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cron(1M)							      cron(1M)

NAME
     cron - clock daemon

SYNOPSIS
     cron [ -j jobs ] [ nofork ]

DESCRIPTION
     cron executes commands at specified dates and times.  Regularly scheduled
     commands can be specified according to instructions found in crontab
     files in the directory /var/spool/cron/crontabs.  Users can submit their
     own crontab file via the crontab(1) command.  Commands that are to be
     executed only once can be submitted using the at(1) command.

     The following options are supported:

     -j jobs   Specify the maximum number of jobs (MAXRUN) that cron can
	       simultaneously run.  The default value is 25.  The maximum
	       allowed value is 250.

     nofork    If this option is supplied, cron runs in the foreground.

     cron examines crontab files and at command files only during process
     initialization and when a file changes via crontab or at.	This reduces
     the overhead of checking for new or changed files at regularly scheduled
     intervals.

     Since cron never exits, it should be executed only once.  This is done
     routinely through /etc/rc2.d/S75cron at system boot time.
     /etc/cron.d/FIFO is used as a lock file to prevent the execution of more
     than one cron and is also used by the crontab command for notification of
     changes to the crontab files.

     If MAXRUN jobs are running and another is scheduled, cron does not run
     the new job.  A message is logged via syslog(3C).

     cron attempts to handle changes to the system date correctly, either
     forward or backward.  There may be some delay for jobs scheduled during
     the interval on large forward-time changes.

     For each job launched, cron reads in configuration information from
     /etc/default/cron. Currently the only option supported is the
     SVR4_SIGNALS option, which may be set to `YES' or `NO' (it defaults to
     NO).  Setting SVR4_SIGNALS to `YES' will result in processes forked with
     the SIGXFSZ and SIGXCPU signals ignored.  For CPU and filesize resource
     limiting to work correctly, SVR4_SIGNALS should be set to `NO', so that
     these signal retain their default behaviour, which is to terminate the
     process.

     If the file /etc/cron.d/cron.allow exists, only users whose names appear
     in the file are permitted to use crontab. This restriction applies to all
     users, including root.  If that file does not exist, the file
     /etc/cron.d/cron.deny is checked to determine if the user should be

									Page 1

cron(1M)							      cron(1M)

     denied access to crontab. If neither file exists, only root is allowed to
     submit a job. If cron.allow does not exist and cron.deny exists but is
     empty, global usage is permitted.	The allow/deny files consist of one
     user name per line.

FILES
     /etc/cron.d		main cron directory
     /etc/cron.d/FIFO		used as a lock file against multiple copies
				running and also for notification of new or
				changed crontab files
     /etc/cron.d/cron.allow	only users whose names appear in the file are
				permitted to use crontab.
     /etc/cron.d/cron.deny	only users whose names appear in the file are
				denied access to crontab.
     /var/cron/log		accounting information
     /var/spool/cron		spool area
     /etc/config/cron.options	site-dependent options /etc/default/cron
				default behaviour configuration file

SIGNALS
     A SIGHUP signal can be sent to cron to cause it to reexamine all the
     crontab and configuration files.  A message is logged for this event.
     The SIGTERM signal should be used to shut cron down cleanly.

SEE ALSO
     at(1), crontab(1), sh(1).

DIAGNOSTICS
     A history of all actions taken by cron is recorded in /var/cron/log.

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