Currently, I am using cloud VMs to run my code and because of that I am assigned with a new VM that is in a different time zone. I want to run a bash script that runs a python script at 7:30 pm (Eastern time). From here I know how to run a bash script at a specific time, e.g., echo "ls -l" | at 07:00
. From here I know how to get the current time of Eastern time, e.g., TZ=America/New_York date
. Also, from here I know how to get only the time using date %R
.
I am a Python
coder and tried my best to write a sudo code that shows what I am trying to accomplish as a bash script:
while true
do
Now=TZ=America/New_York date %R
if [Now -eq 7:30pm]
then
python3 myfile.py
done
CodePudding user response:
As you already know how to set the at
command to execute a command
at the specified time, and how to convert the EST to the local time,
you can just combine them:
echo "python3 myfile.py" | at $(date -d "19:30 EST" %R)
When you invoke the at
command, it always warns
"commands will be executed using /bin/sh". It will matter only if we invoke
a bash specific command such as:
echo "shopt -s globstar; ls **" | at ..
which will fail.
In our case, the command python3 myfile.py
will run with both
/bin/sh
and /bin/bash
then you do not worry about the warning.
date -d STRING
interprets the STRING
as a date/time representation
and prints the converted date/time in the specified format %R
.
If you want to send the output to a file, you can say:
echo "python3 myfile.py > /path/to/a/file" | at $(date -d "19:30 EST" %R)
In order to output to the current terminal, first identify the terminal
with tty
command:
$ tty
=> /dev/pts/0
Then redirect the output to the terminal with:
echo "python3 myfile.py > /dev/pts/0" | at $(date -d "19:30 EST" %R)