I used the at command to execute scripts that would pull files from csv,
and make changes to each file, and put them back into the repository. I
ran the at command on Friday before leaving with the start time after
everyone should be out enjoying a cold beer, and it ran over the week
end with the output going to a file so I could verify all went well when
I got to work on Monday morning.

If your script run with cron, they should do well under at.

Not sure if this helps your situation, but you did mention a one shot
cron job.


On Thu, 2010-11-11 at 19:50 -0500, Travis Fraser wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-11-11 at 05:56 -0500, Andre Robatino wrote:
> > Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> > 
> > > In the past I have always gotten on the terminal of a server and
> > > executed a script that did a bunch of wgets to get the CD isos for a
> > > release.
> > 
> > > Well I want to grab the FC14 isos, and I am not home for a few days.
> > > I can't do it in a SSH session to a server at home as I will drop my
> > > session before all the images are downloaded.
> 
> What about screen?
> 
> -- 
> Travis Fraser <tra...@snowpatch.net>
> 

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