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Section: POSIX Programmer's Manual (1P) Updated: 2003 Index
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PROLOG
This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.
The Linux implementation of this interface may differ (consult
the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior),
or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.
NAME
at - execute commands at a later time
SYNOPSIS
at [-m][-f file][-q
queuename] -t time_arg
at [-m][-f file][-q queuename]
timespec
...
at -r at_job_id ...
at -l -q queuename
at -l [at_job_id ...]
DESCRIPTION
The at utility shall read commands from standard input and group
them together as an at-job, to be executed at a
later time.
The at-job shall be executed in a separate invocation of the shell,
running in a separate process group with no controlling
terminal, except that the environment variables, current working directory,
file creation mask, and other implementation-defined
execution-time attributes in effect when the at utility is executed
shall be retained and used when the at-job is
executed.
When the at-job is submitted, the at_job_id and scheduled time
shall be written to standard error. The at_job_id
is an identifier that shall be a string consisting solely of alphanumeric
characters and the period character. The at_job_id
shall be assigned by the system when the job is scheduled such that
it uniquely identifies a particular job.
User notification and the processing of the job's standard output
and standard error are described under the -m
option.
Users shall be permitted to use at if their name appears in
the file /usr/lib/cron/at.allow. If that file does not
exist, the file /usr/lib/cron/at.deny shall be checked to determine
whether the user shall be denied access to at. If
neither file exists, only a process with the appropriate privileges
shall be allowed to submit a job. If only at.deny exists
and is empty, global usage shall be permitted. The at.allow
and at.deny files shall consist of one user name per
line.
OPTIONS
The at utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume
of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines.
The following options shall be supported:
- -f file
-
Specify the pathname of a file to be used as the source of the at-job,
instead of standard input.
- -l
-
(The letter ell.) Report all jobs scheduled for the invoking user
if no at_job_id operands are specified. If
at_job_ids are specified, report only information for these
jobs. The output shall be written to standard output.
- -m
-
Send mail to the invoking user after the at-job has run, announcing
its completion. Standard output and standard error produced
by the at-job shall be mailed to the user as well, unless redirected
elsewhere. Mail shall be sent even if the job produces no
output.
If -m is not used, the job's standard output and standard error
shall be provided to the user by means of mail, unless
they are redirected elsewhere; if there is no such output to provide,
the implementation need not notify the user of the job's
completion.
- -q queuename
-
Specify in which queue to schedule a job for submission. When used
with the -l option, limit the search to that particular
queue. By default, at-jobs shall be scheduled in queue a. In
contrast, queue b shall be reserved for batch jobs; see
batch. The meanings of all other queuenames are implementation-defined.
If
-q is specified along with either of the -t time_arg
or timespec arguments, the results are
unspecified.
- -r
-
Remove the jobs with the specified at_job_id operands that were
previously scheduled by the at utility.
- -t time_arg
-
Submit the job to be run at the time specified by the time option-argument,
which the application shall ensure has the
format as specified by the touch -t time utility.
OPERANDS
The following operands shall be supported:
- at_job_id
-
The name reported by a previous invocation of the at utility
at the time the job was scheduled.
- timespec
-
Submit the job to be run at the date and time specified. All of the
timespec operands are interpreted as if they were
separated by <space>s and concatenated, and shall be parsed as described
in the grammar at the end of this section. The date
and time shall be interpreted as being in the timezone of the user
(as determined by the TZ variable), unless a timezone
name appears as part of time, below.
In the POSIX locale, the following describes the three parts of the
time specification string. All of the values from the
LC_TIME categories in the POSIX locale shall be recognized in
a case-insensitive manner.
- time
-
-
The time can be specified as one, two, or four digits. One-digit and
two-digit numbers shall be taken to be hours; four-digit
numbers to be hours and minutes. The time can alternatively be specified
as two numbers separated by a colon, meaning
hour:minute. An AM/PM indication (one of the values from
the am_pm keywords in the LC_TIME locale
category) can follow the time; otherwise, a 24-hour clock time shall
be understood. A timezone name can also follow to further
qualify the time. The acceptable timezone names are implementation-defined,
except that they shall be case-insensitive and the
string utc is supported to indicate the time is in Coordinated
Universal Time. In the POSIX locale, the time field
can also be one of the following tokens:
- midnight
-
-
Indicates the time 12:00 am (00:00).
- noon
-
-
Indicates the time 12:00 pm.
- now
-
-
Indicates the current day and time. Invoking at <now>
shall submit an at-job for potentially immediate
execution (that is, subject only to unspecified scheduling delays).
- date
-
-
An optional date can be specified as either a month name (one
of the values from the mon or abmon keywords
in the LC_TIME locale category) followed by a day number (and
possibly year number preceded by a comma), or a day of the
week (one of the values from the day or abday keywords
in the LC_TIME locale category). In the POSIX locale,
two special days shall be recognized:
- today
-
-
Indicates the current day.
- tomorrow
-
-
Indicates the day following the current day.
If no date is given, today shall be assumed if the given
time is greater than the current time, and
tomorrow shall be assumed if it is less. If the given month
is less than the current month (and no year is given), next year
shall be assumed.
- increment
-
-
The optional increment shall be a number preceded by a plus
sign ( '+' ) and suffixed by one of the following:
minutes, hours, days, weeks, months,
or years. (The singular forms shall also be
accepted.) The keyword next shall be equivalent to an increment
number of +1. For example, the following are equivalent
commands:
-
at 2pm + 1 week
at 2pm next week
The following grammar describes the precise format of timespec
in the POSIX locale. The general conventions for this
style of grammar are described in Grammar Conventions . This
formal syntax shall
take precedence over the preceding text syntax description. The longest
possible token or delimiter shall be recognized at a given
point. When used in a timespec, white space shall also delimit
tokens.
-
%token hr24clock_hr_min
%token hr24clock_hour
/*
An hr24clock_hr_min is a one, two, or four-digit number. A one-digit
or two-digit number constitutes an hr24clock_hour. An hr24clock_hour
may be any of the single digits [0,9], or may be double digits, ranging
from [00,23]. If an hr24clock_hr_min is a four-digit number, the
first two digits shall be a valid hr24clock_hour, while the last two
represent the number of minutes, from [00,59].
*/
%token wallclock_hr_min
%token wallclock_hour
/*
A wallclock_hr_min is a one, two-digit, or four-digit number.
A one-digit or two-digit number constitutes a wallclock_hour.
A wallclock_hour may be any of the single digits [1,9], or may
be double digits, ranging from [01,12]. If a wallclock_hr_min
is a four-digit number, the first two digits shall be a valid
wallclock_hour, while the last two represent the number of
minutes, from [00,59].
*/
%token minute
/*
A minute is a one or two-digit number whose value can be [0,9]
or [00,59].
*/
%token day_number
/*
A day_number is a number in the range appropriate for the particular
month and year specified by month_name and year_number, respectively.
If no year_number is given, the current year is assumed if the given
date and time are later this year. If no year_number is given and
the date and time have already occurred this year and the month is
not the current month, next year is the assumed year.
*/
%token year_number
/*
A year_number is a four-digit number representing the year A.D., in
which the at_job is to be run.
*/
%token inc_number
/*
The inc_number is the number of times the succeeding increment
period is to be added to the specified date and time.
*/
%token timezone_name
/*
The name of an optional timezone suffix to the time field, in an
implementation-defined format.
*/
%token month_name
/*
One of the values from the mon or abmon keywords in the LC_TIME
locale category.
*/
%token day_of_week
/*
One of the values from the day or abday keywords in the LC_TIME
locale category.
*/
%token am_pm
/*
One of the values from the am_pm keyword in the LC_TIME locale
category.
*/
%start timespec
%%
timespec : time
| time date
| time increment
| time date increment
| nowspec
;
nowspec : "now"
| "now" increment
;
time : hr24clock_hr_min
| hr24clock_hr_min timezone_name
| hr24clock_hour ":" minute
| hr24clock_hour ":" minute timezone_name
| wallclock_hr_min am_pm
| wallclock_hr_min am_pm timezone_name
| wallclock_hour ":" minute am_pm
| wallclock_hour ":" minute am_pm timezone_name
| "noon"
| "midnight"
;
date : month_name day_number
| month_name day_number "," year_number
| day_of_week
| "today"
| "tomorrow"
;
increment : "+" inc_number inc_period
| "next" inc_period
;
inc_period : "minute" | "minutes"
| "hour" | "hours"
| "day" | "days"
| "week" | "weeks"
| "month" | "months"
| "year" | "years"
;
STDIN
The standard input shall be a text file consisting of commands acceptable
to the shell command language described in Shell Command Language
. The standard input shall only be used if no -f file
option is specified.
INPUT FILES
See the STDIN section.
The text files /usr/lib/cron/at.allow and /usr/lib/cron/at.deny
shall contain zero or more user names, one per line,
of users who are, respectively, authorized or denied access to the
at and batch
utilities.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables shall affect the execution of
at:
- LANG
-
Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that
are unset or null. (See the Base Definitions volume of
IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 8.2, Internationalization Variables
for
the precedence of internationalization variables used to determine
the values of locale categories.)
- LC_ALL
-
If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the
other internationalization variables.
- LC_CTYPE
-
Determine the locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes
of text data as characters (for example, single-byte as
opposed to multi-byte characters in arguments and input files).
- LC_MESSAGES
-
Determine the locale that should be used to affect the format and
contents of diagnostic messages written to standard error and
informative messages written to standard output.
- NLSPATH
-
Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of LC_MESSAGES
.
- LC_TIME
-
Determine the format and contents for date and time strings written
and accepted by at.
- SHELL
-
Determine a name of a command interpreter to be used to invoke the
at-job. If the variable is unset or null, sh shall be used.
If it is set to a value other than a name for sh, the implementation
shall do one of the following: use that shell; use sh; use the
login shell from the user database; or any of the preceding accompanied
by a warning
diagnostic about which was chosen.
- TZ
-
Determine the timezone. The job shall be submitted for execution at
the time specified by timespec or -t
time relative to the timezone specified by the TZ variable.
If timespec specifies a timezone, it shall
override TZ. If timespec does not specify a timezone
and TZ is unset or null, an unspecified default timezone
shall be used.
ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
Default.
STDOUT
When standard input is a terminal, prompts of unspecified format for
each line of the user input described in the STDIN section
may be written to standard output.
In the POSIX locale, the following shall be written to the standard
output for each job when jobs are listed in response to the
-l option:
-
"%s\t%s\n", at_job_id, <date>
where date shall be equivalent in format to the output of:
-
date +"%a %b %e %T %Y"
The date and time written shall be adjusted so that they appear in
the timezone of the user (as determined by the TZ
variable).
STDERR
In the POSIX locale, the following shall be written to standard error
when a job has been successfully submitted:
-
"job %s at %s\n", at_job_id, <date>
where date has the same format as that described in the STDOUT
section. Neither this, nor warning messages concerning the
selection of the command interpreter, shall be considered a diagnostic
that changes the exit status.
Diagnostic messages, if any, shall be written to standard error.
OUTPUT FILES
None.
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
None.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values shall be returned:
- 0
-
The at utility successfully submitted, removed, or listed a
job or jobs.
- >0
-
An error occurred.
CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
The job shall not be scheduled, removed, or listed.
The following sections are informative.
APPLICATION USAGE
The format of the at command line shown here is guaranteed only
for the POSIX locale. Other cultures may be supported
with substantially different interfaces, although implementations
are encouraged to provide comparable levels of functionality.
Since the commands run in a separate shell invocation, running in
a separate process group with no controlling terminal, open
file descriptors, traps, and priority inherited from the invoking
environment are lost.
Some implementations do not allow substitution of different shells
using SHELL. System V systems, for example, have used
the login shell value for the user in /etc/passwd. To select
reliably another command interpreter, the user must include it
as part of the script, such as:
-
$ at 1800
myshell myscript
EOT
job ... at ...
$
EXAMPLES
- 1.
-
This sequence can be used at a terminal:
-
at -m 0730 tomorrow
sort < file >outfile
EOT
- 2.
-
This sequence, which demonstrates redirecting standard error to a
pipe, is useful in a command procedure (the sequence of output
redirection specifications is significant):
-
at now + 1 hour <<!
diff file1 file2 2>&1 >outfile | mailx mygroup
!
- 3.
-
To have a job reschedule itself, at can be invoked from within
the at-job. For example, this daily processing script
named my.daily runs every day (although crontab is a more
appropriate vehicle
for such work):
-
# my.daily runs every day
daily processingat now tomorrow < my.daily
- 4.
-
The spacing of the three portions of the POSIX locale timespec
is quite flexible as long as there are no ambiguities.
Examples of various times and operand presentation include:
-
at 0815am Jan 24
at 8 :15amjan24
at now "+ 1day"
at 5 pm FRIday
at '17
utc+
30minutes'
RATIONALE
The at utility reads from standard input the commands to be
executed at a later time. It may be useful to redirect
standard output and standard error within the specified commands.
The -t time option was added as a new capability to support
an internationalized way of specifying a time for
execution of the submitted job.
Early proposals added a "jobname" concept as a way of giving submitted
jobs names that are meaningful to the user submitting
them. The historical, system-specified at_job_id gives no indication
of what the job is. Upon further reflection, it was
decided that the benefit of this was not worth the change in historical
interface. The at functionality is useful in simple
environments, but in large or complex situations, the functionality
provided by the Batch Services option is more suitable.
The -q option historically has been an undocumented option,
used mainly by the batch utility.
The System V -m option was added to provide a method for informing
users that an at-job had completed. Otherwise, users
are only informed when output to standard error or standard output
are not redirected.
The behavior of at <now> was changed in an early proposal
from being unspecified to submitting a job for
potentially immediate execution. Historical BSD at implementations
support this. Historical System V implementations give an
error in that case, but a change to the System V versions should have
no backwards-compatibility ramifications.
On BSD-based systems, a -u user option has allowed those
with appropriate privileges to access the work of other
users. Since this is primarily a system administration feature and
is not universally implemented, it has been omitted. Similarly,
a specification for the output format for a user with appropriate
privileges viewing the queues of other users has been
omitted.
The -f file option from System V is used instead of the
BSD method of using the last operand as the pathname. The
BSD method is ambiguous-does:
-
at 1200 friday
mean the same thing if there is a file named friday in the current
directory?
The at_job_id is composed of a limited character set in historical
practice, and it is mandated here to invalidate
systems that might try using characters that require shell quoting
or that could not be easily parsed by shell scripts.
The at utility varies between System V and BSD systems in the
way timezones are used. On System V systems, the TZ
variable affects the at-job submission times and the times displayed
for the user. On BSD systems, TZ is not taken into
account. The BSD behavior is easily achieved with the current specification.
If the user wishes to have the timezone default to
that of the system, they merely need to issue the at command
immediately following an unsetting or null assignment to TZ
. For example:
-
TZ= at noon ...
gives the desired BSD result.
While the yacc-like grammar specified in the OPERANDS section
is lexically
unambiguous with respect to the digit strings, a lexical analyzer
would probably be written to look for and return digit strings in
those cases. The parser could then check whether the digit string
returned is a valid day_number, year_number, and so
on, based on the context.
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
None.
SEE ALSO
batch, crontab
COPYRIGHT
Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form
from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology
-- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base
Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the
event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and
The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard
is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online at
http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .
Index
- PROLOG
-
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- OPERANDS
-
- STDIN
-
- INPUT FILES
-
- ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
-
- ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
-
- STDOUT
-
- STDERR
-
- OUTPUT FILES
-
- EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
-
- EXIT STATUS
-
- CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
-
- APPLICATION USAGE
-
- EXAMPLES
-
- RATIONALE
-
- FUTURE DIRECTIONS
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- COPYRIGHT
-
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