i want to execute a script twice daily at 00:00 and 13:30 so i write :
0,30 0,13 * * *
it seems wrong for me, because like this, the script will fire at 00:00 , 00:30 , 13:00 and 13:30. Any idea ?
Why not put in two cron entries ? One for 00:00 and one for 13:30 ? I don't think you can do what you want in one entry, since the two minute definitions will apply for both hour definitions (as you've identified).
The alternative is perhaps to execute one script at 00:00. That script would execute your original script, then wait 13.5 hours and then execute that script again. It would be easy to do via a simple sleep command, but I think it's unintuitive, and I'm not sure how cron
manages such long running processes (what happens if you edit the crontab
- does it kill a spawned job etc.)
Try this-: 00 01,13 * * *
it will run at 1 A.M and 1 P.M
You can not do that with cron on a single line. You have to create 2 separate lines like so:
# Will run "YourCommand" at 00:00
0 0 * * * YourCommand
# Will run "YourCommand" at 13:30
30 13 * * * YourCommand
Or as a single line you can run a command every x hours, like so:
# Will run "YourCommand" every 12 hours
0 */12 * * * YourCommand
try ...
00,30 00,13 * * * [ `date +%H%M` == 1330 ] || [ `date +%H%M` == 0000 ] && logger "its time"
30 0,13 * * * somecommand.sh
This is just purely an example, but you will see that this is a cron entry that will run at 0:30AM and then 1:30PM (13 is 1 in military time). Just comma separate the hours, or comma separate whatever section of the cron.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13993556/execute-crontab-twice-daily-at-00h-and-1330