Many a times we need to schedule a task for a future time, say in the evening at 8 P.M. on a specific day. We can use the at command in such a situation.
Sometimes we need to repeat the same task at a specific time, periodically, every day, or every month. In such situations, we can use the crontab command.
Let's learn more about the utility of the at command. To use the at command, the syntax is as follows:
$ at time date
The following are the examples of the at command:
Control + D command will save the at job. The task will be executed at 11.15 A.M. This command will log messages to the log.txt file at 11.15 A.M.:$ at 11.15 AM at > echo "Hello World" > $HOME/log.txt at > Control + D
$ at 10am mar 31 2015 at> echo "taxes due" | mail jon at> ^D
$ at 11 am may 20
at command can be listed using the following command:
$ atq
atq command, we can use the following command:
$ atrm job-id