Tag: crontab
About
The crontab command, found in Unix and Unix-like operating systems, is used to schedule commands to be executed periodically. It reads a series of commands from standard input and collects them into a file also known as a "crontab" which is later read and whose instructions are carried out. The name is derived from Greek chronos (χρόνος), meaning time.
Generally, the schedules modified by crontab are enacted by a daemon, crond, which runs constantly in the background and checks once a minute to see if any of the scheduled jobs need to be executed. If so, it executes them. These jobs are generally referred to as cron jobs.
From en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crontab
I recently bought a NAS so my data is safe & available, with the benefit of being low
power / noise / heat.
I've considered Netgear, QNAP, but decided to go for a Synology
as it was affordable, still had a big community, decent reviews & Time Machine support.
Synchronizing files from one server to another is quite awesome. You can use it for backups, for keeping web servers in sync, and much more. It's fast and it doesn't take up as much bandwidth as normal copying would. And the best thing is, it can be done with only 1 command. Welcome to the wonderful world of rsync.
If you've got a website that's heavy on your web server, you might want to run
some processes like generating thumbnails or enriching data in the background.
This way it can not interfere with the user interface. Linux has a great
program for this called cron. It allows tasks to be automatically run in the
background at regular intervals. You could also use it to automatically create
backups, synchronize files, schedule updates, and much more. Welcome to
the wonderful world of crontab.
Making sure your system is up to date is a key attribute to it's security. Furthermore Ubuntu releases updates pretty often and you probably don't want to miss out on added stability and features. You could run updated manually, but why not schedule the updates in the background to make sure you are always running the latest stable versions, without ever having to worry about it.