Hi Andrew,
Obviously, if you create a cron job to run, then you can forget about having the "at" scheduler in
any script that might be called, just have the script do what needs to be done /at/ the crontab
scheduled time.
The whole idea of using at in stead of cron is because this was just a one time thing. I know "all
about cron" ;-) but was unable to figure out how at worked from just the man pages and what I was
able to find with google.
Thanks for all the extra explanation, most was known by now but some was new like the use of the
letters EOF in stead of the "real" EOF character.
Bonno
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