Introduction
In the past, you may have written a cron configuration entry for each task you needed to schedule on your server. However, this can quickly become a pain because your task schedule is no longer in source control and you must SSH into your server to view your existing cron entries or add additional entries.
Laravel's command scheduler offers a fresh approach to
managing scheduled tasks on your server. The scheduler
allows you to fluently and expressively define your
command schedule within your Laravel application itself.
When using the scheduler, only a single cron entry is
needed on your server. Your task schedule is defined in
the app/Console/Kernel.php
file's
schedule
method. To help you get started, a
simple example is defined within the method.
Defining Schedules
You may define all of your scheduled tasks in the
schedule
method of your application's
App\Console\Kernel
class. To get started,
let's take a look at an example. In this example, we
will schedule a closure to be called every day at
midnight. Within the closure we will execute a database
query to clear a table:
<?php
namespace App\Console;
use Illuminate\Console\Scheduling\Schedule;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Console\Kernel as ConsoleKernel;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
class Kernel extends ConsoleKernel
{
/**
* Define the application's command schedule.
*/
protected function schedule(Schedule $schedule): void
{
$schedule->call(function () {
DB::table('recent_users')->delete();
})->daily();
}
}
In addition to scheduling using closures, you may also
schedule invokable
objects. Invokable objects are simple PHP
classes that contain an __invoke
method:
$schedule->call(new DeleteRecentUsers)->daily();
If you would like to view an overview of your scheduled
tasks and the next time they are scheduled to run, you
may use the schedule:list
Artisan
command:
php artisan schedule:list
Scheduling Artisan Commands
In addition to scheduling closures, you may also schedule
Artisan commands and system
commands. For example, you may use the
command
method to schedule an Artisan
command using either the command's name or class.
When scheduling Artisan commands using the command's class name, you may pass an array of additional command-line arguments that should be provided to the command when it is invoked:
use App\Console\Commands\SendEmailsCommand;
$schedule->command('emails:send Taylor --force')->daily();
$schedule->command(SendEmailsCommand::class, ['Taylor', '--force'])->daily();
Scheduling Queued Jobs
The job
method may be used to schedule a queued job. This method
provides a convenient way to schedule queued jobs
without using the call
method to define
closures to queue the job:
use App\Jobs\Heartbeat;
$schedule->job(new Heartbeat)->everyFiveMinutes();
Optional second and third arguments may be provided to
the job
method which specifies the queue
name and queue connection that should be used to queue
the job:
use App\Jobs\Heartbeat;
// Dispatch the job to the "heartbeats" queue on the "sqs" connection...
$schedule->job(new Heartbeat, 'heartbeats', 'sqs')->everyFiveMinutes();
Scheduling Shell Commands
The exec
method may be used to issue a
command to the operating system:
$schedule->exec('node /home/forge/script.js')->daily();
Schedule Frequency Options
We've already seen a few examples of how you may configure a task to run at specified intervals. However, there are many more task schedule frequencies that you may assign to a task:
Method | Description |
---|---|
->cron('* * * * *'); |
Run the task on a custom cron schedule |
->everySecond(); |
Run the task every second |
->everyTwoSeconds(); |
Run the task every two seconds |
->everyFiveSeconds(); |
Run the task every five seconds |
->everyTenSeconds(); |
Run the task every ten seconds |
->everyFifteenSeconds(); |
Run the task every fifteen seconds |
->everyTwentySeconds(); |
Run the task every twenty seconds |
->everyThirtySeconds(); |
Run the task every thirty seconds |
->everyMinute(); |
Run the task every minute |
->everyTwoMinutes(); |
Run the task every two minutes |
->everyThreeMinutes(); |
Run the task every three minutes |
->everyFourMinutes(); |
Run the task every four minutes |
->everyFiveMinutes(); |
Run the task every five minutes |
->everyTenMinutes(); |
Run the task every ten minutes |
->everyFifteenMinutes(); |
Run the task every fifteen minutes |
->everyThirtyMinutes(); |
Run the task every thirty minutes |
->hourly(); |
Run the task every hour |
->hourlyAt(17); |
Run the task every hour at 17 minutes past the hour |
->everyOddHour($minutes =
0); |
Run the task every odd hour |
->everyTwoHours($minutes =
0); |
Run the task every two hours |
->everyThreeHours($minutes =
0); |
Run the task every three hours |
->everyFourHours($minutes =
0); |
Run the task every four hours |
->everySixHours($minutes =
0); |
Run the task every six hours |
->daily(); |
Run the task every day at midnight |
->dailyAt('13:00'); |
Run the task every day at 13:00 |
->twiceDaily(1,
13); |
Run the task daily at 1:00 & 13:00 |
->twiceDailyAt(1, 13,
15); |
Run the task daily at 1:15 & 13:15 |
->weekly(); |
Run the task every Sunday at 00:00 |
->weeklyOn(1,
'8:00'); |
Run the task every week on Monday at 8:00 |
->monthly(); |
Run the task on the first day of every month at 00:00 |
->monthlyOn(4,
'15:00'); |
Run the task every month on the 4th at 15:00 |
->twiceMonthly(1, 16,
'13:00'); |
Run the task monthly on the 1st and 16th at 13:00 |
->lastDayOfMonth('15:00'); |
Run the task on the last day of the month at 15:00 |
->quarterly(); |
Run the task on the first day of every quarter at 00:00 |
->quarterlyOn(4,
'14:00'); |
Run the task every quarter on the 4th at 14:00 |
->yearly(); |
Run the task on the first day of every year at 00:00 |
->yearlyOn(6, 1,
'17:00'); |
Run the task every year on June 1st at 17:00 |
->timezone('America/New_York'); |
Set the timezone for the task |
These methods may be combined with additional constraints to create even more finely tuned schedules that only run on certain days of the week. For example, you may schedule a command to run weekly on Monday:
// Run once per week on Monday at 1 PM...
$schedule->call(function () {
// ...
})->weekly()->mondays()->at('13:00');
// Run hourly from 8 AM to 5 PM on weekdays...
$schedule->command('foo')
->weekdays()
->hourly()
->timezone('America/Chicago')
->between('8:00', '17:00');
A list of additional schedule constraints may be found below:
Method | Description |
---|---|
->weekdays(); |
Limit the task to weekdays |
->weekends(); |
Limit the task to weekends |
->sundays(); |
Limit the task to Sunday |
->mondays(); |
Limit the task to Monday |
->tuesdays(); |
Limit the task to Tuesday |
->wednesdays(); |
Limit the task to Wednesday |
->thursdays(); |
Limit the task to Thursday |
->fridays(); |
Limit the task to Friday |
->saturdays(); |
Limit the task to Saturday |
->days(array|mixed); |
Limit the task to specific days |
->between($startTime,
$endTime); |
Limit the task to run between start and end times |
->unlessBetween($startTime,
$endTime); |
Limit the task to not run between start and end times |
->when(Closure); |
Limit the task based on a truth test |
->environments($env); |
Limit the task to specific environments |
Day Constraints
The days
method may be used to limit the
execution of a task to specific days of the week. For
example, you may schedule a command to run hourly on
Sundays and Wednesdays:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->hourly()
->days([0, 3]);
Alternatively, you may use the constants available on the
Illuminate\Console\Scheduling\Schedule
class when defining the days on which a task should
run:
use Illuminate\Console\Scheduling\Schedule;
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->hourly()
->days([Schedule::SUNDAY, Schedule::WEDNESDAY]);
Between Time Constraints
The between
method may be used to limit the
execution of a task based on the time of day:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->hourly()
->between('7:00', '22:00');
Similarly, the unlessBetween
method can be
used to exclude the execution of a task for a period of
time:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->hourly()
->unlessBetween('23:00', '4:00');
Truth Test Constraints
The when
method may be used to limit the
execution of a task based on the result of a given truth
test. In other words, if the given closure returns
true
, the task will execute as long as no
other constraining conditions prevent the task from
running:
$schedule->command('emails:send')->daily()->when(function () {
return true;
});
The skip
method may be seen as the inverse
of when
. If the skip
method
returns true
, the scheduled task will not
be executed:
$schedule->command('emails:send')->daily()->skip(function () {
return true;
});
When using chained when
methods, the
scheduled command will only execute if all
when
conditions return
true
.
Environment Constraints
The environments
method may be used to
execute tasks only on the given environments (as defined
by the APP_ENV
environment
variable):
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->environments(['staging', 'production']);
Timezones
Using the timezone
method, you may specify
that a scheduled task's time should be interpreted
within a given timezone:
$schedule->command('report:generate')
->timezone('America/New_York')
->at('2:00')
If you are repeatedly assigning the same timezone to all
of your scheduled tasks, you may wish to define a
scheduleTimezone
method in your
App\Console\Kernel
class. This method
should return the default timezone that should be
assigned to all scheduled tasks:
use DateTimeZone;
/**
* Get the timezone that should be used by default for scheduled events.
*/
protected function scheduleTimezone(): DateTimeZone|string|null
{
return 'America/Chicago';
}
Warning!
Remember that some timezones utilize daylight savings time. When daylight saving time changes occur, your scheduled task may run twice or even not run at all. For this reason, we recommend avoiding timezone scheduling when possible.
Preventing Task Overlaps
By default, scheduled tasks will be run even if the
previous instance of the task is still running. To
prevent this, you may use the
withoutOverlapping
method:
$schedule->command('emails:send')->withoutOverlapping();
In this example, the emails:send
Artisan command will be run
every minute if it is not already running. The
withoutOverlapping
method is especially
useful if you have tasks that vary drastically in their
execution time, preventing you from predicting exactly
how long a given task will take.
If needed, you may specify how many minutes must pass before the "without overlapping" lock expires. By default, the lock will expire after 24 hours:
$schedule->command('emails:send')->withoutOverlapping(10);
Behind the scenes, the withoutOverlapping
method utilizes your application's cache to obtain locks. If
necessary, you can clear these cache locks using the
schedule:clear-cache
Artisan command. This
is typically only necessary if a task becomes stuck due
to an unexpected server problem.
Running Tasks on One Server
Warning!
To utilize this feature, your application must be using thedatabase
,memcached
,dynamodb
, orredis
cache driver as your application's default cache driver. In addition, all servers must be communicating with the same central cache server.
If your application's scheduler is running on multiple servers, you may limit a scheduled job to only execute on a single server. For instance, assume you have a scheduled task that generates a new report every Friday night. If the task scheduler is running on three worker servers, the scheduled task will run on all three servers and generate the report three times. Not good!
To indicate that the task should run on only one server,
use the onOneServer
method when defining
the scheduled task. The first server to obtain the task
will secure an atomic lock on the job to prevent other
servers from running the same task at the same time:
$schedule->command('report:generate')
->fridays()
->at('17:00')
->onOneServer();
Naming Single Server Jobs
Sometimes you may need to schedule the same job to be
dispatched with different parameters, while still
instructing Laravel to run each permutation of the job
on a single server. To accomplish this, you may assign
each schedule definition a unique name via the
name
method:
$schedule->job(new CheckUptime('https://laravel.com'))
->name('check_uptime:laravel.com')
->everyFiveMinutes()
->onOneServer();
$schedule->job(new CheckUptime('https://vapor.laravel.com'))
->name('check_uptime:vapor.laravel.com')
->everyFiveMinutes()
->onOneServer();
Similarly, scheduled closures must be assigned a name if they are intended to be run on one server:
$schedule->call(fn () => User::resetApiRequestCount())
->name('reset-api-request-count')
->daily()
->onOneServer();
Background Tasks
By default, multiple tasks scheduled at the same time
will execute sequentially based on the order they are
defined in your schedule
method. If you
have long-running tasks, this may cause subsequent tasks
to start much later than anticipated. If you would like
to run tasks in the background so that they may all run
simultaneously, you may use the
runInBackground
method:
$schedule->command('analytics:report')
->daily()
->runInBackground();
Warning!
TherunInBackground
method may only be used when scheduling tasks via thecommand
andexec
methods.
Maintenance Mode
Your application's scheduled tasks will not run when the
application is in maintenance
mode, since we don't want your tasks to
interfere with any unfinished maintenance you may be
performing on your server. However, if you would like to
force a task to run even in maintenance mode, you may
call the evenInMaintenanceMode
method when
defining the task:
$schedule->command('emails:send')->evenInMaintenanceMode();
Running the Scheduler
Now that we have learned how to define scheduled tasks,
let's discuss how to actually run them on our server.
The schedule:run
Artisan command will
evaluate all of your scheduled tasks and determine if
they need to run based on the server's current time.
So, when using Laravel's scheduler, we only need to add a
single cron configuration entry to our server that runs
the schedule:run
command every minute. If
you do not know how to add cron entries to your server,
consider using a service such as Laravel Forge
which can manage the cron entries for you:
* * * * * cd /path-to-your-project && php artisan schedule:run >> /dev/null 2>&1
Sub-Minute Scheduled Tasks
On most operating systems, cron jobs are limited to running a maximum of once per minute. However, Laravel's scheduler allows you to schedule tasks to run at more frequent intervals, even as often as once per second:
$schedule->call(function () {
DB::table('recent_users')->delete();
})->everySecond();
When sub-minute tasks are defined within your
application, the schedule:run
command will
continue running until the end of the current minute
instead of exiting immediately. This allows the command
to invoke all required sub-minute tasks throughout the
minute.
Since sub-minute tasks that take longer than expected to run could delay the execution of later sub-minute tasks, it is recommend that all sub-minute tasks dispatch queued jobs or background commands to handle the actual task processing:
use App\Jobs\DeleteRecentUsers;
$schedule->job(new DeleteRecentUsers)->everyTenSeconds();
$schedule->command('users:delete')->everyTenSeconds()->runInBackground();
Interrupting Sub-Minute Tasks
As the schedule:run
command runs for the
entire minute of invocation when sub-minute tasks are
defined, you may sometimes need to interrupt the command
when deploying your application. Otherwise, an instance
of the schedule:run
command that is already
running would continue using your application's
previously deployed code until the current minute
ends.
To interrupt in-progress schedule:run
invocations, you may add the
schedule:interrupt
command to your
application's deployment script. This command should be
invoked after your application is finished
deploying:
php artisan schedule:interrupt
Running the Scheduler Locally
Typically, you would not add a scheduler cron entry to
your local development machine. Instead, you may use the
schedule:work
Artisan command. This command
will run in the foreground and invoke the scheduler
every minute until you terminate the command:
php artisan schedule:work
Task Output
The Laravel scheduler provides several convenient methods
for working with the output generated by scheduled
tasks. First, using the sendOutputTo
method, you may send the output to a file for later
inspection:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->sendOutputTo($filePath);
If you would like to append the output to a given file,
you may use the appendOutputTo
method:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->appendOutputTo($filePath);
Using the emailOutputTo
method, you may
email the output to an email address of your choice.
Before emailing the output of a task, you should
configure Laravel's email
services:
$schedule->command('report:generate')
->daily()
->sendOutputTo($filePath)
->emailOutputTo('taylor@example.com');
If you only want to email the output if the scheduled
Artisan or system command terminates with a non-zero
exit code, use the emailOutputOnFailure
method:
$schedule->command('report:generate')
->daily()
->emailOutputOnFailure('taylor@example.com');
Warning!
TheemailOutputTo
,emailOutputOnFailure
,sendOutputTo
, andappendOutputTo
methods are exclusive to thecommand
andexec
methods.
Task Hooks
Using the before
and after
methods, you may specify code to be executed before and
after the scheduled task is executed:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->before(function () {
// The task is about to execute...
})
->after(function () {
// The task has executed...
});
The onSuccess
and onFailure
methods allow you to specify code to be executed if the
scheduled task succeeds or fails. A failure indicates
that the scheduled Artisan or system command terminated
with a non-zero exit code:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->onSuccess(function () {
// The task succeeded...
})
->onFailure(function () {
// The task failed...
});
If output is available from your command, you may access
it in your after
, onSuccess
or
onFailure
hooks by type-hinting an
Illuminate\Support\Stringable
instance as
the $output
argument of your hook's closure
definition:
use Illuminate\Support\Stringable;
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->onSuccess(function (Stringable $output) {
// The task succeeded...
})
->onFailure(function (Stringable $output) {
// The task failed...
});
Pinging URLs
Using the pingBefore
and
thenPing
methods, the scheduler can
automatically ping a given URL before or after a task is
executed. This method is useful for notifying an
external service, such as Envoyer, that your
scheduled task is beginning or has finished
execution:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->pingBefore($url)
->thenPing($url);
The pingBeforeIf
and thenPingIf
methods may be used to ping a given URL only if a given
condition is true
:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->pingBeforeIf($condition, $url)
->thenPingIf($condition, $url);
The pingOnSuccess
and
pingOnFailure
methods may be used to ping a
given URL only if the task succeeds or fails. A failure
indicates that the scheduled Artisan or system command
terminated with a non-zero exit code:
$schedule->command('emails:send')
->daily()
->pingOnSuccess($successUrl)
->pingOnFailure($failureUrl);
All of the ping methods require the Guzzle HTTP library. Guzzle is typically installed in all new Laravel projects by default, but, you may manually install Guzzle into your project using the Composer package manager if it has been accidentally removed:
composer require guzzlehttp/guzzle
Events
If needed, you may listen to events dispatched by the
scheduler. Typically, event listener mappings will be
defined within your application's
App\Providers\EventServiceProvider
class:
/**
* The event listener mappings for the application.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $listen = [
'Illuminate\Console\Events\ScheduledTaskStarting' => [
'App\Listeners\LogScheduledTaskStarting',
],
'Illuminate\Console\Events\ScheduledTaskFinished' => [
'App\Listeners\LogScheduledTaskFinished',
],
'Illuminate\Console\Events\ScheduledBackgroundTaskFinished' => [
'App\Listeners\LogScheduledBackgroundTaskFinished',
],
'Illuminate\Console\Events\ScheduledTaskSkipped' => [
'App\Listeners\LogScheduledTaskSkipped',
],
'Illuminate\Console\Events\ScheduledTaskFailed' => [
'App\Listeners\LogScheduledTaskFailed',
],
];