- Exercise 46: Alabama Cement
- Exercise 47: Alaska Tours and Such
- Exercise 48: Arizona Aluminum Manufacturing
- Exercise 49: Arkansas University
- Exercise 50: California Dreaming
- Exercise 51: Colorado Insurers
- Exercise 52: Connecticut Water
- Exercise 53: Delaware Trucking
- Exercise 54: Florida Reviewers
- Exercise 55: Georgia Widgets
- Exercise 56: Hawaii PineTrees, Inc.
- Exercise 57: Idaho Rock Quarries
- Exercise 58: Illinois Lotto
- Exercise 59: Indiana Reptiles
- Exercise 60: Iowa Retirement Homes
- Exercise 61: Kansas Vets, Ltd.
- Exercise 62: Kentucky’s D S Technical
- Exercise 63: Louisiana Fishing
- Exercise 64: Maine Asylums, LLC
- Exercise 65: Maryland Programming
- Exercise 66: Massachusetts Spammers
- Exercise 67: Michigan Growers
- Exercise 68: Minnesota River Authority
- Exercise 69: Mississippi Diabetes Group
- Exercise 70: Missouri Knife and Scissor
- Exercise 71: Montana Expeditions
- Exercise 72: North Carolina Swimmers
- Exercise 73: North Dakota Plastics
- Exercise 74: Nebraska Genealogy
- Exercise 75: Nevada Design
Exercise 70: Missouri Knife and Scissor
You have recently finished a class on advanced Linux administration, and your boss is announcing to all customers that no request is now too big or too small. As you’re explaining to him that this route of advertising might not lead to the most efficient use of your time, he hands you an assignment.
The Missouri Knife and Scissor company has a number of shell routines that it needs to run on a regular basis:
ABC: needs to run every Monday at 6:05
BCD: needs to run on the second day of each month at 15:10
CDE: needs to run on March 14th and September 15th at 18:30
DEF: needs to run every 10 minutes between 6:00 and 18:00 every day
EFG: needs to run at 5 minutes past the hour on every hour between 12:00 and 16:00 on weekdays only
Write down the cron file entries that MK&S needs to run these scripts at their appropriate times.