--- title: "at" tags: [ "Documentation", "Basics" ] --- Install with: ```bash sudo apt install at ``` Enable the daemon service with: ```bash sudo systemctl enable --now atd ``` Then jobs can be specified with absolute time, such as: ```bash at 16:20 ``` ```bash at noon ``` ```bash at midnight ``` ```bash at teatime ``` Type in your command, e.g.: ```bash touch /tmp/$FILE.txt ``` The jobs can also be specified relative to the current time: ```bash at now +15 minutes ``` Finally, accept the jobs with ^D. # Managing `at` Jobs Display a list of commands to run with: ```bash atq ``` > 2 Sat Oct 20 16:00:00 2018 a roach-1 This will print all pending IDs. Remove a job by the ID with: ```bash atrm 2 ``` Check `/var/spool/atd/` to see the jobs. ![At it again](/tapes/at.gif) ## Automation Automatically add a job for later, by setting the date, then using echo for the command. ```bash t="$(date -d "2 minutes" +%R)" echo "fortune > ~/$FILE" | at "$t" watch cat $FILE ``` The `$t` here outputs the day in minutes, but you could also do `t="$(date -d "2 days" +%m/%d/%Y)"`.