Hi. It works! I added -D and it started up fine! I'm amazed -- it wouldn't start up at the designated time, but adding -D made it work great! Thanks very much for all your help! (I still have to figure out why I'm not receiving any e-mail, but given all your info below, I think I can figure it out.) > From: alinden <http://www.localhost.de/~alinden> > Date: Tue, 30 Jun 1998 13:48:49 +0200 (MET DST) > > robert writes: > > > I tried doing as you suggest: made /var/lib/crontabs world-readable, made > > I do not have this problem and others who wrote me feedback about the > program do not have it too. Could it be some interaction with another > cron or another crontab command on your harddisk? > > > the user's crontab file owned by root. There's a crontab.main file which > > is a hard link to root's crontab file and doesn't have any of the user's > > jobs in it. > > This file contains only root's jobs and it should not be linked to anything. > > Assume this: > > 1. You have installed it and there is an empty directory /var/lib/crontabs. > > 2. You are logged in as root and type crontab <file>. Now the file appears > as crontab.main in the crontab directory. Right? > > 3. You log in again with your user account and type crontab <file>. Now two > things can happen: 1) The crontab command gives an error message or 2) your > user crontab appears in the directory. > If not, what happens then? Does it overwrite crontab.main or does nothing > happen? > > If you try crontab -e under your user account, which file is loaded into > the editor? > > > And yet, it still is not running my cron job. And also doesn't run it when > > my computer is shutdown and brought back up. > > It does it only if you use -D in the crontab. Normally, if anything goes > wrong, you should have an error message in syslog. > > I would like to know what happened, but I cannot fix a problem if > everything works. I assume your box is not on a standing link? I could > telnet an see myself.