Is it possible to have cron job running on Amazon lightsail instance?
If you are using node.js, you can do this by adding a few lines to your crontab. First, open the crontab
crontab -e
Add these three lines at the end of the file. I'm assuming you are using forever.
PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/opt/bitnami/nodejs/bin:
@reboot cd /home/bitnami/**THISISYOURFOLDER** && /opt/bitnami/nodejs/bin/forever **NAMEOFYOURAPP.JS**
0 1 * * * sudo reboot
This will run your app that is in THISISYOURFOLDER when the system reboots. In addition, I'm setting it up to reboot at 1am everyday with this setting.
To test this, you can use
* * * * * cd /home/bitnami/**THISISYOURFOLDER** && touch myfile.txt
in your crontab. This needs to create myfile.txt in your target folder after a minute. If it doesn't you need to change your path setting. There is also a difference between
sudo crontab -e
crontab -e
Find time settings at https://crontab.guru/
To answer my own question, just 8 hours later: It IS possible to issue cron jobs on Amazon Lightsail instances
Here is a working example of running a PHP script:
- Connect to your Lightsail instance either by logging in to your lightsail account and clicking "Connect using SSH" or using a SSH client, such as PuTTY.
Create a folder called 'projects' in /home/bitnami/ and create a simple .php file called Hello World:
<?php print("Hello World"); ?>
Use command
crontab -e
to access a document, from where you can add lines that will be your scheduled cron jobs.Append two lines to the document AND ADD A NEWLINE:
PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/opt/bitnami/php/bin: * * * * * php -f /home/bitnami/projects/HelloWorld.php > /home/bitnami/projects/Out.put
Line 1 adds php to the cron path (Cron sees a different path than what is given in the environment variables. Type: env and hit enter in the console). To see which env variables are given to cron replace line 2 with:
* * * * * env > /tmp/env.output
and look in the file. Line 2 is the cron schedule. The asterisks means: Do this every minute of every hour, day, month, year. Search Google for this :) And will output to a file calledOut.put
.Wait 1 minute and see that
Out.put
has been created and contains the magic words of Hello World
If you are having problems with cron jobs not working, check out this troubleshooting guide: https://stackoverflow.com/tags/cron/info
Hope this helps. If it does not, post a comment before downvoting!