Automatic shutdown at specified times?
Cron will work very well for this.
Add the below line (with tweaks) to the end of /etc/crontab
:
30 23 * * * root shutdown -h now
At 23:30 (11:30 PM), the kiosk will shut down. No matter what user is logged in, the shutdown command runs as root.
(If you don't want to use the global crontab, log in as root and use crontab -e
. Use the same above syntax without the root
).
Cron Format:
MM HH DD OO WW command
MM
: Minute, 0-59
HH
: 24-hour hour
DD
: Day of month
OO
: Month
WW
: Day of Week (Sunday is 0, Monday is 1)
command
: Self-explanatory
A cronjob seems to be the best way because you can specify different times for different days. On Gnome based systems you can just install GNOME Shedule Tasks by using
sudo apt-get install gnome-schedule
and then configure the cronjob using the GUI.
otherwise you would have to use sudo crontab -e
and then add the following lines
30 11 * * 1-5 /sbin/shutdown -h now
30 10 * * 0,6 /sbin/shutdown -h now
this would shutdown the PC at 11:30 from Monday to Friday and on 10:30 on Saturday and Sunday. The structure is very simple:
minute (0-59), hour (0-23, 0 = midnight), day (1-31), month (1-12), weekday (0-6, 0 = Sunday), command
For more information about this you could also just check out CronHowto
We can shutdown automatically at specified time by simply running command sudo poweroff
in crontab
.
If you want to shutdown the system at 6:30 pm everyday. Type in terminal:
sudo crontab -e
edit
30 18 * * * poweroff