Hi Henry

In the first line of cron-apt binary you have a line telling #!/bin/bash (or #!/bin/sh).

Change that line to
#!/bin/bash -x

Then run the command and give me the output.

cron-apt > logfile.txt 2&>1

Best regards,

// Ola

Quoting "Henry Bremridge" <[email protected]>:

Ola

Be glad to help if and where I can.

When you say add a few "echo something" into cron-apt, please tell me
EXACTLY what you want me to do.

:) I am happy enough using the command line and I am happy enough to add
things to a config file, but todate I have only followed "recipes".

--
Henry

On Mon, May 04, 2009 at 09:08:44AM +0200, Ola Lundqvist wrote:
Hi Henry

Interesting. I have to look into this. If you want to help you can put
in a few "echo something" lines into cron-apt to determine where it
exits.

Best regards,

// Ola




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