Re: [CentOS] Cron daemon with better precision?

2009-01-19 Thread John Doe
I'm on the hunt for a cron scheduler that supports definitions to the second. Obviously, every cron daemon supports minute/hour/etc but I have a special application that requires finer granularity. I know I know... someone will say The load will be horrendous on your system or Why

Re: [CentOS] Cron daemon with better precision?

2009-01-19 Thread David Hrbáč
Tim Nelson napsal(a): Greetings list- I'm on the hunt for a cron scheduler that supports definitions to the second. Obviously, every cron daemon supports minute/hour/etc but I have a special application that requires finer granularity. I know I know... someone will say The load will be

[CentOS] Cron daemon with better precision?

2009-01-16 Thread Tim Nelson
Greetings list- I'm on the hunt for a cron scheduler that supports definitions to the second. Obviously, every cron daemon supports minute/hour/etc but I have a special application that requires finer granularity. I know I know... someone will say The load will be horrendous on your system or

Re: [CentOS] Cron daemon with better precision?

2009-01-16 Thread nate
Tim Nelson wrote: Greetings list- I'm on the hunt for a cron scheduler that supports definitions to the second. Obviously, every cron daemon supports minute/hour/etc but I have a special application that requires finer granularity. Try this ? http://vexus.ca/products/avatar/v4/ My company

Re: [CentOS] Cron daemon with better precision?

2009-01-16 Thread andrew . cotter
Greetings list- I'm on the hunt for a cron scheduler that supports definitions to the second. Obviously, every cron daemon supports minute/hour/etc but I have a special application that requires finer granularity. I know I know... someone will say The load will be horrendous on your system

Re: [CentOS] Cron daemon with better precision?

2009-01-16 Thread William L. Maltby
On Fri, 2009-01-16 at 13:46 -0600, Tim Nelson wrote: Greetings list- I'm on the hunt for a cron scheduler that supports definitions to the second. Obviously, every cron daemon supports minute/hour/etc but I have a special application that requires finer granularity. I know I know...