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CRON(8)			    System Manager's Manual		       CRON(8)

NAME
       cron -- daemon to execute scheduled commands (Vixie Cron)

SYNOPSIS
       cron   [-j   jitter]   [-J  rootjitter]	[-m  mailto]  [-n]  [-s]  [-o]
	    [-x	debugflag[,...]]

DESCRIPTION
       The cron	utility	should be started from /etc/rc or  /etc/rc.local.   It
       will return immediately,	so you do not need to start it with '&'.

       The  cron  utility  searches /var/cron/tabs for crontab files which are
       named after accounts in /etc/passwd; crontabs  found  are  loaded  into
       memory.	 The  cron utility also	searches for /etc/crontab and files in
       /etc/cron.d and /usr/local/etc/cron.d which are in a  different	format
       (see crontab(5)).

       The  cron  utility  then	 wakes	up  every minute, examining all	stored
       crontabs, checking each command to see if it should be run in the  cur-
       rent minute.  Before running a command from a per-account crontab file,
       cron checks the status of the account with pam(3) and skips the command
       if  the	account	is unavailable,	e.g., locked out or expired.  Commands
       from /etc/crontab bypass	this check.  When executing commands, any out-
       put is mailed to	the owner of the crontab (or to	the user named in  the
       MAILTO  environment variable in the crontab, if such exists).  The from
       address of this mail may	be set with the	MAILFROM environment variable.

       Additionally, cron checks each minute to	see if its  spool  directory's
       modification  time  (or	the  modification  time	 on  /etc/crontab) has
       changed,	and if it has, cron will then examine the modification time on
       all crontabs and	reload those which have	changed.  Thus cron  need  not
       be  restarted  whenever	a  crontab  file  is  modified.	 Note that the
       crontab(1) command updates the modification time	of the spool directory
       whenever	it changes a crontab.

       Available options:

       -j jitter
	       Enable time jitter.  Prior to  executing	 commands,  cron  will
	       sleep a random number of	seconds	in the range from 0 to jitter.
	       This  will  not	affect	superuser  jobs	(see -J).  A value for
	       jitter must be between 0	and 60 inclusive.  Default is 0, which
	       effectively disables time jitter.

	       This option can help to smooth down system load	spikes	during
	       moments	when  a	lot of jobs are	likely to start	at once, e.g.,
	       at the beginning	of the first minute of each hour.

       -J rootjitter
	       Enable time jitter for superuser	jobs.  The same	as  -j	except
	       that it will affect jobs	run by the superuser only.

       -m mailto
	       Overrides the default recipient for cron	mail.  Each crontab(5)
	       without	MAILTO	explicitly  set	 will  send mail to the	mailto
	       mailbox.	 Sending mail will be disabled by  default  if	mailto
	       set to a	null string, usually specified in a shell as ''	or "".

       -n      Do not daemonize; run in	foreground instead.

       -s      Enable  special	handling  of situations	when the GMT offset of
	       the local timezone changes, such	as the	switches  between  the
	       standard	time and daylight saving time.

	       The  jobs run during the	GMT offset changes time	as intuitively
	       expected.  If a job falls into a	time interval that  disappears
	       (for example, during the	switch from standard time) to daylight
	       saving  time  or	is duplicated (for example, during the reverse
	       switch),	then it	is handled in one of two ways:

	       The first case is for the jobs that run every at	hour of	a time
	       interval	overlapping with the disappearing or duplicated	inter-
	       val.  In	other words, if	the job	had run	within one hour	before
	       the GMT offset change (and  cron	 was  not  restarted  nor  the
	       crontab(5) changed after	that) or would run after the change at
	       the  next  hour.	 They work as always, skip the skipped time or
	       run in the added	time as	usual.

	       The second case is for the jobs that run	less frequently.  They
	       are executed exactly once, they are not	skipped	 nor  executed
	       twice  (unless  cron  is	 restarted or the user's crontab(5) is
	       changed during such a time interval).  If  an  interval	disap-
	       pears  due  to the GMT offset change, such jobs are executed at
	       the same	absolute point of time as they would  be  in  the  old
	       time  zone.   For example, if exactly one hour disappears, this
	       point would be during the next hour at the first	minute that is
	       specified for them in crontab(5).

       -o      Disable the special handling of situations when the GMT	offset
	       of  the	local  timezone	changes, to be compatible with the old
	       (default) behavior.  If both options -o and -s  are  specified,
	       the option specified last wins.

       -x debugflag[,...]
	       Enable  writing	of  debugging  information to standard output.
	       One or more of the following comma separated debugflag  identi-
	       fiers must be specified:

	       bit   currently not used
	       ext   make the other debug flags	more verbose
	       load  be	verbose	when loading crontab files
	       misc  be	verbose	about miscellaneous one-off events
	       pars  be	verbose	about parsing individual crontab lines
	       proc  be	 verbose about the state of the	process, including all
		     of	its offspring
	       sch   be	verbose	when iterating through	the  scheduling	 algo-
		     rithms
	       test  trace  through  the execution, but	do not perform any ac-
		     tions

FILES
       /etc/crontab	      System crontab file
       /etc/cron.d	      Directory	  for	optional/modularized	system
			      crontab files.
       /etc/pam.d/cron	      pam.conf(5) configuration	file for cron
       /usr/local/etc/cron.d  Directory	  for	third-party  package  provided
			      crontab files.
       /var/cron/tabs	      Directory	for personal crontab files

SEE ALSO
       crontab(1), pam(3), crontab(5), pam.conf(5), periodic(8)

AUTHORS
       Paul Vixie <paul@vix.com>

FreeBSD	13.2		       February	9, 2022			       CRON(8)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILES | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS

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