Maintenance scripts - not in Leopard?

Are the daily, weekly and monthly maintenance scripts still around in Leopard. If so they do not seem to be running.

David: afraid I'm no expert with Automator, but I do know that you can run Terminal commands from Automator. Check with the folks who know what they're doing in the Automaor forum:
http://discussions.apple.com/forum.jspa?forumID=749
Or you can go to VersionTracker and see which of the many utilities that will do this for you sounds good to you. Personally, I just use Terminal whenever it occurs to me.
Andrew: it sounds like either something is amiss with the sudoers file, or else you are not a member of the admin group. I would suspect the latter, since it is known that the Leopard install sometimes results in the loss of the admin status for a user. To see if you are a member of the admin group, try the id command. Here's what I get:
NoobiX:~ francine$ id
uid=501(francine) gid=20(staff) groups=20(staff),102(com.apple.sharepoint.group.2),98(_lpadmin),101(com.apple.s harepoint.group.1),80(admin),501(francine)
As you can see, I am a member of admin (group 80). If you have lost your admin status, see this Apple KB article:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306876
It's easy to fix if you have a second user who was also an admin, and that user has retained their status. In that case you can just log in to the remaining admin account, go to System Prefs-Accounts, and click the box to enable admin rights to your regular account.
Francine
Francine
Schwieder

Similar Messages

  • Maintenance Scripts not running

    Purchased a mac mini a few days ago. Noticed in my system log: Recent contents: that it doesn't seem to be running the overnight maintenance. It reads:
    Nov 20. 03: 15: 02 - geoff powells computer: mac - mini. cp: error processing extended attributes. Operation not permitted.
    This is updated daily with the same result. Mini is left running 24/7.
    Phoned Apple Tech Support who said their G4s syslogs said the same.
    But couldn't say if the scripts were running or not.
    Anyone any clues.
    The sys log of my G5 running 10.3.8 shows a restart everyday.

    Hi Geoff,
    Welcome to Discussions!
    Your system works perfectly well and the Periodic maintenance runs.
    - That a system log starts precisely at 3:15 shows alone that your computer is left on all night and the Daily script runs at its default scheduled time.
    --> Open Console again and see the three Periodic maintenance logs. They are daily.out, monthly.out and weekly.out.
    If your computer never sleeps, you should find that they were run at 3:15am every day (daily task), 3:15am on Saturdays (weekly task), and 5:30am on the first day of each month (monthly task).
    Note that since 10.4.2 they are able to run "delayed" in case your computer was sleeping during the night. This enhancement works perfectly well with the Daily Task, but not very reliably with the Weekly and the Monthly.
    Still no running at all if computer shut down at night.
    HTH
    Axl

  • Maintenance scripts question

    I was just wondering if the daily, weekly, and monthly maintenance scripts will run overnight if I have the 'puter set to sleep after an hour or so. In other words, will it wake itself to do maintenance? Thanks!

    If you would like to forget about the problem then download and install either Macaroni or PseudoAnacron - VersionTracker or MacUpdate. They will automatically run the scripts whenever the computer becomes available if they did not run at their scheduled times.
    Kappy's Personal Suggestions for OS X Maintenance
    For disk repairs use Disk Utility. For situations DU cannot handle the best third-party utilities are: Disk Warrior; DW only fixes problems with the disk directory, but most disk problems are caused by directory corruption; Disk Warrior 4.0 is now Intel Mac compatible. TechTool Pro provides additional repair options including file repair and recovery, system diagnostics, and disk defragmentation. TechTool Pro 4.6.1 is Leopard compatible; Drive Genius is similar to TechTool Pro in terms of the various repair services provided. The current version, 1.5.1, is Intel Mac compatible.
    OS X performs certain maintenance functions that are scheduled to occur on a daily, weekly, or monthly period. The maintenance scripts run in the early AM only if the computer is turned on 24/7 (no sleep.) If this isn't the case, then an excellent solution is to download and install a shareware utility such as Macaroni, JAW PseudoAnacron, or Anacron that will automate the maintenance activity regardless of whether the computer is turned off or asleep.
    OS X automatically defrags files less than 20 MBs in size, so unless you have a disk full of very large files there's little need for defragmenting the hard drive. As for virus protection there are few if any such animals affecting OS X. You can protect the computer easily using the freeware Open Source virus protection software ClamXAV. Personally I would avoid most commercial anti-virus software because of their potential for causing problems.
    I would also recommend downloading the shareware utility TinkerTool System that you can use for periodic maintenance such as removing old logfiles and archives, clearing caches, etc.
    For emergency repairs install the freeware utility Applejack. If you cannot start up in OS X, you may be able to start in single-user mode from which you can run Applejack to do a whole set of repair and maintenance routines from the commandline. Note that presently AppleJack is not compatible with Leopard.
    When you install any new system software or updates be sure to repair the hard drive and permissions beforehand. I also recommend booting into safe mode before doing system software updates.
    Get an external Firewire drive at least equal in size to the internal hard drive and make (and maintain) a bootable clone/backup. You can make a bootable clone using the Restore option of Disk Utility. You can also make and maintain clones with good backup software. My personal recommendations are (order is not significant):
    1. Retrospect Desktop (Commercial - not yet universal binary)
    2. Synchronize! Pro X (Commercial)
    3. Synk (Backup, Standard, or Pro)
    4. Deja Vu (Shareware)
    5. PsynchX 2.1.1 and RsyncX 2.1 (Freeware)
    6. Carbon Copy Cloner (Freeware - 3.0 is a Universal Binary)
    7. SuperDuper! (Commercial)
    8. Data Backup (Commercial)
    The following utilities can also be used for backup, but cannot create bootable clones:
    1. Backup (requires a .Mac account with Apple both to get the software and to use it.)
    2. Toast
    3. Impression
    4. arRSync
    Apple's Backup is a full backup tool capable of also backing up across multiple media such as CD/DVD. However, it cannot create bootable backups. It is primarily an "archiving" utility as are the other two.
    Impression and Toast are disk image based backups, only. Particularly useful if you need to backup to CD/DVD across multiple media.
    Visit The XLab FAQs and read the FAQs on maintenance, optimization, virus protection, and backup and restore.
    Additional suggestions will be found in Mac Maintenance Quick Assist.
    Referenced software can be found at www.versiontracker.com and www.macupdate.com.

  • Mac OS X maintenance scripts and multiple user accounts

    Hi everyone
    Just wondering how the default maintenance scripts scheduled to run in the early morning works with multiple user accounts. Our Macs at home all have multiple user accounts (one for each of us) and I'm wondering whether the scripts work their magic across all accounts (assuming the computer itself is switched on AND not asleep).
    Also, is the behaviour the same regardless of Mac OS X version? More specifically we're using snow leopard, lion, mountain lion, and maybe shortly mavericks.
    Thanks!
    Joe.

    The maintenance scripts run by periodic perform system tasks. They do nothing in a user's account (unless you modify the scripts or create your own). They are primarily designed for long lived systems (servers). There isn't any magic nor would a normal mac users find any differences whether they ran or not.
    In all the operating system versions that you mention, the scripts will run when the computer wakes, assuming that the computer was turned on before the prescribe times.

  • Execution of maintenance scripts in Lion

    Hi there,
    as of the latest update to OS X Lion, the maintenance scripts have ceased to perform automatically.  Before, the scripts executed at their proper times (daily, weekly, monthly) and whenever the computer was running (no need to wait for specific time slots).  I was able to verify the processes via Maintidget, a widget that monitors script activity and can also be used to execute them manually.  As I said, presently there is no more automated script activity - I have to force their execution via Maintidget.  Does anyone has an idea why this should be so?

    the discussion of the timed maintenance is an old one and does no longer apply.
    Sure it does.  Those scripts are ancient carry-overs from the early days of Unix and have not been changed much since then.
    Also, macjack has a good point.  Verify what the widget is telling you.  Paste the following command into the Terminal to find out when they last ran:
    ls -al /var/log/*.out
    The output on my machine is:
    Hyperion:~ thomas$ ls -al /var/log/*.out
    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  355773 Feb 20 06:05 /var/log/daily.out
    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel    1352 Feb  1 06:07 /var/log/monthly.out
    -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel    2697 Feb 18 09:31 /var/log/weekly.out

  • Running Maintenance Scripts for Mac OS 10.5.8 HELP!

    I am trying to run the maintenance scripts on my laptop for the first time. I go to Terminal type in "sudo periodic daily weekly monthly" and hit return. A warning message pops up the some data may be lost.... and the the Password prompt comes up. I back up consistently so I just want to run the scripts since it has never been done. However, when I try to type in my password, NOTHING types. I hit return and tried again, but nothing. Can someone please help me figure out what is wrong and if there is any other maintenance I need to do to the system?
    Thanks in advance for any help.

    You don't need to use any utility, or perform any procedure, to make sure OS X's built-in maintenance tasks have run under OS X 10.5 and later.
    OS X 10.5 will run its cron jobs automatically (actually, they are no longer handled by the UNIX facility "cron", they are now handled by a similar facility called "launchd". if that means anything to you) whether you have left your computer on all night or not. You no longer need a utility to run missed maintenance as of OS X 10.5. It will run automatically at the next available opportunity. Actually, this was the case as of OS X 10.4, but a bug kept the maintenance routines from running more than once per restart under OS X 10.4. This was fixed in OS X 10.5
    http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=6552347
    http://arstechnica.com/reviews/os/macosx-10.4.ars/5
    http://developer.apple.com/macosx/launchd.html

  • Maintenance scripts

    Hi everyone,
    I have two questions that I need help with, both related to the running of maintenance scripts. I downloaded and installed "anacron" the other day. When I check terminal, I notice that the daily maintenance script runs between midnight and 1am each day. I'm pretty sure that the default time for Tiger is somewhere between 3 and 4 am, a time which is assumed to not have much user activity. If the maintenance scripts are now being run around midnight or 1am, times when I am likely to be using the computer, will I notice a system slowdown? I've heard that supplemental maintenance scripts programs, (like Onyx, anacron, macjanitor, etc) are not necessary.
    I would uninstall the program, but I've tried searching for the files that the readme says to delete, and I am unable to find them (using the Finder and EasyFind). I am not sure if the program has now replaced Tiger maintenance, and if I delete anacron then the Tiger scripts won't run anymore. Can someone provide me with a way to safely uninstall the program and ensure that the scripts will still run? Thank you.

    Hi Louis
    I have been running Anacron for several years with no problems. You will not know when it is running most of the time unless you hear your hardrive clicking. Since my computer sleeps through the scheduled times it normally would run, it will run the scrips at times after the time period exceeds the time limit set since last run. Daily scripts every 24 hrs., etc. Anacron will check every hour to test the time limit to see if it needs to run and will run the scripts when needed. Therefore, if your computer was sleeping or off less than 24 hrs. of the time the daily script was set to run or since the last time it was run and you wake it or turn it on 3 days later, the daily script will run approximately 15 minutes past the next hour.
    As I said, it has never given me a problem and you won't ever have to worry about the log files getting bloated.
    These scripts don't really need to be run that often and some people prefer to use manuel programs such as ONYX to run them on occasion. That's probably more of a personal preference. I choose not to want to think about it and let Anacron do it's thing. If I ever think it may be causing problems, I won't hesitate to remove it. But so far on 3 computers, no problems.
    But if you feel the need to uninstall it follow this:
    To uninstall Anacron, go to Hard Drive/Library/LaunchDaemons/anacron.plist. Move the file "anacron.plist" to the desktop and restart the computer. Then you can trash anacron.plist file.
    Or, search in the Finder or with spotlight for Anacron. You will see the "anacron.plist" file. Delete it and restart the computer. Then you will be able to empty the trash.
    I can't really say how much this and permission repair has really helped, but I can tell you that for 3 years I have virtually no problems with my computers and have never had to reinstall the operating system on any of them other than updating or moving to the newer OSX.

  • Maintenance Scripts?? MacJanitor?

    On my G4 iBook running 10.3 I found and used an app called Macjanitor.
    Here is the blurb from their site.
    Freeware utility to run the system's daily, weekly, and monthly maintenance scripts.
    These scripts are normally run between 3am and 5am, and will not be run if you shut off your Mac at night. This can allow log files to grow very large, and prevent system databases from getting backed up.
    With MacJanitor, you can run these scripts 'by hand' periodically without having to use the Terminal to keep your Mac OS X machine in top racing form.
    Excellent for laptop users and others who shut off or put their Macs to sleep at night.
    Supposedly normal set maintenance scripts in OS X are set to run around 3-5am (not sure where you see this) but they will only run if the system is on (of course) and Not asleep. Well I can guarantee my system is alseep as that time !!
    I also stumbled across someone commenting on how useless MacJanitor was because they use something called Aancron http://members.cox.net/18james/anacron-tiger.html
    Blurb from their site
    Anacron runs the periodic daily, weekly and monthly tasks on your Mac even if the machine (a laptop, for example) spends much of its time asleep or switched-off. Anacron silently checks when you reboot and every sixty minutes while the computer is running to see if the various periodic scripts are overdue, and runs them if necessary. The advantage of Anacron over many other solutions to this issue is that it runs as a proper Unix background process, requires no user intervention, and uses the regular periodic scripts, including local additions or modifications.
    Sounds like a better solution, but I curious to what others due for running these maintenance scripts?
    Has anyone used either of these 2 programs under 10.4?
    Opinions and experiences please.

    Yes, I use OnyX because it runs them at times I have scheduled it to do so. 10.4.0 or later runs them automatically, if the computer is on and idle at 1AM, which isn't normal for many people so running them with an app can be good if you leave your machine running for days or weeks at a time. That said if you shut down your machine down every night there is no need to because the tasks will be run at boot each morning.

  • OSB maintenance scripts

    Where can I find more information about OSB's maintenance scripts?  Specifically, what is responsible for rotation and cleanup of old files under /usr/local/oracle/backup/admin/history/host/ on the OSB server?
    I have files under /usr/local/oracle/backup/admin/history/host/<hostname>/<date>.<hostname>.0.saved that are from more than 7 months ago.  Under OSB's policies, we have the "Log retain time" and "Transcript retain time" set to 14 days (default is 7 days), and the "Job retain time" set to 21 days (default is 30 days).  Do any of those retention policy settings impact the cleanup of the above mentioned files?  It seems they do not, as the files located there that are 7+ months old are quite past that retention and have not been cleaned up.
    Are the files under /usr/local/oracle/backup/admin/history/host/ maintained by OSB internally, or are those files and directories something that I as the system admin should be cleaning via a cronjob?
    OSB version 10.4.0.2.0

    That Mac sets up I-net connection not only in the night.
    The logs of router controlling the lan where the Mac is physically present show for some day
    a setup of nearly 8 I-net connections between 9 and 18 o'clock.
    Again it must have been the Mac because the WiFi access point was shut down in that time
    and the only other client with Ethernet connection was also shut down at that time.

  • Root crontab no system maintenance scripts

    Server: HP DL380, Redhat 4 update 6 (download from linux.oracle.com)
    Today I checked crontab and noticed that there are no system maintenance scripts running under root, to e.g. rotate log files, etc. Is this normal, any suggestions please?
    Best regards

    Check the directories below. Linux cron has directories for hourly, daily, weekly and monthly root scripts where you can drop scripts that you want to run periodically. This is handy if you do not want to maintain a root crontab file.
    ll /etc |grep cron
    -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 329 Sep 28 2004 anacrontab
    drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Mar 27 15:37 cron.d
    drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Apr 7 16:08 cron.daily
    -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 12 2007 cron.deny
    drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Sep 20 2004 cron.hourly
    drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 May 12 2007 cron.monthly
    -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 255 Sep 20 2004 crontab
    drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Nov 28 2007 cron.weekly

  • Do I need maintenance scripts ?

    I am using Macaroni which runs Unix maintenance script every time I start the computer. At night the cpmputer is shut off. Do I really need to run these scripts with Snow Leopard ?

    I know people have weighed in on this before.
    sudo periodic all
    that is all and no I don't leave mine on, or run them daily, in fact hardly at all. But I do other things to keep the system in top shape.
    as long as the utility is certified compatible, you are fine. I think Onyx, SL Cache Cleaner and others can also automatically schedule cron to run next time, I just don't do anything automatic.
    Every time you start? or once a day? some scripts are only weekly and monthly anyway.

  • Cron & missed maintenance scripts

    Hiya.
    I'm assuming the cron-driven daily/weekly/monthly maintenance scripts are not run if the computer is sleeping.
    What (if any) is the easiest way to get caught up on those if missed for a while?
    Thanks in advance...

    Hi--
    They're actually not run by cron any more, but by launchd. So, if the computer is sleeping, but not actually off, they will eventually run. On my PowerBoook, the daily runs about once a week, the weekly every couple of months, and the monthly not often at all.
    If you want to run them by hand, you can easily run them in the Terminal (press the "enter" key after each line):
    <pre class="command">sudo periodic daily
    sudo periodic weekly
    sudo periodic monthly</pre>
    I think you can run them all like this, too:
    <pre class="command">sudo periodic daily weekly monthly</pre>
    but I've never run them that way. I either let them run on their own, or run them one at a time.
    charlie

  • Periodic Maintenance Scripts

    I read this thread http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=3136865&#3136865
    but it is closed so I coldn't post an additional question.
    In understand about how the 3 maintenance scripts are supposed to work (Thank you Dr. Smoke!), but for a variety of reasons I need to put my MacBook Pro to sleep at night. Last night, I set the Energy Saver options to wake up at 3:00 AM, having previously checked to see that the daily script was set to run at 3:15. The computer goes to sleep after one hour, so that should have given enough time for the script to run.
    This morning the daily script had NOT run, and the Console log is filled with entried like this:
    Mar 21 03:30:47 administrators-computer DirectoryService[49]: Active Directory DS Plugin: Kerberos Time Skew Too Large. Check Date/Time!\n
    (There are no entries between 3:00 and 3:30). The computer was not connected to the network where the AD lives (that is at work). Also, this morning when I woke the computer up manually, the clock was set at 3:40.
    I can continue to run the daily script by hand, but I would rather not. Any help will be appreciated.
    Walt

    Make your life simpler. There are some excellent alternatives that completely automate running the maintenance scripts for you. You'll find them at VersionTracker or MacUpdate.
    Macaroni - Shareware $8.00
    Anacron - Freeware
    PseudoAnacron - Freeware
    These utilities check if the periodic maintenance scripts were run at their scheduled times, and if not runs them immediately. They assure the scripts are run when your computer is turned on so you needn't worry about scheduling the computer to wake up at a certain time.
    Why reward points?(Quoted from Discussions Terms of Use.)
    The reward system helps to increase community participation. When a community member gives you (or another member) a reward for providing helpful advice or a solution to their question, your accumulated points will increase your status level within the community.
    Members may reward you with 5 points if they deem that your reply is helpful and 10 points if you post a solution to their issue. Likewise, when you mark a reply as Helpful or Solved in your own created topic, you will be awarding the respondent with the same point values.

  • Overnight maintenance scripts

    I am a big fan of MacJanitor as it is simple, uses what is already built in to Tiger, and does mess with any settings. I do shut down my mac overnight.
    1.) If one doesn't use a 3rd party app to run these tasks, wasn't there an OS update that addressed something to the effect that if those files become to large or they haven't run, something will trigger them?
    2.) Has anyone heard if the next OS version will finally allow some way to control this or perform them via built in Apple software?
    Thanks!

    baltwo wrote: "1) Yes. IIRC, the 10.4.4 update fixed the OS so that if the scheduled tasks didn't run at their scheduled time, they'd run when the machine restarted (or awoke from sleep)."This is wholly incorrect.
    See my "Running the Mac OS X Maintenance Scripts" FAQ for all the advice you need on the scripts. In particular, the section "How the scripts are launched on a schedule" discusses the timer behavior under Tiger that have lead some to believe — incorrectly — that the scripts run "off schedule."
    Good luck!
    Dr. Smoke
    Author: Troubleshooting Mac® OS X
    Note: The information provided in the link(s) above is freely available. However, because I own The X Lab™, a commercial Web site to which some of these links point, the Apple Discussions Terms of Use require I include the following disclosure statement with this post:
    I may receive some form of compensation, financial or otherwise, from my recommendation or link.

  • Export Maintenance Scripts from AWM?

    Is there a way to export the Maintenance Scripts, like you can export dimensions and cubes to xml or something else?
    I'm talking about the scripts that are not part of the workspaces tree, but below them.
    If I'm missing something to explain myself, please tell me.
    Thank you!

    Maintenance Scripts are also called Build Processes in the OLAP API.  The definitions of these scripts are contained in a view and may be accessed by the following query:
    select * from all_cube_build_processes order by owner, build_process_name
    This query is in the AWM Navigator Reports Folder, OLAP Dictionary Reports, All Build Processes.
    Another way to get the definition of the Maintenance Script would be to download the View XML plugin from Oracle OLAP Downloads: Software &amp; Samples
    After installing the plugin in the AWM plugin directory, a new context menu item, "Plugin - View XML..." should appear for a maintenance script in the navigator.  Invoking this menu item will display the XML for maintenance script which then can be copy pasted into a file which then can be imported using DBMS_CUBE.IMPORT_XML.
    Ken Chin

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