<code>at</code> is a shell command for scheduling commands to be executed once, at a future time. The command was developed for Unix and is available on Unix and Unix-like systems, Windows, and ReactOS.
On Unix-like operating systems, <code>at</code> reads a series of commands from standard input and collects them into one "at-job" which is carried out at a later date. The job inherits the current environment, so that it is executed in the same working directory and with the same environment variables set as when it was scheduled. It differs from <code>cron</code>, which is used for recurring executions (e.g. once an hour, every Tuesday, January 1 every year). As with <code>cron</code>, many Unix systems allow the administrator to restrict access to the <code>at</code> command. <code>at</code> can be made to mail a user when done carrying out a scheduled job, can use more than one job queue, and can read a list of jobs to carry out from a file instead of standard input. The Linux <code>at</code> command was mostly written by Thomas Koenig.
The <code></code> command can be used instead of to only run scheduled jobs if the system's load average is below a certain value.
A sample command to compile a C program at 11:45 a.m. on January 31 would be:
or
The <code>atq</code> program lists the currently queued jobs, while <code>atrm</code> removes jobs from the queue:
In some Unix-like computer operating systems, it uses a daemon, <code>atd</code>, which waits in the background periodically checking the list of jobs to do and executing those at their scheduled time on behalf of <code>at</code>.
In addition to the graphical user interface for Windows Task Scheduler in Control Panel, Windows provides an <code>at</code> shell command that schedules operations to run at a specified time and date (similar to <code>cron</code>). It is available since Windows NT, but is now deprecated in favor of <code>schtasks</code>. It can only be used when the Schedule service is running. When used without parameters, <code>at</code> lists scheduled commands. <code>at</code> cannot access tasks created or modified by Control Panel or <code>schtasks.exe</code>. Also, tasks created with <code>at</code> are not interactive by default; interactivity needs to be explicitly requested.
The ReactOS implementation is based on the Windows implementation. It was developed by Eric Kohl and is licensed under the GPLv2.
To use <code>at</code>, the user must be a member of the local Administrators group.
The command-syntax is:
<pre>at [\\ComputerName] [{[ID] [/delete]|/delete [/yes]}]</pre> <pre>at [[\\ComputerName] hours:minutes [/interactive] [{/every:date[,...]|/next:date[,...]}] command]</pre>