Installs the cron package and starts the crond service.
- RHEL family
- Debian family
- Solaris family
- FreeBSD
- Chef 12.1+
- none
The cron_d
LWRP can be used to manage files in /etc/cron.d
. It supports the same interface as Chef's built-in cron
resource:
cron_d 'daily-usage-report' do
minute 0
hour 23
command '/srv/app/scripts/daily_report'
user 'appuser'
end
Note: FreeBSD does not support cron.d functionality, so it is emulated. cron fragments are created in /etc/cron.d, then they are concatenated together into /etc/crontab. FreeBSD puts some core OS functionality into /etc/crontab, so the original file is copied to /etc/crontab.os_source, and included in the concatenation.
Note: This LWRP does not function on Solaris platforms because they do not support running jobs stored in /etc/cron.d. Any Solaris users are welcome to test the emulate_cron.d functionality that was implemented for FreeBSD. See defaults/attributes.rb for more information.
minute
,hour
,day
,month
,weekday
- schedule your cron job. These correspond exactly to their equivalents in the crontab file. All default to "*".predefined_value
- schedule your cron job with one of the special predefined value instead of ** * pattern. This correspond to"@reboot"
,"@yearly"
,"@annually"
,"@monthly"
,"@weekly"
,"@daily"
,"@midnight"
or"@hourly"
.command
- the command to run. Required.user
- the user to run as. Defaults to "root".mailto
,path
,home
,shell
- set the corresponding environment variables in the cron.d file. No default.environment
- a Hash containing additional arbitrary environment variables under which the cron job will be run (similar to theshell
LWRP). No default.mode
- the octal mode of the generated crontab file. Defaults to0644
.
The cron_manage
definition can be used to manage the /etc/cron.allow
and /etc/cron.deny
files. Incude this cookbook as dependency to your cookbook and execute the definition as:
The following will add the user mike to the /etc/cron.allow
file:
cron_manage 'mike' do
user 'mike'
action :allow
end
The following will add the user john to the /etc/cron.deny
file:
cron_manage 'john' do
user 'john' #optional, resource name will be used if not specified.
action :deny #optional, deny is the default
end
user
- username that you want to control (optional).action
-:allow
or:deny
. :deny is the default.
- Author:: Cookbook Engineering Team ([email protected])
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