The Fcron package contains a periodical command scheduler which aims at replacing Vixie Cron.
This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS 11.3 platform.
Download (HTTP): http://fcron.free.fr/archives/fcron-3.2.1.src.tar.gz
Download MD5 sum: bd4996e941a40327d11efc5e3fd1f839
Download size: 587 KB
Estimated disk space required: 5.1 MB
Estimated build time: 0.1 SBU
An MTA, text editor (default is vi from the Vim-9.0.1273 package), Linux-PAM-1.5.2, and DocBook-utils-0.6.14
User Notes: https://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/fcron
For security reasons, an unprivileged user and group for
Fcron should be created (perform
as the root
user):
groupadd -g 22 fcron && useradd -d /dev/null -c "Fcron User" -g fcron -s /bin/false -u 22 fcron
Now fix some locations hard coded in the documentation:
find doc -type f -exec sed -i 's:/usr/local::g' {} \;
Install Fcron by running the following commands:
./configure --prefix=/usr \ --sysconfdir=/etc \ --localstatedir=/var \ --without-sendmail \ --with-piddir=/run \ --with-boot-install=no && make
This package does not come with a test suite.
Now, as the root
user:
make install
DESTDIR install must be done as root
user. Furthermore, if PAM configuration
files should be installed in /etc/pam.d
, you have to create this directory in
the DESTDIR before doing the install.
--without-sendmail
: By
default, Fcron will attempt to use
the sendmail command
from an MTA package to
email you the results of the fcron script. This switch is used
to disable default email notification. Omit the switch to enable
the default. Alternatively, you can use the --with-sendmail=
to use a different mailer command.
</path/to/MTA command>
--with-boot-install=no
:
This prevents installation of the bootscript included with the
package.
--with-piddir=/run
: This
fixes the systemd unit to use the proper directory for PID files so
that systemctl does not hang and the unit starts correctly.
--with-editor=
:
This switch allows you to set the default text editor.
</path/to/editor>
--with-dsssl-dir=
:
May be used if you have DocBook-utils-0.6.14 installed.
Currently, the dsssl stylesheets are located at </path/to/dsssl-stylesheets>
/usr/share/sgml/docbook/dsssl-stylesheets-1.79
.
There are no required changes in any of the config files.
Configuration information can be found in the man page for
fcron.conf
.
fcron scripts are written using fcrontab. Refer to the fcrontab man page for proper parameters to address your situation.
If Linux-PAM is installed, two PAM
configuration files are installed in etc/pam.d
. Alternatively if etc/pam.d
is not used, the installation will
append two configuration sections to the existing /etc/pam.conf
file. You should ensure the files
match your preferences. Modify them as required to suit your
needs.
If you would like to set up a periodic hierarchy for the root
user, first issue the following commands (as the root
user) to create the /usr/bin/run-parts
script:
cat > /usr/bin/run-parts << "EOF" &&
#!/bin/sh
# run-parts: Runs all the scripts found in a directory.
# from Slackware, by Patrick J. Volkerding with ideas borrowed
# from the Red Hat and Debian versions of this utility.
# keep going when something fails
set +e
if [ $# -lt 1 ]; then
echo "Usage: run-parts <directory>"
exit 1
fi
if [ ! -d $1 ]; then
echo "Not a directory: $1"
echo "Usage: run-parts <directory>"
exit 1
fi
# There are several types of files that we would like to
# ignore automatically, as they are likely to be backups
# of other scripts:
IGNORE_SUFFIXES="~ ^ , .bak .new .rpmsave .rpmorig .rpmnew .swp"
# Main loop:
for SCRIPT in $1/* ; do
# If this is not a regular file, skip it:
if [ ! -f $SCRIPT ]; then
continue
fi
# Determine if this file should be skipped by suffix:
SKIP=false
for SUFFIX in $IGNORE_SUFFIXES ; do
if [ ! "$(basename $SCRIPT $SUFFIX)" = "$(basename $SCRIPT)" ]; then
SKIP=true
break
fi
done
if [ "$SKIP" = "true" ]; then
continue
fi
# If we've made it this far, then run the script if it's executable:
if [ -x $SCRIPT ]; then
$SCRIPT || echo "$SCRIPT failed."
fi
done
exit 0
EOF
chmod -v 755 /usr/bin/run-parts
Next, create the directory layout for the periodic jobs (again as
the root
user):
install -vdm754 /etc/cron.{hourly,daily,weekly,monthly}
Finally, add the run-parts to the system
fcrontab (while still the root
user):
cat > /var/spool/fcron/systab.orig << "EOF"
&bootrun 01 * * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.hourly
&bootrun 02 4 * * * root run-parts /etc/cron.daily
&bootrun 22 4 * * 0 root run-parts /etc/cron.weekly
&bootrun 42 4 1 * * root run-parts /etc/cron.monthly
EOF