+#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
+$ crontab -e
+0 0 * * * /bin/bash ~/.local/bin/cron/dailylog.sh
+@reboot /bin/bash ~/.local/bin/cron/dailylog.sh
+#+END_EXAMPLE
+
+In the example script, the options are:
+
+: -c : tells bklog to compress output
+: -e : tells bklog log to encrypt output
+: -r : tells bklog to interpret the next argument as a pubkey string
+: -R : tells bklog to interpret the next argument as a directory
+: where public keys may be found (first line of each file is
+: read).
+: -o : tells bklog to write output files to the directory represented
+: -t : tells bklog to interpret the next argument as a directory
+: for storing temporary files
+: by the next argument
+: -p : tells bklog a command string through which output is piped
+: before being compressed and encrypted. Also expected is a
+: file extension to be appended before the compression and
+: encryption file extensions.
+: -w : tells bklog to save the unprocessed stdin with a specified
+: file extension (instead of the default '.stdin').
+: -b : tells bklog how long each buffer round (time between file
+: writes) lasts in seconds.
+: -B : specifies the time-to-live for the bklog script. A valid value may
+: one of the time elements such as "day" or "hour".
+: -l : specfies a custom string to be used in output file names to
+: help differentiate tar files produced via bklog from different
+: sources of data.
+: -z : specifies a time zone to be used to determine the script time-to-live.
+: By default, bklog uses whatever time is specified by the TZ
+: environment variable.