0

I'm trying to run a BAT script from Task Scheduler in Windows 2008 R2 and it runs for 3 seconds and then stops.

It says it successfully completes but I know it doesn't.

I can run this script from the command line directly, and it runs just fine.

The bat file I'm running actually deletes files older than 7 days using "forfiles" then I'm mapping a network drive, moving the files across the network using robocopy, and then closing the network connection.

I have taken the network and copy options out of the file and it still does the same thing. Here is how my file looks:

rem This will delete the files from BBLEARN_stats forfiles -p "E:\BB_Maintenance_Data\DB_Backups\BBLEARN_stats" -m *.* -d -17 -c "cmd /c del @file" rem This will delete the files from BBLEARN_cms_doc forfiles -p "E:\BB_Maintenance_Data\DB_Backups\BBLEARN_cms_doc" -m *.* -d -14 -c "cmd /c del @path" rem This will delete the files from BBLEARN_admin forfiles -p "E:\BB_Maintenance_Data\DB_Backups\BBLEARN_admin" -m *.* -d -10 -c "cmd /c del @path" rem This will delete the files from BBLEARN_cms forfiles -p "E:\BB_Maintenance_Data\DB_Backups\BBLEARN_cms" -m *.* -d -10 -c "cmd /c del @path" rem This will delete the files from attendance_bb forfiles -p "E:\BB_Maintenance_Data\DB_Backups\attendance_bb" -m *.* -d -10 -c "cmd /c del @path" rem This will delete the files from BBLearn forfiles -p "E:\BB_Maintenance_Data\DB_Backups\BBLEARN" -m *.* -d -18 -c "cmd /c del @path" rem This will delete the files from Logs forfiles -p "E:\BB_Maintenance_Data\logs" -m *.* -d -10 -c "cmd /c del @path" NET USE Z: \\10.20.102.225\coursebackups\BB_DB_Backups /user:cie oly2008 ROBOCOPY E:\BB_Maintenance_Data Z: /e /XO /FFT /PURGE /NP /LOG:BB_DB_Backups.txt openfiles /disconnect /id * NET USE Z: /delete /y 

This is happening on 2 servers when trying to run commands from inside a BAT file.

The other server is giving an error if (0xFFFFFFFF) but that file is running a CALL C:\dir\dir\file.bat -options and I've used commands like that before in Server 2003.

Here is the file for this file:

call C:\blackboard\apps\content-exchange\bin\batch_ImportExport.bat -f backup_batch_file.txt -l 1 -t archive NET USE Z: \\10.20.102.225\coursebackups\BB_Course_Backups /user:cie oly2008 ROBOCOPY E:\ Z: /move /e /LOG+:BB_Move_Course_Backups.txt openfiles /disconnect /id * NET USE Z: /delete /y 
5
  • Why are you mapping the network drive? That's a user-interaction, not something you would normally include in an un-attended script. Can you just copy the files directly to the UNC path? Commented Nov 29, 2011 at 1:44
  • I found this Hotfix, but even if I remove the "s it doesn't work correctly, but maybe this will help someone else support.microsoft.com/kb/951246. Commented Nov 29, 2011 at 1:48
  • Even if i removed the networking stuff, it still errors out. I want this file to move files during the slow time of my server (IE: 1AM). Commented Nov 29, 2011 at 1:49
  • So what is or isn't the batch file actually doing if not what it is supposed to do? Commented Nov 29, 2011 at 3:23
  • The batch isn't running anything at all when run from the Task Scheduler. Commented Nov 29, 2011 at 15:15

1 Answer 1

2

If batch files are failing to execute as a scheduled task but running fine interactively, it most probably is due to a security / permissions issue. The SYSTEM / LocalSystem account which is often used to run scheduled tasks usually does not have permissions to access any networked resources for example.

What is the security context of your scheduled task? You could try changing it to something more privileged (like a domain administrator account) temporarily as a hypothesis test.

If it works, you should create a new account with a complex password and sufficient privileges to use with tasks. The account password is saved along with the scheduled task - by using a separate account you are following a good security practice and preventing failing task runs whenever the administrator's password changes.

1
  • I'm working the network admin (server admin who setup the server) and trying to get his help with permssions. I was able to fix the second BAT file by adding the folder to the "start in" option but it didn't fix the first BAT. Commented Nov 30, 2011 at 15:10

You must log in to answer this question.

Start asking to get answers

Find the answer to your question by asking.

Ask question

Explore related questions

See similar questions with these tags.