How the command "at" works?

Peng Yu pengyu.ut at gmail.com
Sat Aug 6 14:34:06 UTC 2016


On Saturday, August 6, 2016, Karl Auer <kauer at biplane.com.au> wrote:

> On Sat, 2016-08-06 at 06:36 -0500, Peng Yu wrote:
> > Thanks for the information. I actually want to make a customized job
> > scheduler so that it will be able to run bash fuction defined in the
> > environment of the bash shell in which the job scheduler is called.
>
> Why? "at" does it perfectly well. Or are you just doing it for fun?
>
> Or do you specifically need "atd" to run bash shells?


I need atd be aware of any bash function defined in the bash shell when at
is called. I don't think this is possible with the current version of at,

>
> Regards, K.
>
>
> --
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Karl Auer (kauer at biplane.com.au <javascript:;>)
> http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer
> http://twitter.com/kauer389
>
> GPG fingerprint: E00D 64ED 9C6A 8605 21E0 0ED0 EE64 2BEE CBCB C38B
> Old fingerprint: 3C41 82BE A9E7 99A1 B931 5AE7 7638 0147 2C3C 2AC4
>
>
>
>
> --
> ubuntu-users mailing list
> ubuntu-users at lists.ubuntu.com <javascript:;>
> Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/
> mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users
>


-- 
Regards,
Peng
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-users/attachments/20160806/a6dd4ae8/attachment.html>


More information about the ubuntu-users mailing list