On Fri, Feb 19, 2010 at 8:21 AM, L. V. Lammert <l...@omnitec.net> wrote:
> No, that isn't going to work. This isn't some elitist club - if we can't > provide a simple, sane, safe way for a [priviledged] user to push a backup > image out to a DR server, than *we* have failed as technologists. Wait. What the hell is so hard about: j...@eris:~ $ man -k crontab crontab (1) - maintain crontab files for individual users crontab (5) - tables for driving cron j...@eris:~ $ man 5 crontab [...] While lines in a user crontab have five fixed fields plus a command in the form: minute hour day-of-month month day-of-week command [...] If the "[privileged]" user is unwilling to learn, and further unwilling to look this stuff up online to check his setups are right, and -worse- unwilling to check their work (you know, that thing you're supposed to have learned to do in elementary school before you turn in your homework), we should provide a framework around their needs? Really? Being a UNIX Systems Admin means knowing your tools, and most importantly your toolkits. Cron is a tool, making it "simpler" for a new admin is doing you both a disservice in the long run. jb