On Mon, Mar 05, 2001 at 03:58:10PM -0600, Judith Elaine Bush wrote: > On Mon, Mar 05, 2001 at 09:12:33PM +0100, Erdmut Pfeifer wrote: > > > > as there is /etc/crontab for cron, there is a /etc/anacrontab for anacron. > > Indeed. Except the /etc/anacron specifies frequency (how many days > apart should something be done) and delay (how long after anacron is > invoked shoud something be done). The /etc/anachron file does *not* > run anacron just after 7 am every morning. > > > The suggested "test -x ..." lines in crontab are just to disable those > > entries temporarily while anacron is installed. This way, if you decide > > So, /etc/crontab is NOT where anacron is invoked. Somehow anacron is > invoked around 7 am each day. If it's not in /etc/crontab, where is > it?
sorry, I guess I didn't read your mail carefully enough... I think what you are looking for is /etc/cron.d and the files therein. Typically, when anacron is installed, there is a file /etc/cron.d/anacron containing the line 30 7 * * * root test -x /usr/sbin/anacron && /usr/sbin/anacron -s which explains the activity around 7 am you see. The feature that cron is treating the files in /etc/cron.d as extensions to /etc/crontab is a debian-specific modification of the regular cron behaviour -- see the section "DEBIAN SPECIFIC" in man cron. hope that helps now ;) Erdmut -- Erdmut Pfeifer science+computing gmbh -- Bugs come in through open windows. Keep Windows shut! --