Daniel Dalton wrote:
Hi!
I'm writing a program to provide me with battery warnings when my
battery hits certain levels. It just checks the current level and does
something. I plan to call it from a a cron job. But If the cron runs
every minute, warnings every minute would be rather annoying. so is
there a way to make the script check if it has already ran before?
eg. can I write to a variable on one run of the program, and on the next
read that value that was written?
Thx!
Daniel.
To put it simply, you want to store a value from one run of the script,
that persists till the next run of the same script.
The most portable way to to that is to write a file. And since all you
care about is the time of writing, the file can be zero length. So
simply check for the file, determine it's creation time, and decide if
it's too recent to want to run again. If the file doesn't exist, or is
"old", then write the file and notify the user.
It's still messy to leave this bogus file around, so think carefully
about where to put it. If the source directory is writable, it's
reasonble to me to simply put it there. That way, if the program gets
deleted, it'll probably get deleted at the same time. Failing that, you
could put it in a TEMP directory. And perhaps the sneakiest place to
put it, if you're on Windows, is in the "run once on startup"
directory. Make it a do-nothing batch file, and Windows will remove it
next time the user restarts the system.
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