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Re: Help : can not get cron work


On Thu, 5 Jan 2006, lin q wrote:

> From: Brian Dessent <brian@XXXXXXX.XXX>
> Reply-To: cygwin@XXXXXX.XXX
> To: cygwin@XXXXXX.XXX

<http://cygwin.com/acronyms/#PCYMTNQREAIYR>. Thanks.


> Subject: Re: Help : can not get cron work
> Date: Wed, 04 Jan 2006 18:00:46 -0800
>
> lin q wrote:
>
> >   1) "cygrunsrv -I cron -p /usr/sbin/cron -a ?D"
>
> You should run /usr/bin/cron-config, and not try to do this by hand
> because there is much more to do than just installing the service.
>
> >             16 10 * * * linq  rsync -azv emperor:/dev/tools/* /cygdrive/c/bin/tools
>
> That is not the proper format of a user's crontab line.  There is no
> such "username" field as the fifth field in a user's crontab, it
> should just be "16 10 * * * rsync ...".  It was trying to execute a
> command named "linq" that does not exist, and there should be errors
> to this effect in the Windows Event Log.  See "man 5 crontab".

Yep, I missed that...


> Also realize that if you do not have system-wise mounts and Cygwin in
> the PATH the above will not work.  This would have been evident if you
> attached the cygcheck output as requested in
> <http://cygwin.com/problems.html>.

OK, I re-installed cron using /usr/bin/cron-config and I corrected
crontab by removing that "linq".

It still does not work.

I tried a Hello Wold test with the following crontab line,

* * * * * /bin/date > /tmp/date.out 2>&1

It works fine.

Good.


Now I come to suspect something of Cygwin setup. But I can not see
anything wrong in log file of cygcheck. I attach the file.

One thing to note, when I run cygcheck, it exits with an error,
> cygcheck -svr > /tmp/cygcheck.log
cygcheck: dump_sysinfo: GetVolumeInformation() failed: 1231

Is this a problem?

Nope. Error 1231 means "The network location cannot be reached.". Must be a network drive.

Another thing, I checked the Windows event loger and I see some
"Information" on crontab, here is the dump out:

The description for Event ID ( 0 ) in Source ( /usr/sbin/cron ) cannot
be found. The local computer may not have the necessary registry
information or message DLL files to display messages from a remote
computer. You may be able to use the /AUXSOURCE= flag to retrieve this
description; see Help and Support for details. The following information
is part of the event:

This is just junk that the Event Viewer adds when it doesn't know how to parse the event data. You can safely ignore it.

/usr/sbin/cron : PID 6064 : (linq) CMD (rsync -azv
emperor:/dev/swtools/* /cygdrive/c/bin/swtools).

And this is just cron informing you exactly which job it was trying to run.

Do you understand what it is about?

Looking at the cron job, there could be a few possibilities for failure: cron doesn't find rsync; the wildcard gets expanded too early; rsync has output that cron doesn't know where to send because you don't have an smtp daemon running... At least your mounts look ok. Try eliminating the possibilities above by fixing your cron job... HTH, Igor -- http://cs.nyu.edu/~pechtcha/ |\ _,,,---,,_ pechtcha@cs.nyu.edu | igor@watson.ibm.com ZZZzz /,`.-'`' -. ;-;;,_ Igor Peshansky, Ph.D. (name changed!) |,4- ) )-,_. ,\ ( `'-' old name: Igor Pechtchanski '---''(_/--' `-'\_) fL a.k.a JaguaR-R-R-r-r-r-.-.-. Meow!

"Las! je suis sot... -Mais non, tu ne l'es pas, puisque tu t'en rends compte."
"But no -- you are no fool; you call yourself a fool, there's proof enough in
that!" -- Rostand, "Cyrano de Bergerac"
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