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AT(1)			    General Commands Manual			 AT(1)

NAME
       at,  batch,  atq, atrm -	queue, examine or delete jobs for later	execu-
       tion

SYNOPSIS
       at [-V] [-q queue] [-f file] [-mMlv] timespec...
       at [-V] [-q queue] [-f file] [-mMkv] [-t	time]
       at -c job [job...]
       atq [-V]	[-q queue]
       at [-rd]	job [job...]
       atrm [-V] job [job...]
       batch
       at -b

DESCRIPTION
       at and batch read commands from standard	 input	or  a  specified  file
       which are to be executed	at a later time, using /bin/sh.

       at      executes	commands at a specified	time.

       atq     lists  the  user's  pending  jobs, unless the user is the supe-
	       ruser; in that case, everybody's	jobs are listed.   The	format
	       of  the	output	lines (one for each job) is: Job number, date,
	       hour, queue, and	username.

       atrm    deletes jobs, identified	by their job number.

       batch   executes	commands when system  load  levels  permit;  in	 other
	       words,  when  the  load	average	 drops below 0.8, or the value
	       specified in the	invocation of atd.

       At allows fairly	complex	time  specifications,  extending  the  POSIX.2
       standard.   It  accepts	times of the form HH:MM	to run a job at	a spe-
       cific time of day.  (If that time is already past, the next day is  as-
       sumed.)	 You may also specify midnight,	noon, or teatime (4pm) and you
       can have	a time-of-day suffixed with AM or PM for running in the	 morn-
       ing  or the evening.  You can also say what day the job will be run, by
       giving a	date in	the form month-name day	with an	optional year, or giv-
       ing a date  of  the  form  MMDD[CC]YY,  MM/DD/[CC]YY,  DD.MM.[CC]YY  or
       [CC]YY-MM-DD.   The  specification of a date must follow	the specifica-
       tion of the time	of day.	 You can also give  times  like	 now  +	 count
       time-units,  where the time-units can be	minutes, hours,	days, or weeks
       and you can tell	at to run the job today	by suffixing the time with to-
       day and to run the job tomorrow by suffixing the	time with tomorrow.

       For example, to run a job at 4pm	three days from	now, you would	do  at
       4pm  + 3	days, to run a job at 10:00am on July 31, you would do at 10am
       Jul 31 and to run a job at 1am tomorrow,	you would do at	1am tomorrow.

       The  definition	of  the	  time	 specification	 can   be   found   in
       /usr/share/doc/packages/at/timespec.

       For  both  at  and  batch, commands are read from standard input	or the
       file specified with the -f option and executed.	The working directory,
       the environment (except for the variables BASH_VERSINFO,	DISPLAY, EUID,
       GROUPS, SHELLOPTS, TERM,	UID, and _) and	the umask  are	retained  from
       the time	of invocation.

       As  at  is currently implemented	as a setuid program, other environment
       variables (e.g.	LD_LIBRARY_PATH	or LD_PRELOAD) are also	not  exported.
       This  may  change  in the future.  As a workaround, set these variables
       explicitly in your job.

       An at - or batch	- command invoked from a su(1) shell will  retain  the
       current	userid.	  The  user will be mailed standard error and standard
       output from his commands, if any.  Mail will be sent using the  command
       /usr/sbin/sendmail.  If at is executed from a su(1) shell, the owner of
       the login shell will receive the	mail.

       The  superuser  may  use	 these commands	in any case.  For other	users,
       permission to use at is	determined  by	the  files  /etc/at.allow  and
       /etc/at.deny.  See at.allow(5) for details.

OPTIONS
       -V      prints  the  version number to standard error and exit success-
	       fully.

       -q queue
	       uses the	specified queue.  A queue designation  consists	 of  a
	       single letter; valid queue designations range from a to z and A
	       to  Z.	The  a queue is	the default for	at and the b queue for
	       batch.  Queues with higher letters run with increased niceness.
	       The special queue "=" is	reserved for jobs which	are  currently
	       running.

       If  a  job is submitted to a queue designated with an uppercase letter,
       the job is treated as if	it were	submitted to batch at the time of  the
       job.  Once the time is reached, the batch processing rules with respect
       to  load	average	apply.	If atq is given	a specific queue, it will only
       show jobs pending in that queue.

       -m      Send mail to the	user when the job has completed	even if	 there
	       was no output.

       -M      Never send mail to the user.

       -f file Reads the job from file rather than standard input.

       -t time run the job at time, given in the format	[[CC]YY]MMDDhhmm[.ss]

       -l      Is an alias for atq.

       -r      Is an alias for atrm.

       -d      Is an alias for atrm.

       -b      is an alias for batch.

       -v      Shows the time the job will be executed before reading the job.

       Times displayed will be in the format "Thu Feb 20 14:50:00 1997".

       -c     cats the jobs listed on the command line to standard output.

FILES
       /var/spool/atjobs
       /var/spool/atspool
       /proc/loadavg
       /var/run/utmp
       /etc/at.allow
       /etc/at.deny

SEE ALSO
       at.allow(5), at.deny(5),	atd(8),	cron(1), nice(1), sh(1), umask(2).

BUGS
       The  correct  operation of batch	for Linux depends on the presence of a
       proc- type directory mounted on /proc.

       If the file /var/run/utmp is not	available or corrupted,	or if the user
       is not logged on	at the time at is invoked, the mail  is	 sent  to  the
       userid found in the environment variable	LOGNAME.  If that is undefined
       or empty, the current userid is assumed.

       At  and	batch as presently implemented are not suitable	when users are
       competing for resources.	 If this is the	case for your site, you	 might
       want to consider	another	batch system, such as nqs.

AUTHOR
       At was mostly written by	Thomas Koenig, ig25@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de.

				  2009-11-14				 AT(1)

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<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=at&sektion=1&manpath=openSUSE+42.3>

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