man at Command

Man page for apt-get at Command

Man Page for at in Linux

Ubuntu Man Command : man at

Man At  Command

This tutorial shows the man page for man at in linux.

Open terminal with 'su' access and type the command as shown below:
man at

Result of the Command Execution shown below:

AT(1)                                                                 Linux Programmer's Manual                                                                AT(1)



NAME
at, batch, atq, atrm queue, examine or delete jobs for later execution

SYNOPSIS
at [ V] [ q queue] [ f file] [ mldbv] timespec...
at [ V] [ q queue] [ f file] [ mkdbv] [ t time]
at c job [job...]
atq [ V] [ q queue]
atrm [ V] job [job...]
batch

DESCRIPTION
at and batch read commands from standard input or a specified file which are to be executed at a later time, using /bin/sh.

at executes commands at a specified time.

atq lists the user's pending jobs, unless the user is the superuser; in that case, everybody's jobs are listed. The format of the output lines (one for
each job) is: Job number, date, hour, queue, and username.

atrm deletes jobs, identified by their job number.

batch executes commands when system load levels permit; in other words, when the load average drops below 1.5, or the value specified in the invocation of
atd.

At allows fairly complex time specifications, extending the POSIX.2 standard. It accepts times of the form HH:MM to run a job at a specific time of day.
(If that time is already past, the next day is assumed.) You may also specify midnight, noon, or teatime (4pm) and you can have a time of day suffixed with
AM or PM for running in the morning or the evening. You can also say what day the job will be run, by giving a date in the form month name day with an
optional year, or giving a date of the form MMDDYY or MM/DD/YY or DD.MM.YY. The specification of a date must follow the specification of the time of day.
You can also give times like now + count time units, where the time units can be minutes, hours, days, or weeks and you can tell at to run the job today by
suffixing the time with today and to run the job tomorrow by suffixing the time with tomorrow.

For example, to run a job at 4pm three days from now, you would do at 4pm + 3 days, to run a job at 10:00am on July 31, you would do at 10am Jul 31 and to
run a job at 1am tomorrow, you would do at 1am tomorrow.

The exact definition of the time specification can be found in /usr/share/doc/at/timespec.

For both at and batch, commands are read from standard input or the file specified with the f option and executed. The working directory, the environment
(except for the variables TERM, DISPLAY and _) and the umask are retained from the time of invocation. An at or batch command invoked from a su(1) shell
will retain the current userid. The user will be mailed standard error and standard output from his commands, if any. Mail will be sent using the command
/usr/lib/sendmail. If at is executed from a su(1) shell, the owner of the login shell will receive the mail.

The superuser may use these commands in any case. For other users, permission to use at is determined by the files /etc/at.allow and /etc/at.deny.

If the file /etc/at.allow exists, only usernames mentioned in it are allowed to use at.

If /etc/at.allow does not exist, /etc/at.deny is checked, every username not mentioned in it is then allowed to use at.

If neither exists, only the superuser is allowed use of at.

An empty /etc/at.deny means that every user is allowed use these commands, this is the default configuration.

OPTIONS
V prints the version number to standard error and exit successfully.

q queue
uses the specified queue. A queue designation consists of a single letter; valid queue designations range from a to z. and A to Z. The a queue is
the default for at and the b queue for batch. Queues with higher letters run with increased niceness. The special queue "=" is reserved for jobs
which are currently running.

If a job is submitted to a queue designated with an uppercase letter, the job is treated as if it were submitted to batch at the time of the job. Once the
time is reached, the batch processing rules with respect to load average apply. If atq is given a specific queue, it will only show jobs pending in that
queue.

m Send mail to the user when the job has completed even if there was no output.

f file Reads the job from file rather than standard input.

t time run the job at time, given in the format [[CC]YY]MMDDhhmm[.ss]

l Is an alias for atq.

d Is an alias for atrm.


v Shows the time the job will be executed before reading the job.

Times displayed will be in the format "Thu Feb 20 14:50:00 1997".

c cats the jobs listed on the command line to standard output.

FILES
/var/spool/cron/atjobs
/var/spool/cron/atspool
/proc/loadavg
/var/run/utmp
/etc/at.allow
/etc/at.deny

SEE ALSO
cron(1), nice(1), sh(1), umask(2), atd(8).

BUGS
The correct operation of batch for Linux depends on the presence of a proc type directory mounted on /proc.

If the file /var/run/utmp is not available or corrupted, or if the user is not logged on at the time at is invoked, the mail is sent to the userid
found in the environment variable LOGNAME. If that is undefined or empty, the current userid is assumed.

At and batch as presently implemented are not suitable when users are competing for resources. If this is the case for your site, you might want to
consider another batch system, such as nqs.

AUTHOR
At was mostly written by Thomas Koenig, ig25@rz.uni karlsruhe.de.



local Nov 1996 AT(1)


Related Topics

Apt Get Commands