bin | ||
libexec/kiwi-cron | ||
.drone.yml | ||
Dockerfile | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
kiwi-cron
kiwi
- simple, consistent, powerful
Simple cron-jobs for kiwi-scp
Quick start
kiwi-cron
comes with a (slightly) opinionated cron
daemon config for periodic jobs.
Just drop your scripts into the relevant directory under /kiwi-cron
, that's it.
You will likely want to automate some tasks regarding your docker
infrastructure.
That's why the kiwi-cron
images package a current docker-cli
– you can just mount your docker.sock
in its containers and use docker
commands normally.
Simple jobs
On startup, kiwi-cron
checks for possible job files in the /kiwi-cron
directory structure.
For each subdirectory, a random valid cron schedule is generated, so that:
/kiwi-cron/hourly
runs once every hour (random minute)/kiwi-cron/daily
runs once every day (random nighttime value)/kiwi-cron/weekly
runs once every weekend (random nighttime value on Saturday or Sunday)/kiwi-cron/monthly
runs once every month (random nighttime value on a random day)/kiwi-cron/yearly
and/kiwi-cron/annually
runs once a year (random nighttime value on a random day in January or February)
Cron schedules are regenerated once on each startup, only for directories that have files.
Finer granularity: The /kiwi-cron/every
directory
Directories like /kiwi-cron/every/5_minutes
will run scripts every 5 minutes.
kiwi-cron
picks up on that format and generates valid cron
schedules on startup.
You can define schedules to be run every N minutes, hours, days, or months by creating the corresponding directories.
Scheduling for every N weeks (or years) doesn't work that way; jobs in those directories will instead be run every week (or every year).
Inspection
Checking the generated cron
schedules is done using the standard crontab
command:
docker exec kiwi-cron-container crontab -l
will show the effective schedules.