How would I get a cron job to run every 72 minutes? Or some not so pretty number like that?
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Uh I know this is long overdue, but I was looking at some scheduling issues and saw this question. Just do this in your crontab */72 * * * * /home/script.sh |
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Don't use cron...
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Use at (man at). Have your app or startup script calculate a startup time 72 minutes in the future and schedule itself to run again before it starts working. |
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You could always take the approach of triggering cron every minute, and having your script exit out immediately if it's been run more recently than 72 minutes ago. |
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Since
As you can see, the pattern repeats every 6 hours with 5 jobs. So, you will have 5 lines in your 0 0,6,12,18 * * * command 12 1,7,13,19 * * * command 24 2,8,14,20 * * * command 36 3,9,15,21 * * * command 48 4,10,16,22 * * * command The other option, of course, is to create a wrapper daemon or shell script that executes and sleeps for the desired time until stopped. |
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You'll need to set exactly 20 tasks for this - i.e. set one at 00:00, next one at 01:12, next one at 02:24, etc. 20 iterations make a full day. Unfortunately, this is the only way to do it, as cron tasks are set up in a fixed schedule beforehand instead of being run, say, "after X minutes the last task was executed". |
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You cannot directly do this from cron/crontab. Cron jobs are run on a specific schedule, not on a specific interval. One alternative would be to work out a schedule that approximated your "every 72 minutes" by running at midnight, 1:12, 2:24, 3:36, ..., and stretching it out to approximate hitting up at midnight. Your crontab file could specify all of these times as times to execute. Another alternative would be to have a separate application handle the scheduling, and fire your application. |
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