Hi Karl,
> Perhaps the sleepenh package will help you?
>
> Not a solution per se, but possibly a useful building block..
It works perfectly and was exactly what I was looking for! Thanks a lot!
In case anybody ever finds this thread later on, this is what I now
wrote based on sleepenh which doe
Hi Paul,
> Use crontab (see man crontab).
But as far as I see, cron doesnt do what I want.
First of all, it will run as a daemon in the background so there is no
way (at least as far as I am aware) to make it output a counter/timer in
my terminal.
Second, as also mentioned in my initial email,
On 5/2/12 5:33 PM, Paul E Condon wrote:
> I think you should be careful to not set the schedule to execute you
> job too frequently. This system will launch a new job on schedule,
> whether or not the previously launched job has completed. For some
> jobs this can cause problems. If you want to do
On 20120502_102011, Johannes Schauer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for a unix tool that does nothing else than increment and
> print an integer with a fixed frequency. As a bonus it should be able to
> execute a command with a fixed frequency. The special requirement: it
> should precise in the int
On Wed, May 02, 2012 at 09:20:11AM +0100, Johannes Schauer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for a unix tool that does nothing else than increment and
> print an integer with a fixed frequency. As a bonus it should be able to
> execute a command with a fixed frequency. The special requirement: it
> sho
Hi Darac,
> I'm not entirely sure if such a tool exists, but one thing you will
> need to bear in mind is that you will need to make sure you're running
> a real-time kernel (apt-cache search linux-image-rt). This will allow
> you to run your look with real-time priority. If you don't have
> real-
On Wed, May 02, 2012 at 10:20:11AM +0200, Johannes Schauer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for a unix tool that does nothing else than increment and
> print an integer with a fixed frequency. As a bonus it should be able to
> execute a command with a fixed frequency. The special requirement: it
> sho
Hi,
I'm looking for a unix tool that does nothing else than increment and
print an integer with a fixed frequency. As a bonus it should be able to
execute a command with a fixed frequency. The special requirement: it
should precise in the interval.
Thus, the following will not work:
#!/b
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