Les Mikesell wrote: > Anne Wilson wrote: >> On Friday 16 February 2007, Les Mikesell wrote: >>> You can't set up your own cron.d. >>> >> man cron(1) and cron(8) >> > > I see a mention of a special case for /etc/cron.d. If there is a general > case for handling them where a non-root user can access them in the same > way I can't find it. > If you want the full functionality of /etc/cron.d, then do, you can not set it up as a normal user - a normal user can not run programs as another user without using their password. And some of the system user's do are locked, so their is no password that can access them. So it takes root permissions to run programs as that user. Then again, why would you want to let a user do that? Mikkel -- Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup!