Recently I came across the following tutorial of running cron job without using any Gems
http://www.ameravant.com/posts/recurring-tasks-in-ruby-on-rails-using-runner-and-cron-jobs
I create one file in /app/delete_old_posts.rb
class DeleteOldPosts < ActiveRecord::Base
# This script deletes all posts that are over 5 minutes old
post_ids = Post.find(:all, :conditions => ["created_at < ?", 5.minutes.ago])
if post_ids.size > 0
Post.destroy(post_ids)
puts "#{post_ids.size} posts have been deleted!"
end
Then create cron job by giving crontab -e command and in console of cronjob I wrote
*/2 * * * * /usr/bin/env ruby /home/abc/xyz/urjit.rajgor/workspace/thewall/rails/runner/home/XYZ/ABC/urjit.rajgor/workspace/thewall/app/delete_old_posts.rb
cron job run after every two minutes but it did not work
Please help me.
Thanks
Try using the "whenever" gem.
Allows you to define your cronjobs in ruby being able to specify rails runner, rake, or other custom wrappers and it handles writing the crontab for you. Makes life much simpler.
Just add: gem 'whenever', :require => falseto your gemfile
https://github.com/javan/whenever
http://railscasts.com/episodes/164-cron-in-ruby
Related
I just started using Rails Whenever plugin. I have rake file cron. with task:
task :cron => :environment do
puts "Task invoked!"
end
And in schedule.rb I have this:
every 2.minutes do
rake "cron", enviroment => "development"
end
Once I start my app and specified interval passes, nothing happens? I am pretty new to Ruby and Rails so what am I doing wrong?
You'll need to write the schedule to your crontab. Run this command in your app:
bundle exec whenever --update-crontab myapp
When you run this command, whenever takes the Ruby syntax, translates it to cron syntax and adds it to your crontab.
I have a rails app with dozens of rake tasks defined for admin purpose for now, I want these rake tasks to be reflected on a kind of admin interface, so is there any plug-n-play solution for this or any quick ideas around?
You can get output of rake -T and then parse it with regex. i.e. :
all_tasks = %x(rake -T)
tasks_array = all_tasks.scan(/(rake\s[\w|:]*)/)
rake -T is quite long operation, so you may want to cache it
# lib/tasks/test.rake
task :hello do
puts 'hello'
end
$ rake app:hello
To run the task I need to prefix it with "app:" and it runs in the context of the dummy app. It is also exposed to the host application (i.e when used as a plugin in a parent Rails app) as rake hello.
I want to run a rake task which does not require a Rails environment and runs some command, but it is run from the engine root, not the dummy app root.
I know that's a bit late, but for others here searching for the correct answer, do the following :
Create your task :
# lib/tasks/your_engine_tasks.rake
desc "Explaining what the task does"
task :your_task do
# Task goes here
end
Then go to your engine ./Rakefile and add
load 'lib/tasks/your_engine_tasks.rake'
Here we go, now:
$ rake -T
gives you your task.
Hope I helped.
I want a better answer to this question however I did figure out that you can add tasks in the Rakefile for the engine (so ./Rakefile not in the spec/dummy application) like so:
task :my_task do
puts "hi!"
end
task :default => [:spec, :my_task]
I would prefer to have my task in another file but at least this provides a way to go forward. In my case, I want to run Konacha javascript tests in the dummy application so my Rakefile looks like this:
task :spec_javascript do
exec 'cd spec/dummy && rake konacha:run' # exec passes command return value up stack!
end
task :default => [:spec, :spec_javascript]
I am getting uninitialized constant YAML::ENGINE when running a rake task from cron since I upgraded my server to ruby 1.9.2. I had the same error with the app but putting ...
require 'yaml'
YAML::ENGINE.yamler= 'syck'
in the boot.rb file fixed it. If I run the task directly from the command line on my Ubuntu server it works fine, the server uses RVM.
However running a task from cron doesn't seem to pickup this fix, I have tried this ...
task :twitter, :needs => :environment do
require 'yaml'
YAML::ENGINE.yamler= 'syck'
#tweets = Property.updatetwitter
end
to no avail.
Are you sure you're running it under Ruby 1.9.2? Because while YAML::ENGINE exists in 1.9.2, it's not in 1.8.7. Check your Ruby version.
UPDATE
How to tell which Ruby version program is using from within the program:
puts `ruby -v`
Lame way how to enforce cron task to run under certain Ruby version (if server uses RVM):
rvm use 1.8.7; ...
I have a Rails 3 gem which has some rake tasks that should only be run in the test environment. Running in other environments doesn't really make sense.
My problem is Rake loads the Rails system in order to find my tasks in my gem. So by the time it gets to my tasks Rails is already loaded in the "development" environment (or whatever environment the user specified). This means in order to run my rake tasks properly the user must do:
RAILS_ENV=test rake mytask
Since my task only make sense in the "test" environment this is annoying as I would much rather the user be able to just type:
rake mytask
This is similar to how test:units and test:functionals automatically assume the test environment and the user doesn't need to specify RAILS_ENV=test at the command line. So the question is how do I modify my test so that Rails switches to the test environment?
My current workaround is:
Rails.env = 'test'
ActionMailer::Base.delivery_method = :test
require Rails.root.join('test/test_helper')
This seems to somewhat work but it is still logging to log/development.log and I think it is still actually running the "development" config. Anybody have any ideas? Looking at how the test tasks are defined in Rails itself doesn't reveal how to do it that I can see.
https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/master/railties/lib/rails/test_unit/testing.rake
UPDATE: I've updated my code after taking inputs from Eric's implementation at https://github.com/eric1234/test_inline/commit/fe3da7efa3a2cdb7824c23cfa41697b0ceb9e8e2.
For original code see - https://stackoverflow.com/posts/4600524/revisions
desc "Do something in Test environment"
task :example => :environment do
if not Rails.env.test?
Dir.chdir(Rails.root) do
system "rake example RAILS_ENV=test"
end
else
#.... stuff ....
end
end
I didn't check for the correctness of code, but you get the idea, right?