The at command is used for jobs that only need to be run once. These jobs are run from either the command line or from scripts. The at entries do not go in the crontab files.
      prw-------   1 root     cron           0 Jul 23 15:16 FIFO
      -rw-r-----   1 bin      cron           4 Sep 30 1997  at.deny
      -rw-r-----   1 bin      cron           3 Sep 30 1997  cron.deny
      -rw-rw-r--   1 bin      bin          272 Aug 05 11:27 log
      -rw-r--r--   1 root     sys         1328 Sep 18 1997  queuedefs
Following is an example of an error message found in the log file:
           Out of disk space for a temporary file: There is
           not enough space in the file system.
           read: no such file or directory
  
           EventType.[Jobsj][Nicen][Waitw]
       Refer to the man page on the queuedefs file for additional
       information.
           crontab -e
       This starts an editing session for the
       /var/spool/cron/crontabs/user_id file. By default, the vi
       editor is used.  If the  EDITOR  environment variable is set,
       that editor is used.
Any lines beginning with a pound sign (#) are comments and are ignored.
A crontab entry consists of six fields:
The specification of days may be made by two fields (day of the month and day of the week). If you specify both as a list of elements, both are adhered to. For example:
           0 0 1,15 * 1 command
       This entry would run command on the first and fifteenth days of each
       month, as well as every  Monday.  To specify days by only
       one field, the other field should contain an "*" (asterisk).
For example, to run the date command at 2 a.m. on Monday:
    0 2 * * 1 /bin/date
       The parameters can also be specified as a range with a dash
       (-), as in 1-5, or a list separated by commas, as in
       1,2,3,4,5.  For more information on crontab entries, see the
       man page for the crontab command.
  
           * * * * * /bin/date
       Then check your mail.  cron sends the output from standard
       out and standard error to the mailbox of the user submitting
       the job.  You should receive the output of the date command
       once each minute.  If you do not get mail back, check to see
       if the cron daemon is running. Enter the following:
           ps -eaf |grep cron
       Look for a line where the last field is: /usr/sbin/cron or
       /etc/cron.  If cron is not running, check the /etc/inittab
       file for an entry such as the following:
           cron:2:respawn:/usr/sbin/cron
or
           cron:2:respawn:/etc/cron
       If you have this entry and cron is still not running, execute:
           telinit q
       Then recheck using the ps command above to see if cron is
       running.  If this still does not work, contact your support
       organization for assistance.
  
           ps -eaf |grep cron
       The output will look something like the following:
           root  20294      1   0   Sep 26      -  4:18 /etc/cron
       The number after root is the process ID (PID). Type kill -9
       PID to stop cron and cause it to start and reread the
       crontabs files.
           #!/bin/ksh
           cd $HOME
           . .profile
       This will only pick up the environment variables that are
       set in the .profile file. To completely duplicate your
       environment, from the command line run the env command and
       explicitly set all the variables in the cron script with:
           export VARIABLE_NAME=value
       NOTE:   For the Korn shell, other environment variables may
       be set in /etc/profile and, depending upon the setting of
       the  ENV  environment variable, the file pointed to the 
       variable is also run.  You may have to explicitly set all the
       variables you need in the cron script.
  
           croutAxwAXAxBC8
       These files are created as temporary files in /tmp when cron 
       runs a job.  When the job finishes, the crout file is
       usually removed.  If the files are still there, the cron
       daemon is failing half way through the job and is getting
       respawned by init. Therefore the job in question never 
       completes.
To locate the bad job, check the timestamp. Enter the following:
           ls -l crout*
       Match the output to the entry in the crontabs file to which it
       belongs.
           cron_job_file >/dev/null 2>&1
       If you are running a script, you may have to individually
       redirect any commands inside the file that write to either
       standard error or standard out.
           cron_job_file | mail user_name
       You may have to do this inside the script file to catch all
       occurrences of output.
If cron is running and you can get the output by running the date command in the test, the program or script is probably not running. See the section in this document called "A job runs from the command line but not from cron".
If you can see the job is running but you get no mail, test to see if you can send mail to the user submitting the cron job.
If you can send mail, the command or script probably is not outputting anything to standard out or standard error, or it is redirecting it somewhere else.
Commands submitted by the at command are actually run by the cron command.
The Date variable to the -t flag is specified using the following format:
The digits in the Date variable are defined as follows:
For more information on using the -t flag, refer to the at command man page.
The most common way to submit a job is:
           echo <command to execute> |at -t 950603220000
or
           echo <command to execute> |at now + 200 minutes
       See the at command man page for a complete list of time,
       day, and increment parameters.