Difference between /etc/crontab and "crontab -e"
What is the difference between the crontab located in /etc/crontab
and the crontab that can be edited using crontab -e
?
Solution 1:
As Ignacio said, /etc/crontab
is the system wide crontab.
The format of /etc/crontab
is like this:
# m h dom mon dow user command
* * * * * someuser echo 'foo'
while crontab -e
is per user, it's worth mentioning with no -u
argument the crontab command goes to the current users crontab. You can do crontab -e -u <username>
to edit a specific users crontab.
Notice in a per user crontab there is no 'user' field.
# m h dom mon dow command
* * * * * echo 'foo'
An aspect of crontabs that may be confusing is that root also has its own crontab. e.g. crontab -e -u root
will not edit /etc/crontab
See Configuring cron.
In most Linux distros, per user crontabs are typically stored in: /var/spool/cron/crontabs/<username>
(vixie-cron).
RHEL based distributions are stored in /var/spool/cron/<username>
. (cronie)
Solution 2:
One is the system crontab and can only be edited by root, and the other is the user crontab and can be edited by a user and exists per user.