at
Schedule commands to execute at a specified time
TLDR
Create commands interactively and execute them in 5 minutes
$ at now + 5 minutes
Execute commands from stdin at a specific timecopy
$ echo "command" | at 1000
Execute commands from a file at a specific timecopy
$ at -f [path/to/file] 9:30 PM Tue
List all queued jobscopy
$ at -l
View a specified jobcopy
$ at -c [job_number]
Remove a job from the queuecopy
$ atrm [job_number]
copy
SYNOPSIS
at [-q queue] [-f file] [-mMlv] timespecat [-q queue] [-f file] [-mMkv] [-t time]at -c job ...at [-rd] job ...
DESCRIPTION
at executes commands at a specified time. Commands are read from standard input or a file and executed later. Results are sent to the user's mail. The atd daemon must be running for jobs to execute.
PARAMETERS
-f file
Read commands from file instead of standard input-l
List all queued jobs (alias for atq)-c job
Print (cat) the commands of the specified job to standard output-m
Send mail to the user when the job completes, even if there was no output-M
Never send mail to the user-q queue
Use the specified queue. A queue is a single letter (a-z, A-Z); queues with higher letters run with increased niceness. The "=" queue is reserved for currently running jobs.-t time
Run the job at the given time, in the format [[CC]YY]MMDDhhmm[.ss]-r job, -d job
Delete the specified job (alias for atrm)-b
Alias for batch-v
Show the time the job will be executed before reading it
CONFIGURATION
/etc/at.allow
If this file exists, only users listed in it can schedule jobs with at./etc/at.deny
Users listed in this file are denied access to at. Ignored if at.allow exists.
CAVEATS
Requires the atd daemon to be running. Time can be specified in various formats: HH:MM, midnight, noon, teatime (4pm), or relative times like "now + 5 minutes".
HISTORY
Part of the traditional Unix job scheduling system, available since early Unix in the 1970s. The modern Linux at package was mostly written by Thomas Koenig and has since been maintained by various Debian contributors.