Try:
at 10:00 <
> How can command at to run xfmail at 10am say on monday?
> I tried this line the following
> :at 10:00 am
> >xfmail
> and nothing happened
> also I tried
> :at 10:00 am xfmail
> and nothing happened.
>
> What am I doing wrong ?
> Larry Mintz<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> ___
At 08:56 PM 08/19/2000 -0400, you wrote:
>How can command at to run xfmail at 10am say on monday?
>I tried this line the following
>:at 10:00 am
> >xfmail
>and nothing happened
>also I tried
>:at 10:00 am xfmail
>and nothing happened.
To me the question is why do you want to start xfmail at 10 am
man crontab?
**
* Statux *
*
* | *
* E-Mail: | [EMAIL PROTECTED] *
* ICQ: | 1732414
How can command at to run xfmail at 10am say on monday?
I tried this line the following
:at 10:00 am
>xfmail
and nothing happened
also I tried
:at 10:00 am xfmail
and nothing happened.
What am I doing wrong ?
Larry Mintz<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
___
Redha
> "smm" == Shawn McMahon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
smm> Running Red Hat 5.0, Walnut Creek CD of the public download.
smm> I've applied a number of upgrades that were included on the CD,
smm> but nothing from the FTP site yet.
smm> "at" is acting pretty wonky.
smm> Say I type this
Running Red Hat 5.0, Walnut Creek CD of the public download. I've applied a
number of upgrades that were included on the CD, but nothing from the FTP
site yet.
"at" is acting pretty wonky.
Say I type this as root:
at 08:00 /blah/blah/blah/whatever/xdm (don't remember the dir xdm is in,
but I