Hi, Ross Boylan <rossboy...@stanfordalumni.org> writes:
> at does not understand some of the options listed on the man page, and > provides others that are not on the man page. > > For example: > # at -t 10:25 > at: invalid option -- t > Usage: at [-V] [-q x] [-f file] [-mldbv] time > at -c job ... > atq [-V] [-q x] > atrm [-V] job ... > batch > The man page says -t is followed by time > The man page does not describe the V or d options. The man page for at (version 3.1.10.2) describes both the -V and -d options, but does not yet mention the -t option (as Cyril mentioned it was only introduced in 3.1.11). There is also a man page describing a POSIX-compatible at in the manpages-posix package. Is it possible that you did read that man page? If the first line in the man page contains "POSIX Programmer's Manual" instead of "Linux Programmer's Manual" this is probably the case. Regards, Ansgar -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org