restart the cygwin cron daemon.

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