Hi all,
We have a legacy system that runs SCO 3.2v5.0.4 (SCO OpenServer Release 5). Every Saturday around 5 AM (ET) it is rebooting. This is occurring during the middle of a backup that is occurring at the time. (The backup resumes after the reboot and completes successfully.)
Examining cron there appears to be no entry doing this. I did see entries for "cronsched" but after looking on the web I gather these don't do anything other than tell it to reread calendar files which I couldn't locate so presume do not exist.
There doesn't seem to be any sign of system panics and it seems unlikely those would occur on a regular schedule in any event. (The backup is running for quite a while before this reboot so doesn't seem a likely cause.)
Is there something other than cron that would cause a server to reboot regularly like this?
Would the cpuonoff command cause the system to show as if it had been booted? I did find one cron script that runs that during the backup but my read of its man page doesn't make it seem likely it would do this.
We have a legacy system that runs SCO 3.2v5.0.4 (SCO OpenServer Release 5). Every Saturday around 5 AM (ET) it is rebooting. This is occurring during the middle of a backup that is occurring at the time. (The backup resumes after the reboot and completes successfully.)
Examining cron there appears to be no entry doing this. I did see entries for "cronsched" but after looking on the web I gather these don't do anything other than tell it to reread calendar files which I couldn't locate so presume do not exist.
There doesn't seem to be any sign of system panics and it seems unlikely those would occur on a regular schedule in any event. (The backup is running for quite a while before this reboot so doesn't seem a likely cause.)
Is there something other than cron that would cause a server to reboot regularly like this?
Would the cpuonoff command cause the system to show as if it had been booted? I did find one cron script that runs that during the backup but my read of its man page doesn't make it seem likely it would do this.