• @SquiffSquiff@lemmy.world
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      11 month ago

      Cron already exists and is established as the solution in this space. It’s also used as the model for a lot of other timer services outside the Linux kernel.

      • BlackEco
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        1 month ago

        Have you read the article? The fourth paragraph lists improvements systemd timers bring over cron:

        Cron is easy, very simple and robust mechanism to execute periodic tasks on a *nix server, and is available by default on all popular Linux distributions. However, cron suffers from some issues:

        • If the system is down when the cron needs to run, the cron will be missed

        • There is no built-in status monitoring

        • There are no built-in logs

        • If you want to execute pre/post commands (for example by pinging an external service for success/failure) you have to do it inside the script itself

        All of these issues are addressed with systemd services and timers, as the authors explains in details.

      • @MadhuGururajan@programming.dev
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        11 month ago

        cron is quite inadequate for condition based scheduling. Instead of million obscure ways to achieve this inside the command that cron executes, systemd timers give us a standard ONE way to do things.

        I feel like systemd timers follow unix philosophy better than cron at this day and age.