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NAME

     crontab - user crontab file


SYNOPSIS

     /usr/bin/crontab [filename]

     /usr/bin/crontab -e [username]

     /usr/bin/crontab -l [username]

     /usr/bin/crontab -r [username]

     /usr/xpg4/bin/crontab [filename]

     /usr/xpg4/bin/crontab -e [username]

     /usr/xpg4/bin/crontab -l [username]

     /usr/xpg4/bin/crontab -r [username]

     /usr/xpg6/bin/crontab [filename]

     /usr/xpg6/bin/crontab -e [username]

     /usr/xpg6/bin/crontab -l [username]

     /usr/xpg6/bin/crontab -r [username]


DESCRIPTION

     The crontab utility manages a user's access with  cron  (see
     cron(1M))  by copying, creating, listing, and removing cron-
     tab files. If invoked without options,  crontab  copies  the
     specified  file,  or the standard input if no file is speci-
     fied, into a directory that holds all users' crontabs.

     If crontab is invoked  with  filename,  this  overwrites  an
     existing crontab entry for the user that invokes it.

  crontab Access Control
     Users: Access to crontab is allowed:

         o    if     the     user's     name      appears      in
              /etc/cron.d/cron.allow.

         o    if /etc/cron.d/cron.allow does not  exist  and  the
              user's name is not in /etc/cron.d/cron.deny.

     Users: Access to crontab is denied:

         o    if /etc/cron.d/cron.allow  exists  and  the  user's
              name is not in it.

         o    if /etc/cron.d/cron.allow does not exist and user's
              name is in /etc/cron.d/cron.deny.

         o    if neither  file  exists,  only  a  user  with  the
              solaris.jobs.user  authorization is allowed to sub-
              mit a job.

         o    if BSM audit is enabled, the user's  shell  is  not
              audited and the user is not the crontab owner. This
              can occur if the user logs in by way of a  program,
              such  as  some  versions of SSH, which does not set
              audit parameters.

     The rules for allow and deny  apply  to  root  only  if  the
     allow/deny files exist.

     The allow/deny files consist of one user name per line.

  crontab Entry Format
     A crontab file consists of lines of  six  fields  each.  The
     fields  are  separated by spaces or tabs. The first five are
     integer patterns that specify the following:

       minute (0-59),
       hour (0-23),
       day of the month (1-31),
       month of the year (1-12),
       day of the week (0-6 with 0=Sunday).

     Each of these patterns can be either  an  asterisk  (meaning
     all legal values) or a list of elements separated by commas.
     An element is either a number or two numbers separated by  a
     minus sign (meaning an inclusive range). Time specified here
     is interpreted in the timezone of the cron(1M) daemon, which
     is  set system-wide in /etc/default/init. Entries do not use
     the invoking user's timezone. The specification of days  can
     be  made  by  two  fields  (day  of the month and day of the
     week). Both are adhered to if specified as a  list  of  ele-
     ments. See EXAMPLES.

     The sixth field of a line in a crontab file is a string that
     is  executed  by the shell at the specified times. A percent
     character in this field (unless escaped by \) is  translated
     to a NEWLINE character.

     Only the first line (up to a `%' or end of line) of the com-
     mand  field  is  executed by the shell. Other lines are made
     available to the command as standard input. Any  blank  line
     or line beginning with a `#' is a comment and is ignored.

     The shell is invoked from your $HOME directory with an  arg0
     of sh. Users who desire to have their .profile executed must
     explicitly do so  in  the  crontab  file.  cron  supplies  a
     default environment for every shell, defining HOME, LOGNAME,
     SHELL(=/bin/sh), TZ, and PATH. The  default  PATH  for  user
     cron  jobs  is  /usr/bin;  while  root  cron jobs default to
     /usr/sbin:/usr/bin.  The  default  PATH  can   be   set   in
     /etc/default/cron (see cron(1M)).

     If you do not redirect  the  standard  output  and  standard
     error  of  your commands, any generated output or errors are
     mailed to you.

  Setting cron Jobs Across Timezones
     The  timezone  of  the  cron  daemon  sets  the  system-wide
     timezone  for  cron  entries.  This,  in  turn, is by set by
     default system-wide using /etc/default/init.

     If some form of daylight savings or summer/winter time is in
     effect,  then  jobs  scheduled  during the switchover period
     could be executed once, twice, or not at all.


OPTIONS

     The following options are supported:

     -e    Edits a copy of the current user's  crontab  file,  or
           creates  an  empty  file  to  edit if crontab does not
           exist. When editing is complete, the file is installed
           as the user's crontab file.
           The environment variable EDITOR determines which  edi-
           tor  is  invoked  with the -e option. All crontab jobs
           should be submitted using crontab. Do not add jobs  by
           just  editing  the  crontab  file, because cron is not
           aware of changes made this way.

           If all lines in the crontab file are deleted, the  old
           crontab  file  is  restored. The correct way to delete
           all lines is to remove the crontab file using  the  -r
           option.

           If username is specified, the specified user's crontab
           file is edited, rather than the current user's crontab
           file. This can only be done by root or by a user  with
           the solaris.jobs.admin authorization.

     -l    Lists the crontab file for  the  invoking  user.  Only
           root  or a user with the solaris.jobs.admin authoriza-
           tion can specify a username following the -l option to
           list the crontab file of the specified user.

     -r    Removes a user's crontab from the  crontab  directory.
           Only  root  or  a  user  with  the  solaris.jobs.admin
           authorization can specify a username following the  -r
           option  to  remove  the  crontab file of the specified
           user.


EXAMPLES

     Example 1 Cleaning up Core Files

     This example cleans up core files every weekday  morning  at
     3:15 am:

       15 3 * * 1-5 find $HOME-namecore 2>/dev/null | xargs rm-f

     Example 2 Mailing a Birthday Greeting

     This example mails a birthday greeting:

       0 12 14 2 * mailx john%Happy Birthday!%Time for lunch.

     Example 3 Specifying Days of the Month and Week

     This example runs a command on the first  and  fifteenth  of
     each month, as well as on every Monday:

       0 0 1,15 * 1

     To specify days by only one field, the other field should be
     set to *. For example:

       0 0 * * 1

     would run a command only on Mondays.


ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

     See environ(5) for descriptions of the following environment
     variables  that  affect  the  execution  of  crontab:  LANG,
     LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES, and NLSPATH.

  /usr/bin/crontab
     EDITOR    Determine the editor to be  invoked  when  the  -e
               option  is  specified.  This  is overridden by the
               VISUAL environmental variable. The default  editor
               is ed(1).

     PATH      The search path used to find the default ed  util-
               ity.

     VISUAL    Determine the visual editor to be invoked when the
               -e  option  is  specified. If VISUAL is not speci-
               fied, then  the  environment  variable  EDITOR  is
               used. If that is not set, the default is ed(1).

  /usr/xpg4/bin/crontab
     EDITOR    Determine the editor to be  invoked  when  the  -e
               option   is   specified.  The  default  editor  is
               /usr/xpg4/bin/vi(1).

  /usr/xpg6/bin/crontab
     EDITOR    Determine the editor to be  invoked  when  the  -e
               option   is   specified.  The  default  editor  is
               /usr/xpg6/bin/vi(1).


EXIT STATUS

     The following exit values are returned:

     0     Successful completion.

     >0    An error occurred.


FILES

     /etc/cron.d                 main cron directory

     /etc/cron.d/cron.allow      list of allowed users

     /etc/default/cron           contains cron default settings

     /etc/cron.d/cron.deny       list of denied users

     /var/cron/log               accounting information

     /var/spool/cron/crontabs    spool area for crontab


ATTRIBUTES

     See attributes(5) for descriptions of the  following  attri-
     butes:

  /usr/bin/crontab
     ____________________________________________________________
    |       ATTRIBUTE TYPE        |       ATTRIBUTE VALUE       |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|
    | Availability                | SUNWcsu                     |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|
    | Interface Stability         | Standard                    |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|

  /usr/xpg4/bin/crontab

     ____________________________________________________________
    |       ATTRIBUTE TYPE        |       ATTRIBUTE VALUE       |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|
    | Availability                | SUNWxcu4                    |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|
    | Interface Stability         | Standard                    |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|

  /usr/xpg6/bin/crontab
     ____________________________________________________________
    |       ATTRIBUTE TYPE        |       ATTRIBUTE VALUE       |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|
    | Availability                | SUNWxcu6                    |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|
    | Interface Stability         | Standard                    |
    |_____________________________|_____________________________|


SEE ALSO

     atq(1), atrm(1), auths(1), ed(1),  sh(1),  vi(1),  cron(1M),
     su(1M),   auth_attr(4),   attributes(5),  environ(5),  stan-
     dards(5)


NOTES

     If you inadvertently enter the crontab command with no argu-
     ments,  do  not  attempt  to  get  out  with Control-d. This
     removes all entries in your crontab file. Instead, exit with
     Control-c.

     When updating cron, check first for existing crontab entries
     that  can be scheduled close to the time of the update. Such
     entries can be lost if the update  process  completes  after
     the  scheduled  event. This can happen because, when cron is
     notified by crontab to update the internal view of a  user's
     crontab  file, it first removes the user's existing internal
     crontab and any internal scheduled events. Then it reads the
     new  crontab  file  and  rebuilds  the  internal crontab and
     events. This last step takes time, especially with  a  large
     crontab  file,  and  can  complete after an existing crontab
     entry is scheduled to run if it is scheduled  too  close  to
     the  update. To be safe, start a new job at least 60 seconds
     after the current date and time.

     If an authorized  user  other  than  root  modifies  another
     user's   crontab   file,   the  resulting  behavior  can  be
     unpredictable. Instead, the authorized user should first use
     su(1M)  to become superuser to the other user's login before
     making any changes to the crontab file.