9.7.2. Using the at
Command
The
at
executes a command at a specified moment in the future. It takes the desired time and date as command-line parameters, and the command to be executed in its standard input. The command will be executed as if it had been entered in the current shell.
at
even takes care to retain the current environment, in order to reproduce the same conditions when it executes the command. The time is indicated by following the usual conventions:
16:12
or
4:12pm
represents 4:12 pm. The date can be specified in several European and Western formats, including
DD.MM.YY
(
27.07.12
thus representing 27 July 2012),
YYYY-MM-DD
(this same date being expressed as
2012-07-27
),
MM/DD/[CC]YY
(ie.,
12/25/12
or
12/25/2012
will be December 25, 2012), or simple
MMDD[CC]YY
(so that
122512
or
12252012
will, likewise, represent December 25, 2012). Without it, the command will be executed as soon as the clock reaches the time indicated (the same day, or tomorrow if that time has already passed on the same day). You can also simply write “today” or “tomorrow”, which is self-explanatory.
An alternative syntax postpones the execution for a given duration:
at now + number
period
. The
period
can be
minutes
,
hours
,
days
, or
weeks
. The
number
simply indicates the number of said units that must elapse before execution of the command.
To cancel a task scheduled by
cron
, simply run
crontab -e
and delete the corresponding line in the
crontab file. For
at
tasks, it is almost as easy: run
atrm task-number
. The task number is indicated by the
at
command when you scheduled it, but you can find it again with the
atq
command, which gives the current list of scheduled tasks.