From 819941ea677c3c567ba82a0e1efd094e5cdade54 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Karel=20Ko=C4=8D=C3=AD?= Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2017 11:33:31 +0200 Subject: Drop rmbt-client --- rmbt-client/files/updater.defaults | 24 ------------------------ 1 file changed, 24 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 rmbt-client/files/updater.defaults (limited to 'rmbt-client/files/updater.defaults') diff --git a/rmbt-client/files/updater.defaults b/rmbt-client/files/updater.defaults deleted file mode 100644 index 951558a..0000000 --- a/rmbt-client/files/updater.defaults +++ /dev/null @@ -1,24 +0,0 @@ -#!/bin/sh - -# We want to generate some "random" time when the updater is run, every 12 hours. -# The time when the router is first booted or the updater is installed for -# the first time is as good source of the time as any. -# -# With date +%l we get time in interval 1-12. Substracting 1 gives us 0-11, and -# the next run is 12-23 by adding 12. We may take the minutes as they are. -# -# We need to take care not to have leading zeroes, since tools tend to take that -# as octal. We don't want to study which tools are OK with it, so we simply -# don't have them. - -HOUR=$(($(date +%I | sed -e 's/^0*\(..*\)/\1/') - 1)) # We want 12-hour interval. And no leading zeroes (except for a lone 0) -HOUR_NEXT=$(($HOUR + 12)) -MINUTE=$(date +%M | sed -e 's/^0*\(..*\)/\1/') - -# Generate the cron script -( - echo 'MAILTO=""' - echo "$MINUTE $HOUR,$HOUR_NEXT * * * root /usr/bin/updater.sh >/dev/null 2>&1 &" - echo "0 0 * * * root /usr/bin/updater-unstuck.sh >/dev/null 2>&1" -) >/etc/cron.d/updater -chmod 0600 /etc/cron.d/updater -- cgit v1.2.3