On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 2:55 PM, bgnumis bgnum <bgnumis at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Hope I can Explain:
>
> I want to "run" online some function (code written by me) so that
this code
> "saves" an output file on my server and my html webpage read the
file R
> plots and save (really manually I would run R function, open Filezilla, and
> pass the output png o jpg file).
>
> Is it possible to do this "authomatically" telling R, something
like each
> 15 minutes run this "pru.txt" file, and take save this plot.png
and execute
> filezilla with this inputs and save the plot in this folder?
>
?In Linux (or any UNIX like system), you can schedule tasks to be run by
using "cron" (do a "man crontab" for some information, if
you need to). So,
if you can make a "shell script" which does all of your work without
user
input, then you can use "cron" to schedule it periodically, every
"n"
minutes, daily, weekly on ???day, monthly, etc. I don't know Filezilla, so
I don't know what you are really doing with it.
Windows has a similar scheduler to run "bat" files or "Power
Shell"
scripts.? I don't _DO_ Windows! <Start> -> <Administrative
Tools> -> <Task
Scheduler>
Mac OSX - not a fanboy, try somebody else. <grin/>
>
> Hope you can understand me.
>
> In rmarkdown it is true that output html file but my intention is tu run my
> own function and the need is to run my function in R, and run and open
> filezilla and deposit the file in the right place.
>
>
?If you are using Filezilla to copy a file, where is it being copied to? In
UNIX, I'd see if I could use just the plain "cp" command (for
local, NFS,
or CIFS attached places) or either the "ftp" or "scp"
command to copy to a
different server. In Windows the "copy" command could be used to copy
the
file to a different folder locally or on a "share" (Windows
"share" is,
more or less, the same as UNIX CIFS, if you're interested)?. Again, if this
needs to go to some other server, then a scripted "ftp" should work.
One of
my co-workers does this.
--
Schrodinger's backup: The condition of any backup is unknown until a
restore is attempted.
Yoda of Borg, we are. Futile, resistance is, yes. Assimilated, you will be.
He's about as useful as a wax frying pan.
10 to the 12th power microphones = 1 Megaphone
Maranatha! <><
John McKown
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