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cron

v3.3.1

Published

Cron jobs for your node

Downloads

9,950,086

Readme

Cron for Node.js

Version Monthly Downloads Build Status CodeQL Status Coverage Renovate OpenSSF Scorecard Discord

🌟 Features

  • execute a function whenever your scheduled job triggers
  • execute a job external to the javascript process (like a system command) using child_process
  • use a Date or Luxon DateTime object instead of cron syntax as the trigger for your callback
  • use an additional slot for seconds (leaving it off will default to 0 and match the Unix behavior)

🚀 Installation

npm install cron

Table of Contents

  1. Features
  2. Installation
  3. Migrating from v2 to v3
  4. Basic Usage
  5. Cron Patterns
  6. Gotchas
  7. API
  8. Community
  9. Contributing
  10. Acknowledgements
  11. License

🔄 Migrating from v2 to v3

With the introduction of TypeScript in version 3 and alignment with UNIX cron patterns, a few changes have been made:

Month & day-of-week indexing changes

  • Month Indexing: Changed from 0-11 to 1-12. So you need to increment all numeric months by 1.

  • Day-of-Week Indexing: Support added for 7 as Sunday.

Adjustments in CronJob

  • The constructor no longer accepts an object as its first and only params. Use CronJob.from(argsObject) instead.
  • Callbacks are now called in the order they were registered.
  • nextDates(count?: number) now always returns an array (empty if no argument is provided). Use nextDate() instead for a single date.

Removed methods

  • removed job() method in favor of new CronJob(...args) / CronJob.from(argsObject)

  • removed time() method in favor of new CronTime()

🛠 Basic Usage

import { CronJob } from 'cron';

const job = new CronJob(
	'* * * * * *', // cronTime
	function () {
		console.log('You will see this message every second');
	}, // onTick
	null, // onComplete
	true, // start
	'America/Los_Angeles' // timeZone
);
// job.start() is optional here because of the fourth parameter set to true.
// equivalent job using the "from" static method, providing parameters as an object
const job = CronJob.from({
	cronTime: '* * * * * *',
	onTick: function () {
		console.log('You will see this message every second');
	},
	start: true,
	timeZone: 'America/Los_Angeles'
});

Note: In the first example above, the fourth parameter to CronJob() starts the job automatically. If not provided or set to falsy, you must explicitly start the job using job.start().

For more advanced examples, check the examples directory.

Cron Patterns

Cron patterns are the backbone of this library. Familiarize yourself with the syntax:

- `*` Asterisks: Any value
- `1-3,5` Ranges: Ranges and individual values
- `*/2` Steps: Every two units

Detailed patterns and explanations are available at crontab.org. The examples in the link have five fields, and 1 minute as the finest granularity, but our cron scheduling supports an enhanced format with six fields, allowing for second-level precision. Tools like crontab.guru can help in constructing patterns but remember to account for the seconds field.

Supported Ranges

Here's a quick reference to the UNIX Cron format this library uses, plus an added second field:

field          allowed values
-----          --------------
second         0-59
minute         0-59
hour           0-23
day of month   1-31
month          1-12 (or names, see below)
day of week    0-7 (0 or 7 is Sunday, or use names)

Names can also be used for the 'month' and 'day of week' fields. Use the first three letters of the particular day or month (case does not matter). Ranges and lists of names are allowed.
Examples: "mon,wed,fri", "jan-mar".

Gotchas

  • Both JS Date and Luxon DateTime objects don't guarantee millisecond precision due to computation delays. This module excludes millisecond precision for standard cron syntax but allows execution date specification through JS Date or Luxon DateTime objects. However, specifying a precise future execution time, such as adding a millisecond to the current time, may not always work due to these computation delays. It's observed that delays less than 4-5 ms might lead to inconsistencies. While we could limit all date granularity to seconds, we've chosen to allow greater precision but advise users of potential issues.

  • Using arrow functions for onTick binds them to the parent's this context. As a result, they won't have access to the cronjob's this context. You can read a little more in issue #47 (comment).

API

Standalone Functions

  • sendAt: Indicates when a CronTime will execute (returns a Luxon DateTime object).

    import * as cron from 'cron';
    
    const dt = cron.sendAt('0 0 * * *');
    console.log(`The job would run at: ${dt.toISO()}`);
  • timeout: Indicates the number of milliseconds in the future at which a CronTime will execute (returns a number).

    import * as cron from 'cron';
    
    const timeout = cron.timeout('0 0 * * *');
    console.log(`The job would run in ${timeout}ms`);

CronJob Class

Constructor

constructor(cronTime, onTick, onComplete, start, timeZone, context, runOnInit, utcOffset, unrefTimeout):

  • cronTime: [REQUIRED] - The time to fire off your job. Can be cron syntax, a JS Date object or a Luxon DateTime object.

  • onTick: [REQUIRED] - Function to execute at the specified time. If an onComplete callback was provided, onTick will receive it as an argument.

  • onComplete: [OPTIONAL] - Invoked when the job is halted with job.stop(). It might also be triggered by onTick post its run.

  • start: [OPTIONAL] - Determines if the job should commence before constructor exit. Default is false.

  • timeZone: [OPTIONAL] - Sets the execution time zone. Default is local time. Check valid formats in the Luxon documentation.

  • context: [OPTIONAL] - Execution context for the onTick method.

  • runOnInit: [OPTIONAL] - Instantly triggers the onTick function post initialization. Default is false.

  • utcOffset: [OPTIONAL] - Specifies time zone offset in minutes. Cannot co-exist with timeZone.

  • unrefTimeout: [OPTIONAL] - Useful for controlling event loop behavior. More details here.

  • waitForCompletion: [OPTIONAL] - If true, no additional instances of the onTick callback function will run until the current onTick callback has completed. Any new scheduled executions that occur while the current callback is running will be skipped entirely. Default is false.

Methods

  • from (static): Create a new CronJob object providing arguments as an object. See argument names and descriptions above.

  • start: Initiates the job.

  • stop: Halts the job.

  • setTime: Modifies the time for the CronJob. Parameter must be a CronTime.

  • lastDate: Provides the last execution date.

  • nextDate: Indicates the subsequent date that will activate an onTick.

  • nextDates(count): Supplies an array of upcoming dates that will initiate an onTick.

  • fireOnTick: Allows modification of the onTick calling behavior.

  • addCallback: Permits addition of onTick callbacks.

Properties

  • isCallbackRunning: [READ-ONLY] Indicates if a callback is currently executing.

    const job = new CronJob('* * * * * *', async () => {
    	console.log(job.isCallbackRunning); // true during callback execution
    	await someAsyncTask();
    	console.log(job.isCallbackRunning); // still true until callback completes
    });
    
    console.log(job.isCallbackRunning); // false
    job.start();
    console.log(job.running); // true (schedule is active)
    console.log(job.isCallbackRunning); // false (no callback executing)

CronTime Class

Constructor

constructor(time, zone, utcOffset):

  • time: [REQUIRED] - The time to initiate your job. Accepts cron syntax or a JS Date object.

  • zone: [OPTIONAL] - Equivalent to timeZone from CronJob parameters.

  • utcOffset: [OPTIONAL] - Analogous to utcOffset from CronJob parameters.

🤝 Community

Join the Discord server! Here you can discuss issues and get help in a more casual forum than GitHub.

🌍 Contributing

This project is looking for help! If you're interested in helping with the project, please take a look at our contributing documentation.

🐛 Submitting Bugs/Issues

Please have a look at our contributing documentation, it contains all the information you need to know before submitting an issue.

🙏 Acknowledgements

This is a community effort project. In the truest sense, this project started as an open source project from cron.js and grew into something else. Other people have contributed code, time, and oversight to the project. At this point there are too many to name here so we'll just say thanks.

Special thanks to Hiroki Horiuchi, Lundarl Gholoi and koooge for their work on the DefinitelyTyped typings before they were imported in v2.4.0.

License

MIT