Richard Lynch <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
    on Friday, January 28, 2005 11:36 AM said:

> Chris W. Parker wrote:
>> The two options I've come up with both involve adding a job(s) to
>> crontab. 
>> 
>> 1. Individual jobs are added to the users crontab file. This could
>> result in LOTS of entries in crontab, but less load on the server.
> 
> Actually, probably MORE load, as you'll be firing off *WAY* too many
> php processes, as soon as the schedule gets at all busy.

Ahh yes. Very true.

> Actually, you might even want to create a special user with limited
> access/ability (or just use 'nobody') and have THAT user handle all
> the scheduler notifications et al.
> 
> Unless you *NEED* to have the scheduler doing things on that user can
> do with the OS, it would be better to limit it to doing only what it
> NEEDS to do.

Actually it would just be sending out emails and updating the DB.



Thanks for the ideas!
Chris.

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