Nicolas Bercher wrote: > I can actually see two little cons: > 1. no "easy way" to stop rtorrent, but that's not a big deal (any > kill/pkill command could do the job for example, just like my script > does it),
Or screen -R and press Q or whatever it is. > 2. since I like to track my scripts & configs, I massively use git > and/or svn and I really love the "one file per functionnality" way > of manipulating things. Via crontab, everything is just mixed up > into /var/spool/cron/crontabs/<username> and this hard to track and > even (afaik) to maintain in a quite automatic way. I keep my user crontabs in ~/.cron/$user/$hostname and only change those files then feed to cron. This allows keeping them in git and eg, pushing crontab changes out to machines. -- see shy jo
#!/bin/sh # Construct a crontab based on files in ~/.cron and load it into cron. # The file ~/.cron/username/fqdn is appended to the common file in the same # directory. Note that the common file may have "$HOME" in it, as in # "PATH=$HOME/bin". cron is too dumb to deal with that, so the expansion is # handled by this script. set -e WARNING="# Automatically generated by loadcron; edit ~/.cron/ files instead." if [ ! -z "`crontab -l`" ] && ! crontab -l | grep -q "$WARNING"; then if [ "$1" != "-f" ]; then echo "loadcron: Current crontab was not generated by loadcron; not changing." >&2 echo "loadcron: Use loadcron -f to override" exit 1 else crontab -l > $HOME/tmp/oldcrontab echo "loadcron: Old crontab is backed up to $HOME/tmp/oldcrontab" fi fi dir=$HOME/.cron/`whoami` if [ -d "$dir" ]; then hostfile="$dir/`hostname -f`" ( echo "$WARNING" echo if [ -e "$dir/common" ]; then echo "# From $dir/common:" sed "s!\$HOME!$HOME!" < "$dir/common" echo fi hostfile="$dir/`hostname -f`" if [ -e "$hostfile" ]; then echo "# From $hostfile:" cat "$hostfile" echo fi ) | crontab - fi
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