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-rw-r--r--AUTHORS1
-rw-r--r--BUGS13
-rw-r--r--ChangeLog30
-rw-r--r--NEWS24
-rw-r--r--README50
-rw-r--r--TODO43
-rw-r--r--config.scm.in27
-rw-r--r--configure.ac82
-rw-r--r--crontab.scm199
-rw-r--r--email.scm182
-rw-r--r--environment.scm121
-rw-r--r--makefile.am61
-rw-r--r--makefile.ed42
-rw-r--r--mcron.c.template124
-rw-r--r--mcron.scm846
-rw-r--r--mcron.texinfo1094
-rw-r--r--vixie.scm452
17 files changed, 3391 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/AUTHORS b/AUTHORS
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..da27b1c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/AUTHORS
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+Dale Mellor (dale_mellor@users.sourceforge.net)
diff --git a/BUGS b/BUGS
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9eabf92
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BUGS
@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
+ -*-text-*-
+
+* If two users modify their crontabs simultaneously, there will be contention
+ for /var/cron/update between themselves and with the main daemon.
+
+* Daylight savings time shifts are not taken into account very well. If things
+ are critical, your best bet is to set your TZ environment variable to
+ `:Universal', and express all your configuration files in Universal
+ Coordinated Time (UTC).
+
+
+* As often as not the cron daemon crashes (segfaults) when crontab sends it a
+ SIGHUP.
diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ae6a219
--- /dev/null
+++ b/ChangeLog
@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
+2003-06-30 hydro23 <Dale Mellor <dale@dmellor.dabsol.co.uk>>
+
+ * mcron.scm: Introduced arbiters to marshall access to updates
+ structure between main routing and HUP signal action procedure.
+
+ * crontab.scm: When an empty /tmp file is produced for editing,
+ make it owned by the real user (so he can edit it).
+
+ * mcron.scm, makefile.am: Check explicitly for root user when
+ running cron personality. Install with only root execute
+ permission.
+
+ * mcron.scm: Don't create /var/run/cron.pid if the -s option has
+ been used (this is an undocumented possibility).
+
+ * configure.ac, config.scm.in: Added configure option
+ --enable-debug to determine whether debugging and traceback should
+ be turned on.
+
+ * Version bumped to 0.99.2.
+
+
+2003-06-28 Dale Mellor <dale_mellor@users.sourceforge.net>
+
+ * First cut, fully functional, production quality code, just needs
+ testing...
+
+ * Version set at 0.99.1
+
+
diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5050482
--- /dev/null
+++ b/NEWS
@@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
+Historic moments in the life of mcron.
+
+Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1995-2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+See the end for copying conditions.
+
+Please send bug reports to dale_mellor@users.sourceforge.net.
+
+
+
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+Copyright information:
+
+Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+
+ Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies
+ of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the
+ copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved,
+ thus giving the recipient permission to redistribute in turn.
+
+ Permission is granted to distribute modified versions
+ of this document, or of portions of it,
+ under the above conditions, provided also that they
+ carry prominent notices stating who last changed them.
diff --git a/README b/README
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..06ccae1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README
@@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
+This is version 0.99.1 of the mcron program, designed and written by Dale
+Mellor, which replaces and hugely enhances Vixie cron. It is functionally
+complete, production quality code (did you expect less?), but has not received
+much testing yet and contains known bugs. It has only been built on a GNU/Linux
+system, and will most likely fail on others (but you never know...).
+
+
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+IMPORTANT NOTICES
+
+Read the BUGS file.
+
+Do not (yet) install this software on a machine which relies for its functioning
+on its current set of crontabs.
+
+The package must be installed by root.
+
+Before installing this package for the first time, it is necessary to terminate
+any running cron daemons on your system. If your old cron is not accurately
+Vixie compatible (files in /var/cron/tabs*, /var/cron/allow, /var/cron/deny,
+/etc/crontab, /var/run/cron.pid) then you will need to clear out all old
+crontabs and make new ones afresh.
+
+If your old cron is Vixie, or very similar, mcron should fall right into place
+where your old cron was (the binaries cron and crontab will be replaced), and
+you should be able to continue to use your existing crontabs without noticing
+any changes. Bear in mind that if you use /etc/crontab, then changes to this
+file will *not* take immediate effect (this is the 1% incompatibility between
+mcron and Vixie cron); you may want to add a comment to this file with a note to
+this effect. Alternatively, use the new mcron program, it's better!
+
+If you don't want to clobber your existing cron executables, you can specify the
+--program-prefix option to configure with a prefix ending in a non-alphabetic
+character, for example "m.", and then run the programs as m.mcron, m.cron and
+m.crontab.
+----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+See the file INSTALL for building and installation instructions.
+
+After installation, read the info file for full instructions for use (type
+`info mcron' at the command line).
+
+Known bugs are noted in the BUGS file, and features which might be implemented
+sometime sooner or later are noted in the TODO file.
+
+Please send all other bug reports by electronic mail to:
+ dale_mellor@users.sourceforge.net
+
+Mcron is free software. See the file COPYING for copying conditions.
diff --git a/TODO b/TODO
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5f61fcf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/TODO
@@ -0,0 +1,43 @@
+Maybe in the near future...
+
+ * Logging.
+
+ * Check POSIX compliance.
+
+
+
+There are no plans to actually do the following any time soon...
+
+ * Develop at, batch modes of operation.
+
+ * Make compatibilities with other crons (BSD, SYSV, Solaris, Dillon's, ...)
+
+ * Port to BSD, other operating systems.
+
+ * Full security audit for Vixie mode.
+
+ * Move internal functions into a namespace such that configuration files
+ cannot interfere with mcron itself.
+
+
+
+Quite likely to happen if version 2.0 ever materializes...
+
+ * Split program into Vixie and mcron separates (should streamline mcron
+ code by a factor of three; removes need for security audit).
+
+ * UNIX or TCP socket will allow interrogation and control of a running
+ daemon (should be more reliable, efficient and useful than using the
+ SIGHUP-/var/cron/update method).
+
+
+
+May happen if version 2.0 ever materializes...
+
+ * Add anacron functionality (run missed jobs if the daemon is stopped, for
+ example if a personal computer does not run 24 hours a day).
+
+ * TCP socket to allow control via HTTP (web browser interface). Or maybe
+ just CGI personality.
+
+ * GTK+/Bononbo interface.
diff --git a/config.scm.in b/config.scm.in
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f31ac1e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/config.scm.in
@@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
+;; -*-scheme-*-
+
+;; Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+;;
+;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+;; any later version.
+;;
+;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+;; GNU General Public License for more details.
+;;
+;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+;; along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+;; Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307,
+;; USA.
+
+
+;; Some constants set by the configuration process.
+
+(define config-debug @CONFIG_DEBUG@)
+(define config-package-string "@PACKAGE_STRING@")
+(define config-package-bugreport "@PACKAGE_BUGREPORT@")
+(define config-sendmail "@SENDMAIL@")
+(define config-cat "@CAT@")
diff --git a/configure.ac b/configure.ac
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f56b111
--- /dev/null
+++ b/configure.ac
@@ -0,0 +1,82 @@
+# -*- Autoconf -*-
+# Process this file with autoconf to produce a configure script.
+
+AC_PREREQ(2.57)
+AC_INIT(mcron, 0.99.1, dale_mellor@users.sourceforge.net)
+AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE
+
+
+AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether debugging is requested])
+AC_ARG_ENABLE(debug,
+ AC_HELP_STRING([--enable-debug],
+ [enable debugging and traceback on error]),
+ CONFIG_DEBUG=$enableval,
+ CONFIG_DEBUG=no)
+AC_MSG_RESULT($CONFIG_DEBUG)
+if test "$CONFIG_DEBUG" = "no"; then
+ CONFIG_DEBUG="#f"
+else
+ CONFIG_DEBUG="#t"
+fi
+AC_SUBST(CONFIG_DEBUG)
+
+
+AC_PROG_CC
+GUILE_PROGS
+GUILE_FLAGS
+
+# Checks for programs.
+ # AC_CHECK_PROG(CHMOD, chmod, chmod)
+AC_CHECK_PROGS(CHMOD, chmod)
+if test "x$ac_cv_prog_CHMOD" = "x"; then
+ AC_MSG_ERROR(chmod not found)
+fi
+AC_CHECK_PROGS(ED, ed)
+if test "x$ac_cv_prog_ED" = "x"; then
+ AC_MSG_ERROR(ed not found)
+fi
+AC_CHECK_PROGS(CAT, cat)
+if test "x$ac_cv_prog_CAT" = "x"; then
+ AC_MSG_ERROR(cat not found)
+fi
+AC_CHECK_PROGS(WHICH, which)
+if test "x$ac_cv_prog_WHICH" = "x"; then
+ AC_MSG_ERROR(which not found)
+fi
+
+# Now find a sendmail or equivalent.
+
+AC_CHECK_PROGS(SENDMAIL, sendmail)
+if test "x$ac_cv_prog_SENDMAIL" != "x"; then
+ AC_MSG_CHECKING(sendmail path and arguments)
+ ac_cv_prog_SENDMAIL="`$ac_cv_prog_WHICH sendmail` -FCronDaemon -odi -oem "
+dnl -or0s"
+ AC_MSG_RESULT($ac_cv_prog_SENDMAIL)
+
+else
+ AC_CHECK_PROGS(SENDMAIL, mail)
+ if test "x$ac_cv_prog_SENDMAIL" != "x"; then
+ AC_MSG_CHECKING(mail path)
+ ac_cv_prog_SENDMAIL="`$ac_cv_prog_WHICH sendmail` -d "
+ AC_MSG_RESULT($ac_cv_prog_SENDMAIL)
+ else
+ AC_MSG_RESULT(No mail program found)
+ fi
+fi
+SENDMAIL=$ac_cv_prog_SENDMAIL
+
+
+# Checks for libraries.
+
+# Checks for header files.
+
+# Checks for typedefs, structures, and compiler characteristics.
+
+# Checks for library functions.
+
+real_program_prefix=`echo $program_prefix | sed s/NONE//`
+AC_SUBST(real_program_prefix)
+
+
+AC_CONFIG_FILES(makefile config.scm)
+AC_OUTPUT
diff --git a/crontab.scm b/crontab.scm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..417a900
--- /dev/null
+++ b/crontab.scm
@@ -0,0 +1,199 @@
+;; Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+;;
+;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+;; any later version.
+;;
+;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+;; GNU General Public License for more details.
+;;
+;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+;; along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+;; Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307,
+;; USA.
+
+
+;; Apart from the collecting of options and the handling of --help and --version
+;; (which are done in the mcron.scm file), this file provides all the
+;; functionality of the crontab personality. It is designed to be loaded and run
+;; once, and then the calling program can exit and the crontab program will have
+;; completed its function.
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to communicate with running cron daemon that a user has modified
+;; his crontab. The user name is placed in /var/cron/update, and the process
+;; whose PID is held in /var/run/cron.pid is sent a SIGHUP.
+
+(define (hit-server user-name)
+ (catch #t (lambda ()
+ (let ((server-pid (with-input-from-file "/var/run/cron.pid"
+ (lambda () (string->number (read-line))))))
+ (catch #t (lambda ()
+ (with-output-to-file "/var/cron/update" (lambda ()
+ (display user-name)(newline))))
+ (lambda (key . args)
+ (display "Cannot write to /var/cron/update.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 14)))
+ (kill server-pid SIGHUP)))
+ (lambda (key . args)
+ (display "Warning: a cron daemon is not running.\n"))))
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to scan a file containing one user name per line (such as
+;; /var/cron/allow and /var/cron/deny), and determine if the given name is in
+;; there. The procedure returns #t, #f, or '() if the file does not exist.
+
+(define (in-access-file? file name)
+ (catch #t (lambda ()
+ (with-input-from-file file (lambda ()
+ (let loop ((input (read-line)))
+ (if (eof-object? input)
+ #f
+ (if (string=? input name)
+ #t
+ (loop (read-line))))))))
+ (lambda (key . args) '())))
+
+
+
+;; This program should have been installed SUID root. Here we get the passwd
+;; entry for the real user who is running this program.
+
+(define crontab-real-user (passwd:name (getpw (getuid))))
+
+
+
+;; If the real user is not allowed to use crontab due to the /var/cron/allow
+;; and/or /var/cron/deny files, bomb out now.
+
+(if (or (eq? (in-access-file? "/var/cron/allow" crontab-real-user) #f)
+ (eq? (in-access-file? "/var/cron/deny" crontab-real-user) #t))
+ (begin
+ (display "Access denied by system operator.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 6)))
+
+
+
+;; Iff the real user is root, he can use the -u option to access files of
+;; another user.
+
+(define crontab-user
+ (option-ref options 'user crontab-real-user))
+
+
+
+;; So now we know which crontab file we will be manipulating.
+
+(define crontab-file (string-append "/var/cron/tabs/" crontab-user))
+
+
+
+;; Check that no more than one of the mutually exclusive options are being used.
+
+(if (> (+ (if (option-ref options 'edit #f) 1 0)
+ (if (option-ref options 'list #f) 1 0)
+ (if (option-ref options 'remove #f) 1 0))
+ 1)
+ (begin
+ (display "crontab: Only one of options -e, -l or -r can be used.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 7)))
+
+
+
+;; Check that a non-root user is trying to read someone else's files.
+
+(if (and (not (eqv? (getuid) 0))
+ (option-ref options 'user #f))
+ (begin (display "crontab: Only root can use the -u option.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 8)))
+
+
+
+;; There are four possible sub-personalities to the crontab personality: list,
+;; remove, edit and replace (when the user uses no options but supplies file
+;; names on the command line).
+
+(cond
+
+
+ ;; In the list personality, we simply open the crontab and copy it
+ ;; character-by-character to the standard output. If anything goes wrong, it
+ ;; can only mean that this user does not have a crontab file.
+
+ ((option-ref options 'list #f)
+ (catch #t (lambda ()
+ (with-input-from-file crontab-file (lambda ()
+ (do ((input (read-char) (read-char)))
+ ((eof-object? input))
+ (display input)))))
+ (lambda (key . args)
+ (display (string-append "No crontab for "
+ crontab-user
+ " exists.\n")))))
+
+
+ ;; In the edit personality, we determine the name of a temporary file and an
+ ;; editor command, copy an existing crontab file (if it is there) to the
+ ;; temporary file, making sure the ownership is set so the real user can edit
+ ;; it; once the editor returns we try to read the file to check that it is
+ ;; parseable (but do nothing more with the configuration), and if it is okay
+ ;; (this program is still running!) we move the temporary file to the real
+ ;; crontab, wake the cron daemon up, and remove the temporary file.
+
+ ((option-ref options 'edit #f)
+ (let ((temp-file (string-append "/tmp/crontab." (number->string (getpid))))
+ (editor (if (getenv "VISUAL") (getenv "VISUAL")
+ (if (getenv "EDITOR") (getenv "EDITOR")
+ "vi"))))
+ (catch #t
+ (lambda () (copy-file crontab-file temp-file))
+ (lambda (key . args) (with-output-to-file temp-file (lambda () #t))))
+ (chown temp-file (getuid) (getgid))
+ (system (string-append editor " " temp-file))
+ (read-vixie-file temp-file)
+ (copy-file temp-file crontab-file)
+ (delete-file temp-file)
+ (hit-server crontab-user)))
+
+
+ ;; In the remove personality we simply make an effort to delete the crontab and
+ ;; wake the daemon. No worries if this fails.
+
+ ((option-ref options 'remove #f)
+ (catch #t (lambda () (delete-file crontab-file)
+ (hit-server crontab-user))
+ (lambda (key . args) #t)))
+
+
+ ;; In the case of the replace personality we loop over all the arguments on the
+ ;; command line, and for each one parse the file to make sure it is parseable
+ ;; (but subsequently ignore the configuration), and all being well we copy it
+ ;; to the crontab location; we deal with the standard input in the same way but
+ ;; different. :-) In either case the server is woken so that it will read the
+ ;; newly installed crontab.
+
+ ((not (null? (option-ref options '() '())))
+ (let ((input-file (car (option-ref options '() '()))))
+ (if (string=? input-file "-")
+ (let ((input-string (stdin->string)))
+ (read-vixie-port (open-input-string input-string))
+ (with-output-to-file crontab-file (lambda ()
+ (display input-string))))
+ (begin
+ (read-vixie-file input-file)
+ (copy-file input-file crontab-file))))
+ (hit-server crontab-user))
+
+
+ ;; The user is being silly. The message here is identical to the one Vixie cron
+ ;; used to put out, for total compatibility.
+
+ (else
+ (display
+ "crontab: usage error: file name must be specified for replace.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 15)))
diff --git a/email.scm b/email.scm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ec300a7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/email.scm
@@ -0,0 +1,182 @@
+;; Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+;;
+;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+;; any later version.
+;;
+;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+;; GNU General Public License for more details.
+;;
+;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+;; along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+;; Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307,
+;; USA.
+
+
+;; This file provides the (with-mail-out action . user) procedure. This
+;; procedure runs the action in a child process, allowing the user control over
+;; the input and output (including standard error). The input is governed (only
+;; in the case of a string action) by the placing of percentage signs in the
+;; string; the first delimits the true action from the standard input, and
+;; subsequent ones denote newlines to be placed into the input. The output (if
+;; there actually is any) is controlled by the MAILTO environment variable. If
+;; this is not defined, output is e-mailed to the user passed as argument, if
+;; any, or else the owner of the action; if defined but empty then any output is
+;; sunk to /dev/null; otherwise output is e-mailed to the address held in the
+;; MAILTO variable.
+
+
+;; An action string consists of a sequence of characters forming a command
+;; executable by the shell, possibly followed by an non-escaped percentage
+;; sign. The text after the percentage sign is to be fed to the command's
+;; standard input, with further unescaped percents being substituted with
+;; newlines. The escape character can itself be escaped.
+;;
+;; This regexp separates the two halves of the string, and indeed determines if
+;; the second part is present.
+
+(define action-string-regexp (make-regexp "((\\\\%|[^%])*)%(.*)$"))
+
+
+
+;; This regexp identifies an escaped percentage sign.
+
+(define e-percent (make-regexp "\\\\%"))
+
+
+;; Function to execute some action (this may be a shell command, lamdba function
+;; or list of scheme procedures) in a forked process, with the input coming from
+;; the string, and output (including the error output) being sent to a pipe
+;; opened on a mail transport.
+
+(use-modules (ice-9 popen))
+
+(define (with-mail-out action . user)
+
+ ;; Determine the name of the user who is to recieve the mail, looking for a
+ ;; name in the optional user argument, then in the MAILTO environment
+ ;; variable, and finally in the LOGNAME environment variable. (The case
+ ;; MAILTO="" is dealt with specially below.)
+
+ (let* ((mailto (getenv "MAILTO"))
+ (user (cond (mailto mailto)
+ ((not (null? user)) (car user))
+ (else (getenv "LOGNAME"))))
+ (parent->child (pipe))
+ (child->parent (pipe))
+ (child-pid (primitive-fork)))
+
+
+ ;; The child process. Close redundant ends of pipes, remap the standard
+ ;; streams, and run the action, taking care to chop off the input part of an
+ ;; action string.
+
+ (if (eqv? child-pid 0)
+ (begin
+ (close (cdr parent->child))
+ (close (car child->parent))
+
+ (dup2 (port->fdes (car parent->child)) 0)
+ (close (car parent->child))
+ (dup2 (port->fdes (cdr child->parent)) 1)
+ (close (cdr child->parent))
+ (dup2 1 2)
+
+ (cond ((string? action)
+ (let ((match (regexp-exec action-string-regexp action)))
+ (system (if match
+ (let ((action (match:substring match 1)))
+ (do ((match (regexp-exec e-percent action)
+ (regexp-exec e-percent action)))
+ ((not match))
+ (set! action (string-append
+ (match:prefix match)
+ "%"
+ (match:suffix match))))
+ action)
+ action))))
+
+ ((procedure? action) (action))
+ ((list? action) (primitive-eval action)))
+
+ (primitive-exit 0)))
+
+
+ ;; The parent process. Get rid of redundant pipe ends.
+
+ (close (car parent->child))
+ (close (cdr child->parent))
+
+
+ ;; Put stuff to child from after '%' in command line, replacing
+ ;; other %'s with newlines. Ugly or what?
+
+ (if (string? action)
+ (let ((port (cdr parent->child))
+ (match (regexp-exec action-string-regexp action)))
+ (if (and match
+ (match:substring match 3))
+ (with-input-from-string (match:substring match 3)
+ (lambda ()
+ (let loop ()
+ (let ((next-char (read-char)))
+ (if (not (eof-object? next-char))
+ (cond
+ ((char=? next-char #\%)
+ (newline port)
+ (loop))
+ ((char=? next-char #\\)
+ (let ((escape (read-char)))
+ (if (eof-object? escape)
+ (display #\\ port)
+ (if (char=? escape #\%)
+ (begin
+ (display #\% port)
+ (loop))
+ (begin
+ (display #\\ port)
+ (display escape port)
+ (loop))))))
+ (else
+ (display next-char port)
+ (loop)))))))))))
+
+
+ ;; So the child process doesn't hang on to its input expecting more stuff.
+
+ (close (cdr parent->child))
+
+
+ ;; That's got streaming into the child's input out of the way, now we stream
+ ;; the child's output to a mail sink, but only if there is something there
+ ;; in the first place.
+
+ (if (eof-object? (peek-char (car child->parent)))
+
+ (read-char (car child->parent))
+
+ (begin
+ (set-current-output-port (if (and (string? mailto)
+ (string=? mailto ""))
+ (open-output-file "/dev/null")
+ (open-output-pipe
+ (string-append config-sendmail
+ " "
+ user))))
+ (set-current-input-port (car child->parent))
+ (display "To: ") (display user) (newline)
+ (display "From: mcron") (newline)
+ (display (string-append "Subject: " user "@" (gethostname)))
+ (newline)
+ (newline)
+
+ (do ((next-char (read-char) (read-char)))
+ ((eof-object? next-char))
+ (display next-char))))
+
+ (close (car child->parent))
+
+ (waitpid child-pid)))
diff --git a/environment.scm b/environment.scm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e4d59a8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/environment.scm
@@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
+;; Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+;;
+;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+;; any later version.
+;;
+;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+;; GNU General Public License for more details.
+;;
+;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+;; along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+;; Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307,
+;; USA.
+
+
+
+;; This file defines the global variable current-environment-mods, and the
+;; procedures append-environment-mods (which is available to user configuration
+;; files), clear-environment-mods, modify-environment, and
+;; parse-vixie-environment. The idea is that the current-environment-mods is a
+;; list of pairs of environment names and values, and represents the cumulated
+;; environment settings in a configuration file. When a job definition is seen
+;; in a configuration file, the current-environment-mods are copied into the
+;; internal job description, and when the job actually runs these environment
+;; modifications are applied to the UNIX environment in which the job runs.
+
+
+
+;; The env-alist is an association list of variable names and values. Variables
+;; later in the list will take precedence over variables before. We return a
+;; fixed-up version in which some variables are given specific default values
+;; (which the user can override), and one variable which the user is not allowed
+;; to control is added at the end of the list.
+
+(define (impose-default-environment env-alist passwd-entry)
+ (append (list (cons "HOME" (passwd:dir passwd-entry))
+ (cons "CWD" (passwd:dir passwd-entry))
+ (cons "SHELL" (passwd:shell passwd-entry))
+ '("TERM" . #f)
+ '("TERMCAP" . #f))
+ env-alist
+ (list (cons "LOGNAME" (passwd:name passwd-entry))
+ (cons "USER" (passwd:name passwd-entry)))))
+
+
+
+
+;; Modify the UNIX environment for the current process according to the given
+;; association list of variables, with the default variable values imposed.
+
+(define (modify-environment env-alist passwd-entry)
+ (for-each (lambda (variable)
+ (setenv (car variable) (cdr variable)))
+ (impose-default-environment env-alist passwd-entry)))
+
+
+
+
+;; As we parse configuration files, we build up an alist of environment
+;; variables here.
+
+(define current-environment-mods '())
+
+
+
+
+;; When we start to parse a new configuration file, we want to start with a
+;; fresh environment (actually an umodified version of the pervading mcron
+;; environment).
+
+(define (clear-environment-mods)
+ (set! current-environment-mods '()))
+
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to add another environment setting to the alist above. This is used
+;; both implicitly by the Vixie parser, and can be used directly by users in
+;; scheme configuration files. The return value is purely for the convenience of
+;; the parse-vixie-environment procedure below.
+
+(define (append-environment-mods name value)
+ (set! current-environment-mods (append current-environment-mods
+ (list (cons name value))))
+ #t)
+
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to act on an environment variable specification in a Vixie-style
+;; configuration file, by adding an entry to the alist above. Returns #t if the
+;; operation was successful, #f if the line could not be interpreted as an
+;; environment specification.
+
+(define parse-vixie-environment-regexp1
+ (make-regexp
+ "^[ \t]*([[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*)[ \t]*=[ \t]*\"(.*)\"[ \t]*$"))
+(define parse-vixie-environment-regexp2
+ (make-regexp
+ "^[ \t]*([[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*)[ \t]*=[ \t]*\'(.*)\'[ \t]*$"))
+(define parse-vixie-environment-regexp3
+ (make-regexp
+ "^[ \t]*([[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*)[ \t]*=[ \t]*(.*[^ \t])[ \t]*$"))
+(define parse-vixie-environment-regexp4
+ (make-regexp
+ "^[ \t]*([[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*)[ \t]*=[ \t]*$"))
+
+(use-modules (srfi srfi-2))
+
+(define (parse-vixie-environment string)
+ (let ((match (or (regexp-exec parse-vixie-environment-regexp1 string)
+ (regexp-exec parse-vixie-environment-regexp2 string)
+ (regexp-exec parse-vixie-environment-regexp3 string))))
+ (if match
+ (append-environment-mods (match:substring match 1)
+ (match:substring match 2))
+ (and-let* ((match (regexp-exec parse-vixie-environment-regexp4 string)))
+ (append-environment-mods (match:substring match 1) #f)))))
diff --git a/makefile.am b/makefile.am
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..00b54ee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/makefile.am
@@ -0,0 +1,61 @@
+## Makefile for the toplevel directory of mcron.
+## Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+##
+## This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+## it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+## the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+## any later version.
+##
+## This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+## but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+## GNU General Public License for more details.
+##
+## You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+## along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+## Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+
+## Process this file with automake to produce Makefile.in
+
+ED = @ED@
+
+MAINTAINERCLEANFILES = configure makefile makefile.in \
+ install-sh missing mkinstalldirs texinfo.tex INSTALL \
+ aclocal.m4 compile depcomp COPYING
+
+CLEANFILES = mcron.c
+
+EXTRA_DIST = makefile.ed config.scm mcron.scm vixie.scm environment.scm \
+ email.scm crontab.scm mcron.c.template
+
+info_TEXINFOS = mcron.texinfo
+bin_PROGRAMS = mcron
+mcron_SOURCES = mcron.c
+mcron_LDFLAGS = @GUILE_LDFLAGS@
+mcron_CFLAGS = @GUILE_CFLAGS@
+
+mcron.c : config.scm mcron.scm vixie.scm environment.scm email.scm crontab.scm \
+ makefile.ed mcron.c.template
+ @echo 'Building mcron.c...'
+ @$(ED) < makefile.ed > /dev/null 2>&1
+ @rm -f mcron.escaped.scm > /dev/null 2>&1
+
+install-exec-local:
+ @if [ `id -u` -ne 0 ]; then \
+ echo "*** MUST BE ROOT TO INSTALL MCRON ***"; \
+ exit 1; \
+ fi
+
+#full program prefix
+fpp = $(DESTDIR)$(bindir)/@real_program_prefix@
+
+install-exec-hook:
+ @rm -f $(fpp)cron$(EXEEXT) > /dev/null 2>&1
+ @$(INSTALL) --mode='u=rwx' mcron$(EXEEXT) $(fpp)cron$(EXEEXT)
+ @rm -f $(fpp)crontab$(EXEEXT) > /dev/null 2>&1
+ @$(INSTALL) --mode='u=rwxs,og=rx' mcron$(EXEEXT) $(fpp)crontab$(EXEEXT)
+ ./mkinstalldirs -m 'u=rwx' /var/cron
+ ./mkinstalldirs -m 'u=rwx,og=rx' /var/run
+
+uninstall-hook:
+ @rm -f $(fpp){cron,crontab}$(EXEEXT)
diff --git a/makefile.ed b/makefile.ed
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..15fe15d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/makefile.ed
@@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
+# Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+#
+# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+# any later version.
+#
+# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+# GNU General Public License for more details.
+#
+# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307,
+# USA.
+#
+#
+#
+e mcron.scm
+/\(load "config.scm"\)/d
+-1r config.scm
+/\(load "vixie.scm"\)/d
+-1r vixie.scm
+/\(load "email.scm"\)/d
+-1r email.scm
+/\(load "environment.scm"\)/d
+-1r environment.scm
+/\(load "crontab.scm"\)/d
+-1r crontab.scm
+%s/\\/\\\\/g
+%s/"/\\"/g
+%s/ *;;.*$/ /g
+g/^ *$/d
+%s/^/\"/
+%s/$/\"/
+w mcron.escaped.scm
+e mcron.c.template
+/GUILE_PROGRAM_GOES_HERE/d
+-1r mcron.escaped.scm
+w mcron.c
+q
diff --git a/mcron.c.template b/mcron.c.template
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8277732
--- /dev/null
+++ b/mcron.c.template
@@ -0,0 +1,124 @@
+/*
+ * Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+ *
+ * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+ * any later version.
+ *
+ * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ * GNU General Public License for more details.
+ *
+ * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+ * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+ * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307,
+ * USA.
+ */
+
+
+/*
+ This C code represents the thinnest possible wrapper around the Guile code
+ which constitutes all the functionality of the mcron program. There are two
+ plus one reasons why we need to do this, and one very unfortunate
+ consequence.
+
+ Firstly, SUID does not work on an executable script. In the end, it is
+ the execution of the translator, in our case guile, which determines the
+ effective user, and it is not wise to make the system guile installation
+ SUID root!
+
+ Secondly, executable scripts show up in ugly ways in listings of the
+ system process table. Guile in particular, with its multi-line
+ #! ...\ \n -s ...!#
+ idiosyncracies shows up in process listings in a way that is difficult
+ to determine what program is actually running.
+
+ A third reason for the C wrapper which might be mentioned is that a
+ security-conscious system administrator can choose to only install a
+ binary, thus removing the possibility of a user studying a guile script
+ and working out ways of hacking it to his own ends, or worse still
+ finding a way to modify it to his own ends.
+
+ Unfortunately, running the guile script from inside a C program means
+ that the sigaction function does not work. Instead, it is necessary to
+ perform the signal processing in C.
+
+ The guile code itself is substituted for the GU1LE_PROGRAM_GOES_HERE (sic)
+ token by the makefile, which processes the scheme to make it look like one
+ big string.
+*/
+
+
+
+#include <signal.h>
+#include <libguile.h>
+
+
+
+/* This is a function designed to be installed as a signal handler, for signals
+ which are supposed to initiate shutdown of this program. It calls the scheme
+ procedure (see mcron.scm for details) to do all the work, and then exits. */
+
+void react_to_terminal_signal (int sig)
+{
+ scm_eval_string (scm_take0str ("(delete-run-file)") );
+ exit (1);
+}
+
+
+
+/* This is a function designed to be installed as a signal handler. It calls the
+ scheme procedure to do all the work (see mcron.scm for details). */
+
+void react_to_hup_signal (int sig)
+{
+ scm_eval_string (scm_take0str ("(process-hup)") );
+}
+
+
+
+/* This is a function designed to be callable from scheme, and sets up all the
+ signal handlers required by the cron personality. */
+
+SCM set_cron_signals ()
+{
+ static struct sigaction sa;
+ memset (&sa, 0, sizeof (sa));
+ sa.sa_handler = react_to_terminal_signal;
+ sigaction (SIGTERM, &sa, 0);
+ sigaction (SIGINT, &sa, 0);
+ sigaction (SIGQUIT, &sa, 0);
+
+ static struct sigaction hup; hup = sa;
+ hup.sa_handler = react_to_hup_signal;
+ sigaction (SIGHUP, &hup, 0);
+
+ return SCM_BOOL_T;
+}
+
+
+
+/* The effective main function (i.e. the one that actually does some work). We
+ register the function above with the guile system, and then execute the mcron
+ guile program. */
+
+void inner_main ()
+{
+ scm_c_define_gsubr ("c-set-cron-signals", 0, 0, 0, set_cron_signals);
+
+ scm_eval_string (scm_take0str (
+ GUILE_PROGRAM_GOES_HERE
+ ) );
+}
+
+
+
+/* The real main function. Does nothing but start up the guile subsystem. */
+
+int main (int argc, char **argv)
+{
+ scm_boot_guile (argc, argv, inner_main, 0);
+ return 0;
+}
diff --git a/mcron.scm b/mcron.scm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b41a88b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/mcron.scm
@@ -0,0 +1,846 @@
+;; Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+;;
+;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+;; any later version.
+;;
+;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+;; GNU General Public License for more details.
+;;
+;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+;; along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+;; Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307,
+;; USA.
+
+
+
+;; This is the 'main' routine for the whole system; the top of this file is the
+;; global entry point (after the minimal C wrapper, mcron.c.template). To all
+;; intents and purposes the program is pure Guile and starts here.
+;;
+;; This file is built into mcron.c.template by the makefile, which stringifies
+;; the whole lot, and escapes quotation marks and escape characters
+;; accordingly. Bear this in mind when considering literal multi-line strings.
+;;
+;; (load ...)'s are inlined by the makefile.
+
+
+;; Make a note of the time the script started; regardless of how long it takes
+;; to initialize things, we will run any job scheduled to run after this exact
+;; second.
+
+(define configuration-time (current-time))
+
+
+
+;; Pull in some constants set by the builder (via autoconf) at configuration
+;; time. Turn debugging on if indicated.
+
+(load "config.scm")
+(if config-debug (begin (debug-enable 'debug)
+ (debug-enable 'backtrace)))
+
+
+
+;; To determine the name of the program, scan the first item of the command line
+;; backwards for the first non-alphabetic character. This allows names like
+;; in.cron to be accepted as an invocation of the cron command.
+
+(use-modules (ice-9 regex))
+
+(define command-name (match:substring (regexp-exec (make-regexp "[[:alpha:]]*$")
+ (car (command-line)))))
+
+
+
+;; We will be doing a lot of testing of the command name, so it makes sense to
+;; perform the string comparisons once and for all here.
+
+(define command-type (cond ((string=? command-name "mcron") 'mcron)
+ ((or (string=? command-name "cron")
+ (string=? command-name "crond")) 'cron)
+ ((string=? command-name "crontab") 'crontab)
+ (else
+ (display "The command name is invalid.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 12))))
+
+
+
+;; There are a different set of options for the crontab personality compared to
+;; all the others, with the --help and --version options common to all the
+;; personalities.
+
+(use-modules (ice-9 getopt-long))
+
+(define options
+ (getopt-long (command-line)
+ (append
+ (case command-type ('crontab
+ '((user (single-char #\u) (value #t))
+ (edit (single-char #\e) (value #f))
+ (list (single-char #\l) (value #f))
+ (remove (single-char #\r) (value #f))))
+ (else `((schedule (single-char #\s) (value optional))
+ (daemon (single-char #\d) (value #f))
+ (stdin (single-char #\i) (value #t)
+ (predicate
+ ,(lambda (value)
+ (or (string=? "vixie" value)
+ (string=? "guile" value))))))))
+ '((version (single-char #\v) (value #f))
+ (help (single-char #\h) (value #f))))))
+
+
+
+
+;; If the user asked for the version of this program, give it to him and get
+;; out.
+
+(if (option-ref options 'version #f)
+ (begin
+ (display (string-append "\n
+" command-name " (" config-package-string ")\n
+Written by Dale Mellor\n
+\n
+Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor\n
+This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO\n
+warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.\n
+"))
+ (quit)))
+
+
+
+;; Likewise if the user requested the help text.
+
+(if (option-ref options 'help #f)
+ (begin
+ (display (string-append "
+Usage: " (car (command-line))
+(case command-type ('mcron
+" [OPTIONS] [FILES]\n
+Run an mcron process according to the specifications in the FILES (`-' for\n
+standard input), or use all the files in ~/.cron with .guile or .vixie\n
+extensions.\n
+\n
+ -v, --version Display version\n
+ -h, --help Display this help message\n
+ -s, --schedule[=COUNT] Display the next COUNT jobs (default 8) that\n
+ will be run by mcron\n
+ -d, --daemon Immediately detach the program from the terminal and\n
+ run as a daemon process\n
+ -i, --stdin=(guile|vixie) Format of data passed as standard input\n
+ (default guile)")
+
+ ('cron
+" [OPTIONS]\n
+Unless an option is specified, run a cron daemon as a detached process, \n
+reading all the information in the users' crontabs and in /etc/crontab.\n
+\n
+ -v, --version Display version\n
+ -h, --help Display this help message\n
+ -s, --schedule[=COUNT] Display the next COUNT jobs (default 8) that\n
+ will be run by cron")
+
+ ('crontab
+ (string-append " [-u user] file\n"
+ " " (car (command-line)) " [-u user] { -e | -l | -r }\n"
+ " (default operation is replace, per 1003.2)\n"
+ " -e (edit user's crontab)\n"
+ " -l (list user's crontab)\n"
+ " -r (delete user's crontab)\n")))
+
+"\n\n
+Report bugs to " config-package-bugreport ".\n
+"))
+ (quit)))
+
+
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+;; Perform setup processing specific to cron, crond personalities.
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+;; This is called from the C front-end whenever a terminal signal is
+;; received. We simply remove the /var/run/cron.pid file so that crontab and
+;; other invokations of cron don't get the wrong idea that a daemon is currently
+;; running.
+
+(define (delete-run-file)
+ (catch #t (lambda () (delete-file "/var/run/cron.pid"))
+ (lambda (key . args) #t))
+ (quit))
+
+
+
+;; Every time a SIGHUP is received from a crontab process, we read the
+;; /var/cron/update file for a user name (he whose crontab has been modified)
+;; and add it to this list (thus it may be regarded as a deferred update list).
+
+(define hup-received-for '())
+
+
+
+;; Two arbiters to control access to the above list. When an interrupt is
+;; received, the list will only be modified if pending-lock is available. If it
+;; is not, then the interrupt routine will lock interrupt-required and return
+;; immediately to the system, which should at convenient times check this lock
+;; and send a SIGHUP to the process to re-run the interrupt routine (obviously,
+;; if the main program locks pending-lock (or leaves locked) and issues an
+;; interrupt the interrupt routine will be a no-op).
+
+(define pending-lock (make-arbiter "pending-lock"))
+(define interrupt-required (make-arbiter "interrupt-required"))
+
+
+
+;; This is called from the C front-end whenever a HUP signal is received. We
+;; read the name of the user whose crontab has been modified, add his name to
+;; the list of pending requests, and remove the update file as an
+;; acknowledgement that we received the signal.
+;;
+;; ! We should put a warning in a log file if we receive a HUP and the update
+;; file is not present.
+
+(define (process-hup)
+ (if (try-arbiter pending-lock)
+ (begin
+ (with-input-from-file "/var/cron/update" (lambda ()
+ (set! hup-received-for (append hup-received-for (list (read-line))))))
+ (delete-file "/var/cron/update")
+ (release-arbiter pending-lock))
+ (try-arbiter interrupt-required)))
+
+
+
+;; Setup the cron process, if appropriate. If there is already a
+;; /var/run/cron.pid file, then we must assume a cron daemon is already running
+;; and refuse to start another one.
+;;
+;; Otherwise, clear the MAILTO environment variable so that output from cron
+;; jobs is sent to the various users (this may still be overridden in the
+;; configuration files), and call the function in the C wrapper to set up
+;; terminal and hangup signal responses to vector to the two procedures
+;; above. The PID file will be filled in properly later when we have forked our
+;; daemon process (but not done if we are only viewing the schedules).
+
+(if (eq? command-type 'cron)
+ (begin
+ (if (not (eqv? (getuid) 0))
+ (begin
+ (display "This program must be run by the root user (and should ")
+ (display "have been installed as such).\n")
+ (primitive-exit 16)))
+ (if (access? "/var/run/cron.pid" F_OK)
+ (begin
+ (display "A cron daemon is already running.\n")
+ (display " (If you are sure this is not true, remove the file\n")
+ (display " /var/run/cron.pid.)\n")
+ (primitive-exit 1)))
+ (if (not (option-ref options 'schedule #f))
+ (with-output-to-file "/var/run/cron.pid"
+ (lambda () #t)))
+ (setenv "MAILTO" #f)
+ (c-set-cron-signals)))
+
+
+
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+;; Define the functions available to the configuration files.
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+;; Define the with-mail-out command for configuration files to use (directly or
+;; indirectly as is the case when we parse vixie-style files).
+
+(load "email.scm")
+
+
+
+;; Function (available to user configuration files) which produces a list of
+;; values from start up to (but not including) end. An optional step may be
+;; supplied, and (if positive) only every step'th value will go into the
+;; list. For example, (range 1 6 2) returns '(1 3 5).
+
+(define (range start end . step)
+ (let ((step (if (or (null? step)
+ (<= (car step) 0))
+ 1
+ (car step))))
+ (let loop ((start start))
+ (if (>= start end) '()
+ (cons start
+ (loop (+ start step)))))))
+
+
+
+;; Internal function (not supposed to be used directly in configuration files)
+;; which takes a value and a list of possible next values (all assumed less than
+;; 9999). It returns a pair consisting of the smallest element of the list, and
+;; the smallest element larger than the current value. If an example of the
+;; latter cannot be found, 9999 will be returned.
+
+(define (find-best-next current next-list)
+ (let ((current-best (cons 9999 9999)))
+ (for-each (lambda (allowed-time)
+ (if (< allowed-time (car current-best))
+ (set-car! current-best allowed-time))
+ (if (and (> allowed-time current)
+ (< allowed-time (cdr current-best)))
+ (set-cdr! current-best allowed-time)))
+ next-list)
+ current-best))
+
+
+
+;; Internal function to return the time corresponding to some near future
+;; hour. If hour-list is not supplied, the time returned corresponds to the
+;; start of the next hour of the day.
+;;
+;; If the hour-list is supplied the time returned corresponds to the first hour
+;; of the day in the future which is contained in the list. If all the values in
+;; the list are less than the current hour, then the time returned will
+;; correspond to the first hour in the list *on the following day*.
+;;
+;; ... except that the function is actually generalized to deal with seconds,
+;; minutes, etc., in an obvious way :-)
+;;
+;; Note that value-list always comes from an optional argument to a procedure,
+;; so is wrapped up as the first element of a list (i.e. it is a list inside a
+;; list).
+
+(define (bump-time time value-list component higher-component
+ set-component! set-higher-component!)
+ (if (null? value-list)
+ (set-component! time (+ (component time) 1))
+ (let ((best-next (find-best-next (component time) (car value-list))))
+ (if (eqv? 9999 (cdr best-next))
+ (begin
+ (set-higher-component! time (+ (higher-component time) 1))
+ (set-component! time (car best-next)))
+ (set-component! time (cdr best-next)))))
+ (car (mktime time)))
+
+
+
+
+;; Set of configuration methods which use the above general function to bump
+;; specific components of time to the next legitimate value. In each case, all
+;; the components smaller than that of interest are taken to zero, so that for
+;; example the time of the next year will be the time at which the next year
+;; actually starts.
+
+(define (next-year-from current-time . year-list)
+ (let ((time (localtime current-time)))
+ (set-tm:mon time 0)
+ (set-tm:mday time 1)
+ (set-tm:hour time 0)
+ (set-tm:min time 0)
+ (set-tm:sec time 0)
+ (bump-time time year-list tm:year tm:year set-tm:year set-tm:year)))
+
+(define (next-month-from current-time . month-list)
+ (let ((time (localtime current-time)))
+ (set-tm:mday time 1)
+ (set-tm:hour time 0)
+ (set-tm:min time 0)
+ (set-tm:sec time 0)
+ (bump-time time month-list tm:mon tm:year set-tm:mon set-tm:year)))
+
+(define (next-day-from current-time . day-list)
+ (let ((time (localtime current-time)))
+ (set-tm:hour time 0)
+ (set-tm:min time 0)
+ (set-tm:sec time 0)
+ (bump-time time day-list tm:mday tm:mon set-tm:mday set-tm:mon)))
+
+(define (next-hour-from current-time . hour-list)
+ (let ((time (localtime current-time)))
+ (set-tm:min time 0)
+ (set-tm:sec time 0)
+ (bump-time time hour-list tm:hour tm:mday set-tm:hour set-tm:mday)))
+
+(define (next-minute-from current-time . minute-list)
+ (let ((time (localtime current-time)))
+ (set-tm:sec time 0)
+ (bump-time time minute-list tm:min tm:hour set-tm:min set-tm:hour)))
+
+(define (next-second-from current-time . second-list)
+ (let ((time (localtime current-time)))
+ (bump-time time second-list tm:sec tm:min set-tm:sec set-tm:min)))
+
+
+
+;; The current-action-time is the time a job was last run, the time from which
+;; the next time to run a job must be computed. (When the program is first run,
+;; this time is set to the configuration time so that jobs run from that moment
+;; forwards.) Once we have this, we supply versions of the time computation
+;; commands above which implicitly assume this value.
+
+(define current-action-time configuration-time)
+
+
+
+;; We want to provide functions which take a single optional argument (as well
+;; as implicitly the current action time), but unlike usual scheme behaviour if
+;; the argument is missing we want to act like it is really missing, and if it
+;; is there we want to act like it is a genuine argument, not a list of
+;; optionals.
+
+(define (maybe-args function args)
+ (if (null? args)
+ (function current-action-time)
+ (function current-action-time (car args))))
+
+
+
+;; These are the convenience functions we were striving to define for the
+;; configuration files. They are wrappers for the next-X-from functions above,
+;; but implicitly use the current-action-time for the time argument.
+
+(define (next-year . args) (maybe-args next-year-from args))
+(define (next-month . args) (maybe-args next-month-from args))
+(define (next-day . args) (maybe-args next-day-from args))
+(define (next-hour . args) (maybe-args next-hour-from args))
+(define (next-minute . args) (maybe-args next-minute-from args))
+(define (next-second . args) (maybe-args next-second-from args))
+
+
+
+;; The list of all jobs known to the system. Each element of the list is
+;;
+;; (vector user next-time-function action environment next-time)
+;;
+;; where action may be a string (indicating a shell command) or a list
+;; (indicating scheme code) or a procedure, and the environment is an alist of
+;; modifications that need making to the UNIX environment before the action is
+;; run. The next-time elements is the only one that is modified during the
+;; running of a cron process (i.e. all the others are set once and for all at
+;; configuration time).
+
+(define job-list '())
+
+
+
+;; Convenience functions for getting and setting the elements of a job object.
+
+(define (job:user job) (vector-ref job 0))
+(define (job:next-time-function job) (vector-ref job 1))
+(define (job:action job) (vector-ref job 2))
+(define (job:environment job) (vector-ref job 3))
+(define (job:next-time job) (vector-ref job 4))
+(define (job:set-next-time! job time) (vector-set! job 4 time))
+
+
+
+;; Introduce the definition of an environment object, and provide methods for
+;; its manipulation and application to the environment in which we run a job.
+
+(load "environment.scm")
+
+
+
+;; Introduce functions which can be used directly in configuration files or
+;; indirectly to parse vixie-style time specification strings and manufacture
+;; corresponding next-time functions like the ones above.
+
+(load "vixie.scm")
+
+
+
+;; The default user for running jobs is the current one (who invoked this
+;; program). There are exceptions: when cron parses /etc/crontab the user is
+;; specified on each individual line; when cron parses /var/cron/tabs/* the user
+;; is derived from the filename of the crontab. These cases are dealt with by
+;; mutating this variable. Note that the variable is only used at configuration
+;; time; a UID is stored with each job and it is that which takes effect when
+;; the job actually runs.
+
+(define configuration-user (getpw (getuid)))
+
+
+
+;; The job function, available to configuration files for adding a job rule to
+;; the system.
+;;
+;; Here we must 'normalize' the next-time-function so that it is always a lambda
+;; function which takes one argument (the last time the job ran) and returns a
+;; single value (the next time the job should run). If the input value is a
+;; string this is parsed as a Vixie-style time specification, and if it is a
+;; list then we arrange to eval it (but note that such lists are expected to
+;; ignore the function parameter - the last run time is always read from the
+;; current-action-time global variable). A similar normalization is applied to
+;; the action.
+;;
+;; Here we also compute the first time that the job is supposed to run, by
+;; finding the next legitimate time from the current configuration time (set
+;; right at the top of this program).
+;;
+;; Note that the new job is added at the front of the job-list (this is
+;; important so that the entries in the system crontab /etc/crontab finish up at
+;; the front of the list when we scan that file).
+
+(define (job time-proc action)
+ (let ((action (cond ((procedure? action) action)
+ ((list? action) (lambda () (primitive-eval action)))
+ ((string? action) (lambda () (system action)))
+ (else
+ (display "job: invalid second argument (action; should be lamdba")
+ (display "function, string or list)\n")
+ (primitive-exit 2))))
+
+ (time-proc
+ (cond ((procedure? time-proc) time-proc)
+ ((string? time-proc) (parse-vixie-time time-proc))
+ ((list? time-proc) (lambda (dummy)
+ (primitive-eval time-proc)))
+ (else
+
+ (display "job: invalid first argument (next-time-function; should ")
+ (display "be function, string or list)")
+ (primitive-exit 3)))))
+
+ (set! job-list (cons (vector configuration-user
+ time-proc
+ action
+ (list-copy current-environment-mods)
+ (time-proc current-action-time))
+ job-list))))
+
+
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+;; End of definition of procedures for configuration files.
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to slurp the standard input into a string.
+
+(define (stdin->string)
+ (with-output-to-string (lambda () (do ((in (read-char) (read-char)))
+ ((eof-object? in))
+ (display in)))))
+
+
+
+;; Now we have the procedures in place for dealing with the contents of
+;; configuration files, the crontab personality is able to validate such
+;; files. If the user requested the crontab personality, we load and run the
+;; code here and then get out.
+
+(if (eq? command-type 'crontab)
+ (begin
+ (load "crontab.scm")
+ (quit)))
+
+
+
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+;; Procedures for effecting the configuration process itself.
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+;; Procedure which processes any configuration file according to the
+;; extension. If a file is not recognized, it is silently ignored (this deals
+;; properly with most editors' backup files, for instance).
+
+(define guile-file-regexp (make-regexp "\\.gui(le)?$"))
+(define vixie-file-regexp (make-regexp "\\.vix(ie)?$"))
+
+(define (process-user-file file-path)
+ (cond ((string=? file-path "-")
+ (if (string=? (option-ref options 'stdin "guile") "vixie")
+ (read-vixie-port (current-input-port))
+ (eval-string (stdin->string))))
+ ((regexp-exec guile-file-regexp file-path)
+ (load file-path))
+ ((regexp-exec vixie-file-regexp file-path)
+ (read-vixie-file file-path))))
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to run through all the files in a user's ~/.cron directory (only
+;; happens under the mcron personality).
+
+(define (process-files-in-user-directory)
+ (catch #t (lambda ()
+ (let* ((dir-path (string-append (passwd:dir configuration-user)
+ "/.cron"))
+ (directory (opendir dir-path)))
+ (do ((file-name (readdir directory) (readdir directory)))
+ ((eof-object? file-name) (closedir directory))
+ (process-user-file (string-append dir-path
+ "/"
+ file-name)))))
+ (lambda (key . args)
+ (display "Cannot read files in your ~/.cron directory.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 13))))
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to check that a user name is the the passwd database (it may happen
+;; that a user is removed after creating a crontab). If the user name is valid,
+;; the full passwd entry for that user is returned to the caller.
+
+(define (valid-user user-name)
+ (setpwent)
+ (do ((entry (getpw) (getpw)))
+ ((or (not entry)
+ (string=? (passwd:name entry) user-name))
+ (endpwent)
+ entry)))
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to process all the files in the crontab directory, making sure that
+;; each file is for a legitimate user and setting the configuration-user to that
+;; user. In this way, when the job procedure is run on behalf of the
+;; configuration files, the jobs are registered with the system with the
+;; appropriate user. Note that only the root user should be able to perform this
+;; operation, but we leave it to the permissions on the /var/cron/tabs directory
+;; to enforce this.
+
+(use-modules (srfi srfi-2))
+
+(define (process-files-in-system-directory)
+;;; (catch #t (lambda ()
+ (let ((directory (opendir "/var/cron/tabs")))
+ (do ((file-name (readdir directory) (readdir directory)))
+ ((eof-object? file-name) (closedir directory))
+ (and-let* ((user (valid-user file-name)))
+ (set! configuration-user user)
+ (read-vixie-file (string-append "/var/cron/tabs/"
+ file-name)))))
+;;; )
+;;; (lambda (key . args)
+;;; (display "You do not have permission to access the system crontabs.\n")
+;;; (primitive-exit 4)))
+ )
+
+
+
+;; The head of the jobs list will contain the jobs specified in /etc/crontab,
+;; and this variable tells us how long that head is.
+
+(define system-jobs 0)
+
+
+
+;; Having defined all the necessary procedures for scanning various sets of
+;; files, we perform the actual configuration of the program depending on the
+;; personality we are running as. If it is mcron, we either scan the files
+;; passed on the command line, or else all the ones in the user's .cron
+;; directory. If we are running under the cron personality, we read the
+;; /var/cron/tabs directory and also the /etc/crontab file.
+
+(case command-type
+ ('mcron (if (null? (option-ref options '() '()))
+ (process-files-in-user-directory)
+ (for-each (lambda (file-path)
+ (process-user-file file-path))
+ (option-ref options '() '()))))
+
+ ('cron (process-files-in-system-directory)
+ (let ((start-length (length job-list)))
+ (read-vixie-file "/etc/crontab" parse-system-vixie-line)
+ (set! system-jobs (- (length job-list) start-length)))))
+
+
+
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+;; End of configuration section.
+;;
+;; Now the main execution loop.
+;;----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+;; Procedure to locate the jobs in the global job-list with the lowest
+;; (soonest) next-times. These are the jobs for which we must schedule the mcron
+;; program (under any personality) to next wake up. The return value is a cons
+;; cell consisting of the next time (maintained in the next-time variable) and a
+;; list of the job entries that are to run at this time (maintained in the
+;; next-jobs-list variable).
+;;
+;; The procedure works by first obtaining the time of the first job on the list,
+;; and setting this job in the next-jobs-list. Then for each other entry on the
+;; job-list, either the job runs earlier than any other that have been scanned,
+;; in which case the next-time and next-jobs-list are re-initialized to
+;; accomodate, or the job runs at the same time as the next job, in which case
+;; the next-jobs-list is simply augmented with the new job, or else the job runs
+;; later than others noted in which case we ignore it for now and continue to
+;; recurse the list.
+
+(define (find-next-jobs)
+
+ (if (null? job-list)
+ (if (eq? command-type 'mcron)
+ (begin (display "Nothing to do.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 5))
+ (cons #f '()))
+
+ (let ((next-time (job:next-time (car job-list)))
+ (next-jobs-list (list (car job-list))))
+
+ (for-each
+ (lambda (job)
+ (let ((this-time (job:next-time job)))
+ (cond ((< this-time next-time)
+ (set! next-time this-time)
+ (set! next-jobs-list (list job)))
+ ((eqv? this-time next-time)
+ (set! next-jobs-list (cons job next-jobs-list))))))
+ (cdr job-list))
+
+ (cons next-time next-jobs-list))))
+
+
+
+;; If the user has requested a schedule of jobs that will run, we provide the
+;; information here and then get out.
+;;
+;; Start by determining the number of time points in the future that output is
+;; required for. This may be provided on the command line as a parameter to the
+;; --schedule option, or else we assume a default of 8. Having determined this
+;; count we enter a loop of displaying the next set of jobs to run, artificially
+;; forwarding the time to the next time point (instead of waiting for it to
+;; occur as we would do in a normal run of mcron), and recurse around the loop
+;; count times.
+
+(and-let* ((count (option-ref options 'schedule #f)))
+ (set! count (if (eq? count #t)
+ 8
+ (string->number count)))
+ (if (<= count 0) (set! count 1))
+ (do ((count count (- count 1)))
+ ((eqv? count 0))
+ (let* ((next-jobs (find-next-jobs))
+ (date-string (strftime "%c\n" (localtime (car next-jobs)))))
+ (for-each (lambda (job) (display date-string)
+ (write (job:action job))
+ (newline)(newline))
+ (cdr next-jobs))))
+ (quit))
+
+
+
+;; For proper housekeeping, it is necessary to keep a record of the number of
+;; child processes we fork off to run the jobs.
+
+(define number-children 0)
+
+
+
+;; For every job on the list, fork a process to run it (noting the fact by
+;; increasing the number-children counter), and in the new process set up the
+;; run-time environment exactly as it should be before running the job proper.
+;;
+;; In the parent, update the job entry by computing the next time the job needs
+;; to run.
+
+(define (run-jobs jobs-list)
+ (for-each (lambda (job)
+ (if (eqv? (primitive-fork) 0)
+ (begin
+ (setuid (passwd:uid (job:user job)))
+ (chdir (passwd:dir (job:user job)))
+ (modify-environment (job:environment job) (job:user job))
+ ((job:action job))
+ (primitive-exit 0))
+ (begin
+ (set! number-children (+ number-children 1))
+ (set! current-action-time (job:next-time job))
+ (job:set-next-time! job
+ ((job:next-time-function job)
+ current-action-time)))))
+ jobs-list))
+
+
+
+;; If we are supposed to run as a daemon process (either a --daemon option has
+;; been explicitly used, or we are running as cron or crond), detach from the
+;; terminal now. If we are running as cron, we can now write the PID file.
+
+(if (option-ref options 'daemon (eq? command-type 'cron))
+ (begin
+ (if (not (eqv? (primitive-fork) 0))
+ (quit))
+ (setsid)
+ (if (eq? command-type 'cron)
+ (with-output-to-file "/var/run/cron.pid"
+ (lambda () (display (getpid)) (newline))))))
+
+
+
+;; Now the main loop. Take the current time. Loop over all job specifications,
+;; get a list of the next ones to run (may be more than one). Set an alarm and
+;; go to sleep. When we wake, run the jobs. Repeat ad infinitum.
+
+(use-modules (srfi srfi-1))
+
+(let main-loop ()
+
+ (release-arbiter pending-lock)
+
+ ;; Check for any pending updates to the configuration files (as notified by
+ ;; crontab). If one is seen, remove all work from the job-list that belongs to
+ ;; this user, set up the global variables current-action-time and
+ ;; configuration-user appropriately, and then process the new configuration
+ ;; file for the user.
+
+ (do () ((and (if (release-arbiter interrupt-required)
+ (begin (kill (getpid) SIGHUP) #f)
+ #t)
+ (null? hup-received-for)))
+ (try-arbiter pending-lock)
+ (let ((user (car hup-received-for)))
+ (set! hup-received-for (cdr hup-received-for))
+ (release-arbiter pending-lock)
+ (set! configuration-user (getpw user))
+ (let ((uid (passwd:uid configuration-user))
+ (old-job-list job-list))
+ (set! current-action-time (current-time))
+ (set! job-list
+ (append
+ (list-head old-job-list system-jobs)
+ (begin (set! job-list '())
+ (read-vixie-file (string-append "/var/cron/tabs/" user))
+ job-list)
+ (remove (lambda (job) (eqv? (passwd:uid (job:user job)) uid))
+ (list-tail old-job-list system-jobs)))))))
+
+
+ ;; Compute the amount of time that we must sleep until the next job is due to
+ ;; run.
+
+ (let* ((next-jobs (find-next-jobs))
+ (next-time (car next-jobs))
+ (next-jobs-list (cdr next-jobs))
+ (sleep-time (if next-time (- next-time (current-time))
+ #f)))
+
+
+ ;; If an update signal has just come in, or there are no current jobs and a
+ ;; pause operation has been interrupted (presumably by a SIGHUP), or the
+ ;; sleep operation has been interrupted (presumably by a SIGHUP), then undo
+ ;; the latest time calculations and jump back to the top of the loop where
+ ;; the pending updates will be dealt with.
+ ;;
+ ;; Otherwise, when we wake from our sleep, first try to collect as many
+ ;; child zombies as possible from previous job runs, then run the current
+ ;; set of jobs (on the next-jobs-list).
+
+ (if (and (null? hup-received-for)
+ ;; ! If a signal occurs now, we won't see it
+ ;; until the next signal.
+ (eqv? 0 (cond ((not sleep-time) (pause) 1)
+ ((> sleep-time 0) (sleep sleep-time))
+ (else 0))))
+ (run-jobs next-jobs-list)))
+
+ (do () ((or (<= number-children 0)
+ (eqv? (car (waitpid WAIT_ANY WNOHANG)) 0)))
+ (set! number-children (- number-children 1)))
+
+ (main-loop))
diff --git a/mcron.texinfo b/mcron.texinfo
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4ceb290
--- /dev/null
+++ b/mcron.texinfo
@@ -0,0 +1,1094 @@
+\input texinfo
+@c %**start of header
+@setfilename mcron.info
+@settitle mcron 1.0.0
+@c %**end of header
+
+@syncodeindex fn cp
+
+@copying
+This file documents the @code{mcron} command for running jobs at
+scheduled times.
+
+Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+This is free software. See the source files for the terms of the
+copyright.
+
+@ignore
+Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
+this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
+are preserved on all copies.
+
+Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
+results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
+notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
+(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
+
+Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
+manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
+resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
+notice identical to this one.
+
+Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
+into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
+except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
+by the Foundation.
+@end ignore
+@end copying
+
+
+@ifinfo
+
+@dircategory Individual utilities
+
+@direntry
+* mcron: (mcron). Run jobs at scheduled times.
+@end direntry
+
+@end ifinfo
+
+
+@titlepage
+@title mcron - Mellor's cron daemon
+@author Dale Mellor
+
+@page
+@vskip 0pt plus 1fill
+@insertcopying
+
+@end titlepage
+
+@contents
+
+@ifnottex
+@node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir)
+@top mcron
+
+@insertcopying
+@end ifnottex
+
+@menu
+* Introduction:: Introducing mcron.
+* Simple examples:: How to use mcron 99.9% of the time.
+* Syntax:: All the possibilities for configuring cron jobs.
+* Invoking:: What happens when you run the mcron command.
+* Index:: The complete index.
+
+@detailmenu
+ --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
+
+Simple examples
+
+* Guile Simple Examples::
+* Vixie Simple Examples::
+
+Full available syntax
+
+* Guile Syntax::
+* Extended Guile examples::
+* Vixie Syntax::
+
+Extended Guile examples
+
+* AT commands::
+* Every second Sunday::
+* Two hours every day::
+* Missing the first appointment::
+* Penultimate day of every month::
+
+Vixie
+
+* Paul Dixie's copyright::
+* Crontab file::
+* Incompatibilities with old Unices::
+
+Detailed invoking
+
+* Running mcron::
+* Running cron or crond::
+* Running crontab::
+* Exit codes::
+
+@end detailmenu
+@end menu
+
+@node Introduction, Simple examples, Top, Top
+@chapter Introducing mcron
+@cindex introduction
+@cindex mcron
+The mcron program represents a complete re-think of the cron concept
+originally found in the Berkeley and AT&T unices, and subsequently
+rationalized by Paul Vixie. The original idea was to have a daemon
+that wakes up every minute, scans a set of files under a special
+directory, and determines from those files if any shell commands
+should be executed in this minute.
+
+The new idea is to read the required command instructions, work out
+which command needs to be executed next, and then sleep until the
+inferred time has arrived. On waking the commands are run, and the
+time of the next command is computed. Furthermore, the specifications
+are written in scheme, allowing at the same time simple command
+execution instructions and very much more flexible ones to be composed
+than the original Vixie format. This has several useful advantages
+over the original idea.
+
+@cindex advantages of mcron
+@itemize @bullet
+@item
+Does not consume CPU resources when not needed. Many cron daemons only
+run jobs once an hour, or even just once a day.
+@item
+Can easily allow for finer time-points to be specified,
+i.e. seconds. In principle this could be extended to microseconds, but
+this is not implemented.
+@item
+Times can be more or less regular. For example, a job that runs
+every 17 hours can be specified, or a job that runs on the first
+Sunday of every month.
+@item
+Times can be dynamic. Arbitrary Guile (scheme) code can be provided to
+compute the next time that a command needs to be run. This could, for
+example, take the system load into consideration.
+@item
+Turns out to be easy to provide complete backwards compatibility with
+Vixie cron.
+@item
+Each user looks after his own files in his own directory. He can use
+more than one to break up complicated cron specifications.
+@item
+Each user can run his own daemon. This removes the need for suid
+programs to manipulate the crontabs, and eliminates many security
+concerns that surround all existing cron programs.
+@item
+The user can obtain an advance schedule of all the jobs that are due
+to run.
+@item
+Vixie cron is implemented in 4500 lines of C code; mcron is 1500 lines
+of scheme, despite the fact that it offers many more features and much
+more flexibility, and complete compatibility with Vixie cron.
+@end itemize
+
+A full discussion of the design and philosophy of mcron can be found
+in the white paper at http://.../mcron.html [FIXME].
+
+
+@node Simple examples, Syntax, Introduction, Top
+@chapter Simple examples
+The vast majority of uses of cron are sublimely simple: run a program
+every hour, or every day. With this in mind the design of mcron has
+been to allow such simple specifications to be made easily. The
+examples show how to create the command descriptions, and subsequently
+how to run mcron to make them happen.
+@menu
+* Guile Simple Examples::
+* Vixie Simple Examples::
+@end menu
+
+@node Guile Simple Examples, Vixie Simple Examples, Simple examples, Simple examples
+@section Guile
+@cindex guile examples
+@cindex examples, guile
+@cindex example, run a program every hour
+You have an executable @code{my-program} in your home directory, which
+you want to run every hour. Create a file @code{job.guile} in directory
+@code{~/.cron} with the following contents
+
+@example
+(job '(next-hour) "my-program")
+@end example
+
+then run the command @code{mcron}.
+
+Want the program to run fifteen minutes past the hour, every two
+hours? Edit the file to read
+
+@example
+(job
+ '(next-minute-from
+ (next-hour (range 0 24 2))
+ 15)
+ "my-program")
+@end example
+
+and run the command @code{mcron}.
+
+Or, if you are not comfortable with Scheme, you could use (and see
+also the next section)
+
+@example
+(job "15 */2 * * *" "my-program")
+@end example
+
+and run the @code{mcron} command.
+
+If you want to run other jobs, you can either add more lines to this
+file, or you can create other files in your @code{.cron} directory
+with the @code{.guile} extension. Alternatively, you can use any file
+you want and pass it as an argument to @code{mcron}, or even pipe the
+commands into the standard input.
+
+
+@node Vixie Simple Examples, , Guile Simple Examples, Simple examples
+@section Vixie
+@cindex examples
+@cindex examples, vixie
+@cindex vixie examples
+You have an executable @code{my-program} in your home directory, which
+you want to run every hour. Create a file @code{job.vixie} in directory
+@code{~/.cron} with the following contents
+
+@example
+0 * * * * my-program
+@end example
+
+then run the command @code{mcron}.
+
+@cindex vixie compatibility
+@cindex compatibility
+Alternatively (full compatibility with Vixie cron), set your
+environment variable @code{EDITOR} to your favorite editor, run
+@code{crontab -e}, put the above line into the edit buffer, save and
+exit. For this to work the @code{crond} daemon must be already running
+on your system, by root.
+
+@node Syntax, Invoking, Simple examples, Top
+@chapter Full available syntax
+@menu
+* Guile Syntax::
+* Extended Guile examples::
+* Vixie Syntax::
+@end menu
+@node Guile Syntax, Extended Guile examples, Syntax, Syntax
+@section Guile Syntax
+@subsection Job specification
+@cindex guile syntax
+@cindex syntax, guile
+@findex job
+In Guile-formatted configuration files each command that needs
+executing is introduced with the @code{job} function. This function
+always takes exactly two arguments, the first a time specification,
+and the second a command specification.
+
+@cindex time specification, procedure
+@cindex procedure time specification
+The first argument can be a procedure, a list, or a string. If a
+function is supplied, it must take exactly one argument, which will be
+the ``current'' time in UNIX format, and the return value of the
+function must be the time in UNIX format when this action should next
+be run. The following functions are available to facilitate the
+computation:
+
+@findex next-second-from
+@code{(next-second-from time . args)} without arguments this
+returns the second after the current one. With the extra arguments,
+these form a list of seconds in the minute when the action should run,
+and the function will return the time of the next allowed second
+(which may be in the next minute of the hour). @footnote{Note that
+while commands can be scheduled to run at any second, it is unlikely
+that they will be executed then but some time shortly thereafter,
+depending on the load on the system and the number of jobs that mcron
+has to start at the same time.}
+
+@findex next-minute-from
+@findex next-hour-from
+@findex next-day-from
+@findex next-week-from
+@findex next-month-from
+@findex next-year-from
+Similarly to @code{next-second-from}, there are also
+@code{next-minute-from}, @code{next-hour-from}, @code{next-day-from},
+@code{next-week-from}, @code{next-month-from}, @code{next-year-from}.
+
+@findex range
+Furthermore, the optional argument can be fulfilled by the function
+@code{(range start end . step)}, which will provide a list of values
+from start to (but not including) end, with the step if given. For
+example @code{(range 0 10 2)} will yield the list @code{'(0 2 4 6 8)}.
+
+@findex next-second
+@findex next-minute
+@findex next-hour
+@findex next-day
+@findex next-week
+@findex next-month
+@findex next-year
+@cindex time specification, list
+@cindex list time specification
+If the first argument to the @code{job} function is a list, it is
+taken to be program code made up of the functions @code{(next-second
+. args)}, @code{(next-minute...)}, etc, where the optional arguments
+can be supplied with the @code{(range)} function above (these
+functions are analogous to the ones above except that they implicitly
+assume the current time; it is supplied by the mcron core when the
+list is eval'd).
+
+@cindex time specification
+@cindex time specification, string
+@cindex string time specification
+@cindex time specification, vixie-style
+@cindex vixie-style time specification
+If the first argument to the @code{job} function is a string, it is
+expected to be a Vixie cron-style time specification. See the section
+on Vixie syntax for this.
+
+@cindex job execution
+@cindex command execution
+@cindex execution
+The second argument to the @code{(job)} function can be either a
+string, a list, or a function. In all cases the command is executed in
+the user's home directory, under the user's own UID. If a string is
+passed, it is assumed to be shell script and is executed with the
+user's default shell. If a list is passed it is assumed to be scheme
+code and is eval'd as such. A supplied function should take exactly
+zero arguments, and will be called at the pertinent times.
+
+@subsection Sending output as e-mail
+@cindex email output
+@cindex email from guile script
+@cindex standard input to commands
+@findex with-mail-out
+When jobs are specified in a vixie-style configuration, the command is
+broken at a percentage sign, and the stuff that comes after this is
+sent into the command's standard input. Furthermore, any output from
+the command is mailed to the user. This functionality is provided for
+compatibility with Vixie cron, but it is also available to scheme
+configuration files. The command (with-mail-out action . user) can be
+used to direct output from the action (which may be a procedure, list,
+or string) into an e-mail to the user.
+
+In the case that the action is a string, then percentage signs are
+processed as per the vixie specifications, and information is piped to
+the shell command's standard input.
+
+@subsection Setting environment variables
+@cindex environment variables in scheme
+@cindex setting environment variables
+@findex append-environment-mods
+Also for compatibility with Vixie cron, mcron has the ability to set
+environment variables in configuration files. To access this
+functionality from a scheme configuration file, use the command
+(append-environment-mods name value), where name is the name of an
+environment variable, and value is the value put to it. A value of #f
+will remove the variable from the environment.
+
+Note that environment modifications are accumulated as the
+configuration file is processed, so when a job actually runs, its
+environment will be modified according to the modifications specified
+before the job specification in the configuration file.
+
+
+@node Extended Guile examples, Vixie Syntax, Guile Syntax, Syntax
+@section Extended Guile examples
+@cindex examples, extended guile
+@cindex extended guile examples
+While Guile gives you flexibility to do anything, and the power to
+represent complex requirements succinctly, things are not always as
+they seem. The following examples illustrate some pitfalls, and
+demonstrate how to code around them.
+
+@menu
+* AT commands::
+* Every second Sunday::
+* Two hours every day::
+* Missing the first appointment::
+* Penultimate day of every month::
+@end menu
+
+@node AT commands, Every second Sunday, Extended Guile examples, Extended Guile examples
+@subsection Synthesizing ``at'' commands
+@cindex at command
+The current implementation of mcron does not provide for an at command
+(a command-line program that allows the user to specify that a job
+runs exactly once at a certain time). This can, however, be achieved.
+
+Suppose the program @code{my-program} needs to be run at midnight
+tonight. A Guile script like the following should work. FIXME: TEST
+THIS EXAMPLE.
+
+@example
+(define my-program-flag #t)
+
+(job (lambda (current-time)
+ (if my-program-flag
+ (begin
+ (set! my-program-flag #f)
+ (next-day-from current-time))
+ 99999999))
+ (lambda () (system "my-program")
+ (kill (getppid))))
+@end example
+
+@node Every second Sunday, Two hours every day, AT commands, Extended Guile examples
+@subsection Every second Sunday
+@cindex examples, every second sunday
+To run @code{my-program} on the second Sunday of every month, a Guile
+script like the following should suffice (it is left as an exercise to
+the student to understand how this works!). FIXME: TEST THIS EXAMPLE.
+
+@example
+(job (lambda (current-time)
+ (let* ((next-month (next-month-from current-time))
+ (first-day (tm:wday (localtime next-month)))
+ (second-sunday (if (eqv? first-day 0)
+ 8
+ (- 15 first-day))))
+ (+ next-month (* 24 60 60 second-sunday))))
+ "my-program")
+@end example
+
+
+@node Two hours every day, Missing the first appointment, Every second Sunday, Extended Guile examples
+@subsection Two hours every day
+@cindex examples, two hours every day
+@cindex pitfalls, two hours every day
+Surprisingly perhaps, the following will @strong{not} have the desired
+effect.
+
+@example
+(job '(next-hour-from (next-day) '(1 2))
+ "my-program")
+@end example
+
+Rather than running the my-program program at one o'clock and two
+o'clock every day, it will only run it at one o'clock. This is because
+each time mcron has to compute the next time to run the command, it
+first obtains the next day, and then finds the earliest hour in that
+day to run at. Thus, after running the command at one o'clock, the
+program first skips forwards to the next midnight (missing the two
+o'clock appointment), and then finds the next one o'clock schedule.
+
+The following simple command is the correct way to specify this
+behaviour.
+
+@example
+(job '(next-hour '(1 2)) "my-program")
+@end example
+
+
+@node Missing the first appointment, Penultimate day of every month, Two hours every day, Extended Guile examples
+@subsection Missing the first appointment
+@cindex examples, missing the first appointment
+@cindex pitfalls, missing the first appointment
+The command
+
+@example
+(job '(next-hour-from (next-day) '(16))
+ "my-program")
+@end example
+
+will run @code{my-program} every day at four o'clock in the
+afternoon. However, if mcron is started with this script at midday,
+the first time the command will run will be four o'clock tomorrow;
+today's appointment will be missed (one time only).
+
+The correct way to specify this requirement is simply
+
+@example
+(job '(next-hour '(16))
+ "my-program")
+@end example
+
+
+@node Penultimate day of every month, , Missing the first appointment, Extended Guile examples
+@subsection Penultimate day of every month
+@cindex examples, penultimate day of every month
+The following will run the @code{my-program} program on the
+second-to-last day of every month.
+
+@example
+(job '(- (next-month-from (next-month)) (* 48 3600))
+ "my-program")
+@end example
+
+
+
+@node Vixie Syntax, , Extended Guile examples, Syntax
+@section Vixie
+@cindex syntax, vixie
+@cindex vixie syntax
+@cindex vixie definition
+@cindex vixie compatibility
+@cindex compatibility, vixie
+@emph{NOTE} that this section is definitive. If there is a difference in
+behaviour between the mcron program and this part of the manual, then
+there is a bug in the program. This section is also copied verbatim
+from Paul Dixie's documentation for his cron program, and his
+copyright notice is duly reproduced below.
+
+@cindex /etc/crontab
+@cindex system crontab
+@cindex incompatibility
+@cindex vixie incompatibility
+There is one single exception to the above. @strong{Mcron does not
+notice changes made to /etc/crontab}. If a change is made, then it is
+necessary to kill the cron daemon and restart it for the change to
+take effect.
+
+There are three problems with this specification.
+
+@cindex zero'th day of month
+@cindex 0'th day of month
+1. It is allowed to specify days of the month in the range 0-31. What
+does it mean to specify day 0? Well, if I'm not mistaken mcron will
+run the command on the last day of the previous month (but don't rely
+on this). I don't know what Vixie cron would have done.
+
+@cindex thirteenth month of year
+@cindex 13th month of year
+2. Similarly to the above (but different), months of the year can be
+specified in the range 0-12. In the case of mcron (don't know what
+Vixie cron did) month 12 will cause the program to wait until January
+of the following year (but don't rely on this).
+
+@cindex shell
+@cindex environment variables, shell
+@cindex /etc/passwd
+3. Somewhere it says that cron sets the SHELL environment variable to
+/bin/sh, and elsewhere it implies that the default behaviour is for
+the user's default shell to be used to execute commands. Mcron sets
+the variable and runs the command in the user's default shell, as
+advertised by the /etc/passwd file.
+
+@menu
+* Paul Dixie's copyright::
+* Crontab file::
+* Incompatibilities with old Unices::
+@end menu
+
+
+@node Paul Dixie's copyright, Crontab file, Vixie Syntax, Vixie Syntax
+@subsection Paul Dixie's copyright
+@cindex copyright, Paul Dixie's
+@cindex Paul Dixie's copyright
+@quotation
+Copyright 1988,1990,1993,1994 by Paul Vixie
+All rights reserved
+
+Distribute freely, except: don't remove my name from the source or
+documentation (don't take credit for my work), mark your changes (don't
+get me blamed for your possible bugs), don't alter or remove this
+notice. May be sold if buildable source is provided to buyer. No
+warrantee of any kind, express or implied, is included with this
+software; use at your own risk, responsibility for damages (if any) to
+anyone resulting from the use of this software rests entirely with the
+user.
+@end quotation
+
+
+
+
+@node Crontab file, Incompatibilities with old Unices, Paul Dixie's copyright, Vixie Syntax
+@subsection Crontab files.
+@cindex crontab file
+@cindex vixie crontab file
+A @code{crontab} file contains instructions to the @code{cron} daemon
+of the general form: ``run this command at this time on this date''.
+Each user has their own crontab, and commands in any given crontab
+will be executed as the user who owns the crontab. Uucp and News will
+usually have their own crontabs, eliminating the need for explicitly
+running @code{su} as part of a cron command.
+
+@cindex comments, vixie-style
+Blank lines and leading spaces and tabs are ignored. Lines whose first
+non-space character is a pound-sign (#) are comments, and are ignored.
+Note that comments are not allowed on the same line as cron commands, since
+they will be taken to be part of the command. Similarly, comments are not
+allowed on the same line as environment variable settings.
+
+An active line in a crontab will be either an environment setting or a cron
+command. An environment setting is of the form,
+
+@cindex environment setting, vixie-style
+@example
+name = value
+@end example
+
+where the spaces around the equal-sign (=) are optional, and any
+subsequent non-leading spaces in @code{value} will be part of the
+value assigned to @code{name}. The @code{value} string may be placed
+in quotes (single or double, but matching) to preserve leading or
+trailing blanks.
+
+@cindex environment variables, SHELL
+@cindex environment variables, LOGNAME
+@cindex environment variables, HOME
+@cindex SHELL environment variable
+@cindex LOGNAME environment variable
+@cindex HOME environment variable
+@cindex /etc/passwd
+Several environment variables are set up automatically by the
+@code{cron} daemon. SHELL is set to /bin/sh, and LOGNAME and HOME are
+set from the /etc/passwd line of the crontab's owner. HOME and SHELL
+may be overridden by settings in the crontab; LOGNAME may not.
+
+@cindex environment variables, USER
+@cindex USER environment variable
+@cindex BSD
+(Another note: the LOGNAME variable is sometimes called USER on BSD systems...
+on these systems, USER will be set also.) @footnote{mcron has not been
+ported to BSD, so these notes are not relevant.}
+
+@cindex environment variables, MAILTO
+@cindex MAILTO environment variable
+In addition to LOGNAME, HOME, and SHELL, @code{cron} will look at
+MAILTO if it has any reason to send mail as a result of running
+commands in ``this'' crontab. If MAILTO is defined (and non-empty),
+mail is sent to the user so named. If MAILTO is defined but empty
+(MAILTO=""), no mail will be sent. Otherwise mail is sent to the
+owner of the crontab. This option is useful if you decide on
+/bin/mail instead of /usr/lib/sendmail as your mailer when you install
+cron -- /bin/mail doesn't do aliasing, and UUCP usually doesn't read
+its mail.
+
+The format of a cron command is very much the V7 standard, with a number of
+upward-compatible extensions. Each line has five time and date fields,
+followed by a user name if this is the system crontab file,
+followed by a command. Commands are executed by @code{cron}
+when the minute, hour, and month of year fields match the current
+time, @strong{and} when at least one of the two day fields (day of month, or day of week)
+match the current time (see ``Note'' below). @code{cron} examines cron entries once every minute.
+The time and date fields are:
+
+@cindex vixie time specification fields
+@cindex fields, vixie time specification
+@multitable @columnfractions .2 .5
+@item Field @tab Allowed values
+@item ----- @tab --------------
+@item minute @tab 0-59
+@item hour @tab 0-23
+@item day of month @tab 0-31
+@item month @tab 0-12 (or names, see below)
+@item day of week @tab 0-7 (0 or 7 is Sun, or use names)
+@end multitable
+
+A field may be an asterisk (*), which always stands for ``first-last''.
+
+@cindex ranges in vixie time specifications
+Ranges of numbers are allowed. Ranges are two numbers separated
+with a hyphen. The specified range is inclusive. For example,
+8-11 for an ``hours'' entry specifies execution at hours 8, 9, 10
+and 11.
+
+@cindex lists in vixie time specifications
+Lists are allowed. A list is a set of numbers (or ranges)
+separated by commas. Examples: ``1,2,5,9'', ``0-4,8-12''.
+
+@cindex steps in vixie time specifications
+Step values can be used in conjunction with ranges. Following
+a range with ``/<number>'' specifies skips of the number's value
+through the range. For example, ``0-23/2'' can be used in the hours
+field to specify command execution every other hour (the alternative
+in the V7 standard is ``0,2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16,18,20,22''). Steps are
+also permitted after an asterisk, so if you want to say ``every two
+hours'', just use ``*/2''.
+
+@cindex names in vixie-style time specifications
+Names can also be used for the ``month'' and ``day of week''
+fields. Use the first three letters of the particular
+day or month (case doesn't matter). Ranges or
+lists of names are not allowed. @footnote{Mcron allows any alphabetic
+characters after a name, so full names of days or months are also valid.}
+
+@cindex % character on vixie-style commands
+@cindex standard input, vixie-style
+The ``sixth'' field (the rest of the line) specifies the command to be
+run.
+The entire command portion of the line, up to a newline or %
+character, will be executed by /bin/sh or by the shell
+specified in the SHELL variable of the cronfile.
+Percent-signs (%) in the command, unless escaped with backslash
+(\\), will be changed into newline characters, and all data
+after the first % will be sent to the command as standard
+input.
+
+@cindex day specification, vixie-style
+@cindex vixie-style day specification
+Note: The day of a command's execution can be specified by two
+fields -- day of month, and day of week. If both fields are
+restricted (ie, aren't *), the command will be run when
+@emph{either}
+field matches the current time. For example,
+
+``30 4 1,15 * 5''
+
+would cause a command to be run at 4:30 am on the 1st and 15th of each
+month, plus every Friday.
+
+EXAMPLE CRON FILE
+
+@example
+# use /bin/sh to run commands, no matter what /etc/passwd says
+SHELL=/bin/sh
+# mail any output to `paul', no matter whose crontab this is
+MAILTO=paul
+#
+# run five minutes after midnight, every day
+5 0 * * * $HOME/bin/daily.job >> $HOME/tmp/out 2>&1
+# run at 2:15pm on the first of every month -- output mailed to paul
+15 14 1 * * $HOME/bin/monthly
+# run at 10 pm on weekdays, annoy Joe
+0 22 * * 1-5 mail -s "It's 10pm" joe%Joe,%%Where are your kids?%
+23 0-23/2 * * * echo "run 23 minutes after midn, 2am, 4am ..., everyday"
+5 4 * * sun echo "run at 5 after 4 every sunday"
+@end example
+
+@node Incompatibilities with old Unices, , Crontab file, Vixie Syntax
+@subsection Extensions and incompatibilities.
+@cindex incompatibilities with old Unices
+@cindex extensions, vixie over old Unices
+This section lists differences between Paul Vixie's cron and the
+olde-worlde BSD and AT&T programs, for the benefit of system
+administrators and users who are upgrading all the way.
+
+@itemize @bullet
+@item
+@cindex day 7
+When specifying day of week, both day 0 and day 7 will be considered Sunday.
+BSD and AT&T seem to disagree about this.
+
+@item
+Lists and ranges are allowed to co-exist in the same field. "1-3,7-9" would
+be rejected by AT&T or BSD cron -- they want to see "1-3" or "7,8,9" ONLY.
+
+@item
+Ranges can include "steps", so "1-9/2" is the same as "1,3,5,7,9".
+
+@item
+Names of months or days of the week can be specified by name.
+
+@item
+Environment variables can be set in the crontab. In BSD or AT&T, the
+environment handed to child processes is basically the one from /etc/rc.
+
+@item
+Command output is mailed to the crontab owner (BSD can't do this), can be
+mailed to a person other than the crontab owner (SysV can't do this), or the
+feature can be turned off and no mail will be sent at all (SysV can't do this
+either).
+
+@end itemize
+
+
+@node Invoking, Index, Syntax, Top
+@chapter Detailed invoking
+@cindex invoking
+@cindex personality
+@cindex mcron program
+@cindex cron program
+@cindex crond program
+@cindex crontab program
+The program adopts one of three different personalities depending on
+the name used to invoke it. In a standard installation, the program is
+installed in the system under the names mcron, cron and crontab
+(installed SUID).
+
+The recommended way to invoke the program is via the mcron personality
+described in the next section. The program can also be run as cron by
+root, and by the SUID program crontab by individual users to gain
+backwards compatibility with Vixie cron. However, due to the fact that
+this daemon process is shared by, and under control of, all the users
+of the system it is possible (though very unlikely) that it may become
+unusable, hence the recommendation to use the mcron personality.
+
+@cindex deprecated, vixie personality
+Furthermore, the Vixie personality is considered deprecated by this
+author (it offers not a single advantage over the mcron personality,
+and bloats the code by a factor of three). It is unlikely that this
+personality will ever actually go away, but the program may in future
+be split into two distinct parts, and new developments will only take
+place in the part which implements the mcron personality.
+
+
+
+@menu
+* Running mcron::
+* Running cron or crond::
+* Running crontab::
+* Exit codes::
+@end menu
+
+@node Running mcron, Running cron or crond, Invoking, Invoking
+@section Running mcron
+@cindex invoking mcron
+@cindex mcron options
+@cindex mcron arguments
+@cindex command line, mcron
+@cindex mcron command line
+Mcron should be run by the user who wants to schedule his jobs. It may
+be made a background job using the facilities of the shell. The basic
+command is
+@code{mcron [OPTION ...] [file ...]}
+which has the effect of reading all the configuration files specified
+(subject to the options) and then waiting until it is time to execute
+some command. If no files are given on the command line, then mcron
+will look in the user's ~/.cron directory. In either case, files which
+end in the extension .vixie or .vix will be assumed to contain
+Vixie-style crontabs, and files ending .guile or .gle will be assumed
+to contain scheme code and will be executed as such.
+
+The program accepts the following options.
+
+@table @option
+@item -s [count]
+@itemx --schedule[=count]
+@cindex printout of jobs schedule
+@cindex schedule of jobs, listing
+@cindex options, schedule
+@cindex options, -s
+@cindex -s option
+@cindex --schedule option
+With this option specified no commands are run. Instead, the program
+computes the times the commands would be run and prints the
+information to the screen, and then immediately exits.
+
+The count, if supplied, indicates the number of commands to
+display. The default value is 8.
+
+@cindex daemon option
+@cindex options, daemon
+@cindex options, -d
+@cindex -d option
+@cindex --daemon option
+@item -d
+@itemx --daemon
+With this option the program will detach itself from the controlling
+terminal and run as a daemon process.
+
+@cindex stdin option
+@cindex options, stdin
+@cindex options, -i
+@cindex -i option
+@cindex --stdin option
+@cindex standard input, configuring from
+@cindex configuring from standard input
+@item -i (vixie|guile)
+@itemx --stdin=(vixie|guile)
+This option is used to indicate whether the configuration information
+being passed on the standard input is in Vixie format or Guile
+format. Guile is the default.
+
+@cindex -v option
+@cindex --version option
+@cindex options, -v
+@cindex options, version
+@item -v
+@itemx --version
+This option causes a message to be printed on the standard output with
+information about the version and copyright for the current program.
+
+@cindex -h option
+@cindex --help option
+@cindex options, -h
+@cindex options, --help
+@item -h
+@itemx --help
+This causes a short but complete usage message to be displayed on
+standard output.
+
+@end table
+
+@node Running cron or crond, Running crontab, Running mcron, Invoking
+@section Running cron or crond
+@cindex cron, invokation
+@cindex running cron
+@cindex crond, invokation
+@cindex running crond
+@cindex /var/cron/tabs
+@cindex /var/run/cron.pid
+If the program runs by the name of cron or crond, then it will read
+all the files in /var/cron/tabs (which should only be readable by
+root) and the file /etc/crontab, and then detaches itself from the
+terminal to live forever as a daemon process. Additionally, it puts
+its PID into /var/run/cron.pid, and listens for SIGHUPs, in which case
+it will look for a file /var/cron/update which should contain a single
+username, and the program will re-read that user's crontab. This is
+for correct functioning with the crontab program.
+
+@cindex /etc/crontab
+@cindex incompatibility
+@strong{NOTE} that it does not detect changes in /etc/crontab; if this file
+is ever changed then it will be necessary to kill and then restart the
+daemon. This is the one and only incompatibility with Vixie's cron
+program.
+
+The options which may be used with this program are as follows.
+
+@table @option
+
+@cindex -v option
+@cindex --version option
+@cindex options, -v
+@cindex options, version
+@item -v
+@itemx --version
+This option causes a message to be printed on the standard output with
+information about the version and copyright for the current program.
+
+@cindex -h option
+@cindex --help option
+@cindex options, -h
+@cindex options, --help
+@item -h
+@itemx --help
+This causes a short but complete usage message to be displayed on
+standard output.
+
+@end table
+
+@node Running crontab, Exit codes, Running cron or crond, Invoking
+@section Running crontab
+@cindex crontab, invoking
+@cindex running crontab
+This program is run by individual users to inspect or modify their
+crontab files. If a change is made to the file, then the root daemon
+process will be given a kick, and will immediately read the new
+configuration. A warning will be issued to standard output if it
+appears that a cron daemon is not running.
+
+The command is used as
+
+@code{crontab [-u user] file}
+
+or
+
+@code{crontab [-u user] ( -l | -e | -r )}
+
+Only the root user can use the -u option, to specify the manipulation
+of another user's crontab file. In the first instance, the entire
+crontab file of the user is replaced with the contents of the
+specified file, or standard input if the file is ``-''.
+
+In the latter case, the program behaves according to which of the
+(mutually exclusive) options was given (note that the long options are
+an mcron extension).
+
+@table @option
+
+@cindex -l option
+@cindex list option, crontab
+@cindex options, -l
+@cindex options, --list
+@cindex viewing a crontab
+@cindex listing a crontab
+@item -l
+@itemx --list
+Print the user's crontab file to the standard output, and exit.
+
+@cindex -r option
+@cindex remove option
+@cindex options, -r
+@cindex options, --remove
+@cindex deleting a crontab
+@cindex removing a crontab
+@item -r
+@item --remove
+Delete the user's crontab file, and exit.
+
+@cindex -e option
+@cindex edit option
+@cindex options, -e
+@cindex options, --edit
+@cindex editing a crontab
+@cindex creating a crontab
+@item -e
+@item --edit
+Using the editor specified in the user's VISUAL or EDITOR environment
+variables, allow the user to edit his crontab. Once the user exits the
+editor, the crontab is checked for parseability, and if it is okay
+then it is installed as the user's new crontab and the daemon is
+notified that a change has taken place, so that the new file will
+become immediately effective.
+
+@end table
+
+@node Exit codes, , Running crontab, Invoking
+@section Exit codes
+@cindex exit codes
+@cindex error conditions
+@cindex errors
+The following are the status codes returned to the operating system
+when the program terminates.
+
+@table @asis
+@item 0
+No problems.
+
+@item 1
+An attempt has been made to start cron but there is already a
+/var/run/cron.pid file. If there really is no other cron daemon
+running (this does not include invokations of mcron) then you should
+remove this file before attempting to run cron.
+
+@item 2
+In parsing a guile configuration file, a @code{job} command has been
+seen but the second argument is neither a procedure, list or
+string. This argument is the job's action, and needs to be specified
+in one of these forms.
+
+@item 3
+In parsing a guile configuration file, a @code{job} command has been
+seen but the first argument is neither a procedure, list or
+string. This argument is the job's next-time specification, and needs
+to be specified in one of these forms.
+
+@item 4
+An attempt to run cron has been made by a user who does not have
+permission to access the crontabs in /var/cron/tabs. These files
+should be readable only by root, and the cron daemon must be run as
+root.
+
+@item 5
+An attempt to run mcron has been made, but there are no jobs to
+schedule!
+
+@item 6
+The system administrator has blocked this user from using crontab with
+the files /var/cron/allow and /var/cron/deny.
+
+@item 7
+Crontab has been run with more than one of the arguments @code{-l},
+@code{-r}, @code{-e}. These are mutually exclusive options.
+
+@item 8
+Crontab has been run with the -u option by a user other than
+root. Only root is allowed to use this option.
+
+@item 9
+An invalid vixie-style time specification has been supplied.
+
+@item 10
+An invalid vixie-style job specification has been supplied.
+
+@item 11
+A bad line has been seen in /etc/crontab.
+
+@item 12
+The last component of the name of the program was not one of
+@code{mcron}, @code{cron}, @code{crond} or @code{crontab}.
+
+@item 13
+Either the ~/.cron directory does not exist, or there is a problem
+reading the files there.
+
+@item 14
+There is a problem writing to /var/cron/update. This is probably
+because the crontab program is not installed SUID root, as it should
+be.
+
+@item 15
+Crontab has been run without any arguments at all. There is no default
+behaviour in this case.
+
+@item 16
+Cron has been run by a user other than root.
+
+@end table
+
+
+
+@node Index, , Invoking, Top
+@unnumbered Index
+
+@printindex cp
+
+@bye
diff --git a/vixie.scm b/vixie.scm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2e7df93
--- /dev/null
+++ b/vixie.scm
@@ -0,0 +1,452 @@
+;; Copyright (C) 2003 Dale Mellor
+;;
+;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+;; any later version.
+;;
+;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+;; GNU General Public License for more details.
+;;
+;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+;; along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
+;; Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307,
+;; USA.
+
+
+
+;; This file provides methods for reading a complete Vixie-style configuration
+;; file, either from a real file or an already opened port. It also exposes the
+;; method for parsing the time-specification part of a Vixie string, so that
+;; these can be used to form the next-time-function of a job in a Guile
+;; configuration file.
+
+
+
+(use-modules (ice-9 regex) (ice-9 rdelim) (srfi srfi-13) (srfi srfi-14))
+
+
+
+;; In Vixie-style time specifications three-letter symbols are allowed to stand
+;; for the numbers corresponding to months and days of the week. We deal with
+;; this by making a textual substitution early on in the processing of the
+;; strings.
+;;
+;; We start by defining, once and for all, a list of cons cells consisting of
+;; regexps which will match the symbols - which allow an arbitrary number of
+;; other letters to appear after them (so that the user can optionally complete
+;; the month and day names; this is an extension of Vixie) - and the value which
+;; is to replace the symbol.
+;;
+;; The procedure then takes a string, and then for each symbol in the
+;; parse-symbols list attempts to locate an instance and replace it with an
+;; ASCII representation of the value it stands for. The procedure returns the
+;; modified string. (Note that each symbol can appear only once, which meets the
+;; Vixie specifications technically but still allows silly users to mess things
+;; up).
+
+(define parse-symbols
+ (map (lambda (symbol-cell)
+ (cons (make-regexp (string-append (car symbol-cell) "[[:alpha:]]*")
+ regexp/icase)
+ (cdr symbol-cell)))
+ '(("jan" . "0") ("feb" . "1") ("mar" . "2") ("apr" . "3")
+ ("may" . "4") ("jun" . "5") ("jul" . "6") ("aug" . "7")
+ ("sep" . "8") ("oct" . "9") ("nov" . "10") ("dec" . "11")
+
+ ("sun" . "0") ("mon" . "1") ("tue" . "2") ("wed" . "3")
+ ("thu" . "4") ("fri" . "5") ("sat" . "6") )))
+
+(define (vixie-substitute-parse-symbols string)
+ (for-each (lambda (symbol-cell)
+ (let ((match (regexp-exec (car symbol-cell) string)))
+ (if match
+ (set! string (string-append (match:prefix match)
+ (cdr symbol-cell)
+ (match:suffix match))))))
+ parse-symbols)
+ string)
+
+
+
+;; A Vixie time specification is made up of a space-separated list of elements,
+;; and the elements consist of a comma-separated list of subelements. The
+;; procedure below takes a string holding a subelement, which should have no
+;; spaces or symbols (see above) in it, and returns a list of all values which
+;; that subelement indicates. There are five distinct cases which must be dealt
+;; with: [1] a single '*' which returns a list of all values; [2] a '*' followed
+;; by a step specifier; [3] a range and step specifier; [4] a range; and [5] a
+;; single number.
+;;
+;; To perform the computation required for the '*' cases, we need to pass the
+;; limit of the allowable range for this subelement as the third argument. As
+;; days of the month start at 1 while all the other time components start at 0,
+;; we must pass the base of the range to deal with this case also.
+
+(define parse-vixie-subelement-regexp
+ (make-regexp "^([[:digit:]]+)(-([[:digit:]]+)(/([[:digit:]]+))?)?$"))
+
+(define (parse-vixie-subelement string base limit)
+ (if (char=? (string-ref string 0) #\*)
+ (range base limit (if (> (string-length string) 1)
+ (string->number (substring string 2)) ;; [2]
+ 1)) ;; [1]
+ (let ((match (regexp-exec parse-vixie-subelement-regexp string)))
+ (cond ((not match)
+ (display "Error: Bad Vixie-style time specification.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 9))
+ ((match:substring match 5)
+ (range (string->number (match:substring match 1))
+ (+ 1 (string->number (match:substring match 3)))
+ (string->number (match:substring match 5)))) ;; [3]
+ ((match:substring match 3)
+ (range (string->number (match:substring match 1))
+ (+ 1 (string->number (match:substring match 3))))) ;; [4]
+ (else
+ (list (string->number (match:substring match 1)))))))) ;; [5]
+
+
+
+;; A Vixie element contains the entire specification, without spaces or symbols,
+;; of the acceptable values for one of the time components (minutes, hours,
+;; days, months, week days). Here we break the comma-separated list into
+;; subelements, and process each with the procedure above. The return value is a
+;; list of all the valid values of all the subcomponents.
+;;
+;; The second and third arguments are the base and upper limit on the values
+;; that can be accepted for this time element.
+;;
+;; The effect of the 'apply append' is to merge a list of lists into a single
+;; list.
+
+(define (parse-vixie-element string base limit)
+ (apply append
+ (map (lambda (sub-element)
+ (parse-vixie-subelement sub-element base limit))
+ (string-tokenize string (char-set-complement (char-set #\,))))))
+
+
+
+;; Consider there are two lists, one of days in the month, the other of days in
+;; the week. This procedure returns an augmented list of days in the month with
+;; weekdays accounted for.
+
+(define (interpolate-weekdays mday-list wday-list month year)
+ (let ((t (localtime 0)))
+ (set-tm:mday t 1)
+ (set-tm:mon t month)
+ (set-tm:year t year)
+ (let ((first-day (tm:wday (cdr (mktime t)))))
+ (apply append
+ mday-list
+ (map (lambda (wday)
+ (let ((first (- wday first-day)))
+ (if (< first 0) (set! first (+ first 7)))
+ (range (+ 1 first) 32 7)))
+ wday-list)))))
+
+
+
+;; Return the number of days in a month. Fix up a tm object for the zero'th day
+;; of the next month, rationalize the object and extract the day.
+
+(define (days-in-month month year)
+ (let ((t (localtime 0))) (set-tm:mday t 0)
+ (set-tm:mon t (+ month 1))
+ (set-tm:year t year)
+ (tm:mday (cdr (mktime t)))))
+
+
+
+;; We will be working with a list of time-spec's, one for each element of a time
+;; specification (minute, hour, ...). Each time-spec holds three pieces of
+;; information: a list of acceptable values for this time component, a procedure
+;; to get the component from a tm object, and a procedure to set the component
+;; in a tm object.
+
+(define (time-spec:list time-spec) (vector-ref time-spec 0))
+(define (time-spec:getter time-spec) (vector-ref time-spec 1))
+(define (time-spec:setter time-spec) (vector-ref time-spec 2))
+
+
+
+;; This procedure modifies the time tm object by setting the component referred
+;; to by the time-spec object to its next acceptable value. If this value is not
+;; greater than the original (because we have wrapped around the top of the
+;; acceptable values list), then the function returns #t, otherwise it returns
+;; #f. Thus, if the return value is true then it will be necessary for the
+;; caller to increment the next coarser time component as well.
+;;
+;; The first part of the let block is a concession to humanity; the procedure is
+;; simply unreadable without all of these aliases.
+
+(define (increment-time-component time time-spec)
+ (let* ((time-list (time-spec:list time-spec))
+ (getter (time-spec:getter time-spec))
+ (setter (time-spec:setter time-spec))
+ (next-best (find-best-next (getter time) time-list))
+ (wrap-around (eqv? (cdr next-best) 9999)))
+ (setter time ((if wrap-around car cdr) next-best))
+ wrap-around))
+
+
+
+;; There now follows a set of procedures for adjusting an element of time,
+;; i.e. taking it to the next acceptable value. In each case, the head of the
+;; time-spec-list is expected to correspond to the component of time in
+;; question. If the adjusted value wraps around its allowed range, then the next
+;; biggest element of time must be adjusted, and so on.
+
+;; There is no specification allowed for the year component of
+;; time. Therefore, if we have to make an adjustment (presumably because a
+;; monthly adjustment has wrapped around the top of its range) we can simply
+;; go to the next year.
+
+(define (nudge-year! time)
+ (set-tm:year time (+ (tm:year time) 1)))
+
+
+;; We nudge the month by finding the next allowable value, and if it wraps
+;; around we also nudge the year. The time-spec-list will have time-spec
+;; objects for month and weekday.
+
+(define (nudge-month! time time-spec-list)
+ (and (increment-time-component time (car time-spec-list))
+ (nudge-year! time)))
+
+
+;; Try to increment the day component of the time according to the combination
+;; of the mday-list and the wday-list. If this wraps around the range, or if
+;; this falls outside the current month (31st February, for example), then
+;; bump the month, set the day to zero, and recurse on this procedure to find
+;; the next day in the new month.
+;;
+;; The time-spec-list will have time-spec entries for mday, month, and
+;; weekday.
+
+(define (nudge-day! time time-spec-list)
+ (if (or (increment-time-component
+ time
+ (vector
+ (interpolate-weekdays (time-spec:list (car time-spec-list))
+ (time-spec:list (caddr time-spec-list))
+ (tm:mon time)
+ (tm:year time))
+ tm:mday
+ set-tm:mday))
+ (> (tm:mday time) (days-in-month (tm:mon time) (tm:year time))))
+ (begin
+ (nudge-month! time (cdr time-spec-list))
+ (set-tm:mday time 0)
+ (nudge-day! time time-spec-list))))
+
+
+
+;; The hour is bumped to the next accceptable value, and the day is bumped if
+;; the hour wraps around.
+;;
+;; The time-spec-list holds specifications for hour, mday, month and weekday.
+
+(define (nudge-hour! time time-spec-list)
+ (and (increment-time-component time (car time-spec-list))
+ (nudge-day! time (cdr time-spec-list))))
+
+
+
+;; The minute is bumped to the next accceptable value, and the hour is bumped
+;; if the minute wraps around.
+;;
+;; The time-spec-list holds specifications for minute, hour, day-date, month
+;; and weekday.
+
+(define (nudge-min! time time-spec-list)
+ (and (increment-time-component time (car time-spec-list))
+ (nudge-hour! time (cdr time-spec-list))))
+
+
+
+
+;; This is a procedure which returns a procedure which computes the next time a
+;; command should run after the current time, based on the information in the
+;; Vixie-style time specification.
+;;
+;; We start by computing a list of time-spec objects (described above) for the
+;; minute, hour, date, month, year and weekday components of the overall time
+;; specification [1]. When we create the return procedure, it is this list to
+;; which references to a time-spec-list will be bound. It will be used by the
+;; returned procedure [3] to compute the next time a function should run. Any
+;; 7's in the weekday component of the list (the last one) are folded into 0's
+;; (both values represent sunday) [2].
+;;
+;; The returned procedure itself:-
+;;
+;; Starts by obtaining the current broken-down time [4], and fixing it to
+;; ensure that it is an acceptable value, as follows. Each component from the
+;; biggest down is checked for acceptability, and if it is not acceptable it
+;; is bumped to the next acceptable value (this may cause higher components to
+;; also be bumped if there is range wrap-around) and all the lower components
+;; are set to -1 so that it can successfully be bumped up to zero if this is
+;; an allowed value. The -1 value will be bumped up subsequently to an allowed
+;; value [5].
+;;
+;; Once it has been asserted that the current time is acceptable, or has been
+;; adjusted to one minute before the next acceptable time, the minute
+;; component is then bumped to the next acceptable time, which may ripple
+;; through the higher components if necessary [6]. We now have the next time
+;; the command needs to run.
+;;
+;; The new time is then converted back into a UNIX time, and returned [7].
+
+(define (parse-vixie-time string)
+ (let* ((tokens (string-tokenize (vixie-substitute-parse-symbols string)))
+ (time-spec-list
+ (map-in-order (lambda (x) (vector (parse-vixie-element
+ (list-ref tokens (vector-ref x 0))
+ (vector-ref x 1)
+ (vector-ref x 2))
+ (vector-ref x 3)
+ (vector-ref x 4)))
+ ;; token range-top+1 getter setter
+ `( #( 0 0 60 ,tm:min ,set-tm:min )
+ #( 1 0 24 ,tm:hour ,set-tm:hour )
+ #( 2 1 32 ,tm:mday ,set-tm:mday )
+ #( 3 0 12 ,tm:mon ,set-tm:mon )
+ #( 4 0 7 ,tm:wday ,set-tm:wday ))))) ;; [1]
+
+ (vector-set! (car (last-pair time-spec-list))
+ 0
+ (map (lambda (time-spec)
+ (if (eqv? time-spec 7) 0 time-spec))
+ (vector-ref (car (last-pair time-spec-list)) 0))) ;; [2]
+
+ (lambda (current-time) ;; [3]
+ (let ((time (localtime current-time))) ;; [4]
+
+ (if (not (member (tm:mon time)
+ (time-spec:list (cadddr time-spec-list))))
+ (begin
+ (nudge-month! time (cdddr time-spec-list))
+ (set-tm:mday time 0)
+ (set-tm:hour time -1)
+ (set-tm:min time -1)))
+ (if (not (member (tm:mday time) ;; !!
+ (time-spec:list (caddr time-spec-list))))
+ (begin
+ (nudge-day! time (cddr time-spec-list))
+ (set-tm:hour time -1)
+ (set-tm:min time -1)))
+ (if (not (member (tm:hour time)
+ (time-spec:list (cadr time-spec-list))))
+ (begin
+ (nudge-hour! time (cdr time-spec-list))
+ (set-tm:min time -1))) ;; [5]
+
+ (set-tm:sec time 0)
+ (nudge-min! time time-spec-list) ;; [6]
+
+ (car (mktime time)))))) ;; [7]
+
+
+
+
+;; A line in a Vixie-style crontab file which gives a command specification
+;; carries two pieces of information: a time specification consisting of five
+;; space-separated items, and a command which is also separated from the time
+;; specification by a space. The line is broken into the two components, and the
+;; job procedure run to add the two pieces of information to the job list (this
+;; will in turn use the above function to turn the time specification into a
+;; function for computing future run times of the command).
+
+(define parse-user-vixie-line-regexp
+ (make-regexp "^[[:space:]]*(([^[:space:]]+[[:space:]]+){5})(.*)$"))
+
+(define (parse-user-vixie-line line)
+ (let ((match (regexp-exec parse-user-vixie-line-regexp line)))
+ (if (not match) (begin (display "Bad job line in Vixie file.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 10)))
+ (job (match:substring match 1)
+ (lambda () (with-mail-out (match:substring match 3))))))
+
+
+
+;; The case of reading a line from /etc/crontab is similar to above but the user
+;; ID appears in the sixth field, before the action.
+
+(define parse-system-vixie-line-regexp
+ (make-regexp (string-append "^[[:space:]]*(([^[:space:]]+[[:space:]]+){5})"
+ "([[:alpha:]][[:alnum:]_]*)[[:space:]]+(.*)$")))
+
+(define (parse-system-vixie-line line)
+ (let ((match (regexp-exec parse-user-vixie-line-regexp line)))
+ (if (not match) (begin (display "Bad job line in /etc/crontab.\n")
+ (primitive-exit 11)))
+ (set! configuration-user (passwd (match:substring match 3)))
+ (job (match:substring match 1)
+ (lambda () (with-mail-out (match:substring match 4)
+ (passwd:name configuration-user))))))
+
+
+
+
+;; The next procedure reads an entire Vixie-style file. For each line in the
+;; file there are three possibilities (after continuation lines have been
+;; appended): the line is blank or contains only a comment, the line contains an
+;; environment modifier which will be handled in environment.scm, or the line
+;; contains a command specification in which case we use the procedure above to
+;; add an entry to the internal job list.
+;;
+;; Note that the environment modifications are cleared, so that there is no
+;; interference between crontab files (this might lead to unpredictable
+;; behaviour because the order in which crontab files are processed, if there is
+;; more than one, is generally undefined).
+
+(define read-vixie-file-comment-regexp
+ (make-regexp "^[[:space:]]*(#.*)?$"))
+
+
+(define (read-vixie-port port . parse-vixie-line)
+ (clear-environment-mods)
+ (if port
+ (let ((parse-vixie-line
+ (if (null? parse-vixie-line) parse-user-vixie-line
+ (car parse-vixie-line))))
+ (do ((line (read-line port) (read-line port)))
+ ((eof-object? line))
+
+ ;; If the line ends with \, append the next line.
+ (do ()
+ ((or (< (string-length line) 1)
+ (not (char=? (string-ref line
+ (- (string-length line) 1))
+ #\\))))
+ (let ((next-line (read-line port)))
+ (if (eof-object? next-line)
+ (set! next-line ""))
+ (set! line
+ (string-append
+ (substring line 0 (- (string-length line) 1))
+ next-line))))
+
+ ;; Consider the three cases mentioned in the description.
+ (or (regexp-exec read-vixie-file-comment-regexp line)
+ (parse-vixie-environment line)
+ (parse-vixie-line line))))))
+
+
+
+;; If a file cannot be opened, we must silently ignore it because it may have
+;; been removed by crontab. However, if the file is there it must be parseable,
+;; otherwise the error must be propagated to the caller.
+
+(define (read-vixie-file file-path . parse-vixie-line)
+ (let ((port #f))
+ (catch #t (lambda () (set! port (open-input-file file-path)))
+ (lambda (key . args) (set! port #f)))
+ (if port
+ (begin
+ (if (null? parse-vixie-line)
+ (read-vixie-port port)
+ (read-vixie-port port (car parse-vixie-line)))
+ (close port)))))