#/* Copyright 1988,1990,1993 by Paul Vixie
# * All rights reserved
# */
##
## Copyright (c) 2004 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
## Copyright (c) 1997,2000 by Internet Software Consortium, Inc.
##
## Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
## purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
## copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
##
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## WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
## MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL ISC BE LIABLE FOR
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## WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
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## OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
##
ISC Cron - January 2004
[V4.0 was November, 2000]
[V4.0b1 was September 7, 1997]
[V3.1 was some time after 1993]
[V3.0 was December 27, 1993]
[V2.2 was some time in 1992]
[V2.1 was May 29, 1991]
[V2.0 was July 5, 1990]
[V2.0-beta was December 9, 1988]
[V1.0 was May 6, 1987]
ftp://ftp.isc.org/isc/cron/
This is a version of 'cron' that is known to run on most systems. It
is functionally based on the SysV cron, which means that each user can have
their own crontab file (all crontab files are stored in a read-protected
directory, usually /var/cron/tabs). No direct support is provided for
'at'; you can continue to run 'atrun' from the crontab as you have been
doing. If you don't have atrun (i.e., System V) you are in trouble.
A messages is logged each time a command is executed; also, the files
"allow" and "deny" in /var/cron can be used to control access to the
"crontab" command (which installs crontabs). It hasn't been tested on
SysV, although some effort has gone into making the port an easy one.
To use this: Sorry, folks, there is no cutesy 'Configure' script. You'll
have to go edit a couple of files... So, here's the checklist:
Read all the FEATURES, INSTALL, and CONVERSION files
Edit config.h
Edit Makefile
(both of these files have instructions inside; note that
some things in config.h are definable in Makefile and are
therefore surrounded by #ifndef...#endif)
'make'
'su' and 'make install'
(you may have to install the man pages by hand)
kill your existing cron process
(actually you can run your existing cron if you want, but why?)
build new crontabs using /usr/lib/{crontab,crontab.local}
(either put them all in "root"'s crontab, or divide it up
and rip out all the 'su' commands, collapse the lengthy
lists into ranges with steps -- basically, this step is
as much work as you want to make it)
start up the new cron
(must be done as root)
watch it. test it with 'crontab -r' and watch the daemon track your
changes.
if you like it, change your /etc/{rc,rc.local} to use it instead of
the old one.
Id: README,v 1.6 2004/01/23 19:03:32 vixie Exp