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  2. cron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron

    The crontab files are stored where the lists of jobs and other instructions to the cron daemon are kept. Users can have their own individual crontab files and often there is a system-wide crontab file (usually in /etc or a subdirectory of /etc e.g. /etc/cron.d) that only system administrators can edit. [note 1]

  3. VisualCron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VisualCron

    VisualCron is a replacement for the Windows Task Scheduler and a similar cron job scheduler in Unix-like operating systems. [1] The software is split into client and server parts, with the former being invoked by the user on demand and the latter always running as a process in the background. [1]

  4. fcron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fcron

    fcron is a computer program with a GNU General Public License (GNU GPL) license that performs periodic command scheduling. It has been developed on Linux and should work on POSIX systems.

  5. Talk:Crontab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Crontab

    The content of the article is fine, but I'm not sure if it should be at "Crontab" or "Crontab (Unix command)".You can have the crontab program or a crontab file, and I think an article about the command should be placed in "Crontab (Unix command)" and an article about the format of crontab files at "Crontab".

  6. Windows Task Scheduler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Task_Scheduler

    It runs as a Windows Service, and the task definitions and schedules are stored in binary.job files. Tasks are manipulated directly by manipulating the .job files. Each task corresponds to single action. On Windows 95 (with Internet Explorer 4.0 or later), Windows 98 and Windows Me, the Task Scheduler runs as an ordinary program, mstask.exe.

  7. Webcron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webcron

    webcron is the term for a time-based job scheduler hosted on a web server.The name derives its roots from the phrase web server and the Unix daemon cron.A webcron solution [buzzword] enables users to schedule jobs to run within the web server environment on a web host that does not offer a shell account or other means of scheduling jobs.

  8. locate (Unix) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locate_(Unix)

    locate is a Unix utility which serves to find files on filesystems. It searches through a prebuilt database of files generated by the updatedb command or by a daemon and compressed using incremental encoding. It operates significantly faster than find, but requires regular updating of the database.

  9. whereis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whereis

    whereis is a command on Unix and Unix-like operating systems used to locate some special files of a command like the binary file, source and manual page files. The whereis utility was first included with 2BSD, [1] dating back to 1979. [2]