Computer and Software Support


How to use scheduled tasks

Microsoft® Windows® 2000 Scripting Guide

Scheduled tasks can save a great deal of work for administrators, especially if these tasks are well coordinated for minimal impact on users, computers, and the network. However, poorly planned scheduled tasks can cause a number of problems.

For example, if multiple tasks are scheduled to run at the same time, some tasks might interfere with other tasks. Likewise, CPU-intensive or network-intensive tasks scheduled to run at inopportune times might negatively affect users or the network.

To help ensure that tasks are carried out on a regular basis, but without adversely affecting users or the network, it is important for administrators to know which tasks are scheduled to run on their computers and when they are scheduled to run. Enumerating your scheduled tasks can help you minimize the impact of these activities on an individual computer and on the network as a whole.

The Win32_ScheduledJob class can be used to enumerate the following items about the scheduled tasks on a computer:

  • Which task is scheduled to run.
  • When the task is scheduled to run.
  • What happened the last time the task was scheduled to run. (That is, did the task run as expected, or did it fail?)

Scheduled task properties available through the Win32_ScheduledJob class are shown in Table 17.13.

Return to Top

How to access Scheduled Tasks (Click the hyperlink for assistance with that step)

  1. Open System Tools
  2. Double-click Scheduled Tasks

 

Table 17.13 Win32_ScheduledJob Properties

Property Description

Caption

Short description (one-line string) of the task.

Command

Name of the command, batch program, or binary file (along with command-line arguments) that the schedule service will use to invoke the job. Example: "defrag /q /f"

DaysOfMonth

Days of the month when the job is scheduled to run. If a job is to run on multiple days of the month, these values can be joined in a logical OR. For example, if a job is to run on the 1st and 16th of each month, the value of the DaysOfMonth property will be 1 OR 32768.

Values include:

1 - 1st

2 - 2nd

4 - 3rd

8 - 4th

16 - 5th

32 - 6th

64 - 7th

128 - 8th

256 - 9th

512 - 10th

1024 - 11th

2048 - 12th

4096 - 13th

8192 - 14th

16384 - 15th

32768 - 16th

65536 - 17th

131072 - 18th

262144 - 19th

524288 - 20th

1048576 - 21st

2097152 - 22nd

4194304 - 23rd

8388608 - 24th

16777216 - 25th

33554432 - 26th

67108864 - 27th

134217728 - 28th

268435456 - 29th

536870912 - 30th

1073741824 - 31st

DaysOfWeek

Days of the week when the job is scheduled to run. If a job is to run on multiple days of the week, these values can be joined in a logical OR. For example, if a job is to run on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, the value of the DaysOfWeek property will be 1 OR 4 OR 16.

Values include:

1 - Monday

2 - Tuesday

4 - Wednesday

8 - Thursday

16 - Friday

32 - Saturday

64 - Sunday

Description

Description of the object.

ElapsedTime

Length of time that the job has been executing.

InstallDate

Date the job was created.

InteractWithDesktop

Boolean value indicating that the specified job is interactive (meaning a user can give input to a scheduled job while it is executing).

JobID

Identifier number of the scheduled task.

JobStatus

Status of execution the last time this job was supposed to run. Values are:

Success

Failure

Notify

User to be notified upon job completion or failure.

Owner

User that submitted the job.

Priority

Urgency or importance of execution of a job.

RunRepeatedly

Scheduled job should run repeatedly on the days that the job is scheduled. If FALSE, the job is run once.

StartTime

UTC time to run the job, in the format:

YYYYMMDDHHMMSS.MMMMMM±UUU

Where YYYYMMDD must be replaced by ********.

The replacement is necessary because the scheduling service allows jobs to be configured to run only once or to run on a day of the month or week. A job cannot be run on a specific date.

For example, ********123000.000000-420 means that the task should run at 12:30 P.M. Pacific time with daylight saving time in effect.

In the Universal Time Coordinate (UTC) format:

yyyy represents the year.

mm represents the month.

dd represents the day.

HH represents the hour (in 24-hour format).

MM represents the minutes.

SS represents the seconds.

xxxxxx represents the milliseconds.

±UUU represents the number of minutes difference between the current time zone and Greenwich mean time.

TimeSubmitted

Time that the job was created.

UntilTime

Time after which the job is invalid or should be stopped.

Scripting Steps

Listing 17.29 contains a script that enumerates the scheduled tasks on a computer. To carry out this task, the script must perform the following steps:

  1. Create a variable to specify the computer name.
  2. Use a GetObject call to connect to the WMI namespace root\cimv2 on the computer, and set the impersonation level to "impersonate."
  3. Use the ExecQuery method to query the Win32_ScheduledJob class.

    This query returns a collection consisting of all the scheduled tasks created for the computer.

  4. For each scheduled task in the collection, echo the task properties.

Listing 17.29 Enumerating Scheduled Tasks

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
strComputer = "."
Set objWMIService = GetObject("winmgmts:" _
 & "{impersonationLevel=impersonate}!\\" & strComputer & "\root\cimv2")
Set colScheduledJobs = objWMIService.ExecQuery _
 ("SELECT * FROM Win32_ScheduledJob")
For Each objJob in colScheduledJobs
 Wscript.Echo "Caption: " & objJob.Caption
 Wscript.Echo "Command: " & objJob.Command
 Wscript.Echo "Days Of Month: " & objJob.DaysOfMonth
 Wscript.Echo "Days Of Week: " & objJob.DaysOfWeek
 Wscript.Echo "Description: " & objJob.Description
 Wscript.Echo "Elapsed Time: " & objJob.ElapsedTime
 Wscript.Echo "Install Date: " & objJob.InstallDate
 Wscript.Echo "Interact with Desktop: " & objJob.InteractWithDesktop
 Wscript.Echo "Job ID: " & objJob.JobID
 Wscript.Echo "Job Status: " & objJob.JobStatus
 Wscript.Echo "Name: " & objJob.Name
 Wscript.Echo "Notify: " & objJob.Notify
 Wscript.Echo "Owner: " & objJob.Owner
 Wscript.Echo "Priority: " & objJob.Priority
 Wscript.Echo "Run Repeatedly: " & objJob.RunRepeatedly
 Wscript.Echo "Start Time: " & objJob.StartTime
 Wscript.Echo "Status: " & objJob.Status
 Wscript.Echo "Time Submitted: " & objJob.TimeSubmitted
 Wscript.Echo "Until Time: " & objJob.UntilTime
Next

Return to Top

Example of Setting a scheduled task

In this example I am going to show how to install and schedule the shutdown utility called Shutdown.exe to shut the computer down every Monday at 3:00 AM. (Click the hyperlink for assistance with that step)

  1. Open System Tools
  2. Click on Scheduled Tasks
  3. Double-click Add Scheduled Task
  4. Click Next
   
  • Click Browse
  • Double-click the folder you downloaded Shutdown.exe to (in this case, c:\shut)
  • Highlight the file
  • Click Open
  • Place a dot in Weekly
  • Click Next
       
  • Set the Start time to 3:00 AM
  • Place a check on Monday
  • Click Next
  •    
  • Type in the password
  • Retype the password for confirmation
  • Click Next
  •    
  • Place a check on Open advanced properties for this task when I click Finish
  • Click Finish
  •    
  • Click the tab Settings
  • Uncheck Don't start the task if the computer is running on batteries
  • Uncheck Stop the task if battery mode begins
  • Place a check on Wake the computer to run this task
  • Click OK
  •