I'm trying to write a cron job that runs a report, and emails the result to an address defined in my user's ~/.bashrc file. I had this working perfectly on Fedora, but when I switched to Ubuntu, my solution no longer works. The command my cron job currently runs is:
. /home/myuser/.bashrc; /home/myuser/bin/runreport
If I run that command m开发者_StackOverflow社区anually, or start it via Gnome-Schedule, it works perfectly, but it never seems to run. Is there something specific to Ubuntu that would be blocking this from running?
Output of crontab -l:
0 8 * * * . /home/myuser/.bashrc; /home/myuser/bin/runreport # JOB_ID_1
Output of grep -i cron /var/log/syslog:
Aug 4 08:00:00 localhost CRON[23234]: (myuser) CMD (. /home/myuser/.bashrc; /home/myuser/bin/runreport # JOB_ID_1)
If /home/myuser/bin/runreport
is a script, add the following two lines to the top:
env
set -x
and change the crontab
line to:
. /home/myuser/.bashrc ; /home/myuser/bin/runreport >/tmp/qq 2>&1
Then, when it runs, you should have all the environment variables, and the commands that were run, in the /tmp/qq
file.
If it isn't a script, make a script that calls it and add the env
line to it. That will at least give you the environment you're running in.
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