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Supercronic

Supercronic has an announcement blog post over here!

Supercronic is a crontab-compatible job runner, designed specifically to run in containers.

Why Supercronic?

Crontabs are the lingua franca of job scheduling, but typical server cron implementations are ill-suited for container environments:

  • They purge their environment before starting jobs. This is an important security feature in multi-user systems, but it breaks a fundamental configuration mechanism for containers.
  • They capture the output from the jobs they run, and often either want to email this output or simply discard it. In a containerized environment, logging task output and errors to stdout / stderr is often easier to work with.
  • They often don't respond gracefully to SIGINT / SIGTERM / SIGQUIT, and may leave running jobs orphaned when signaled. Again, this makes sense in a server environment where init will handle the orphan jobs and Cron isn't restarted often anyway, but it's inappropriate in a container environment as it'll result in jobs being forcefully terminated (i.e. SIGKILL'ed) when the container exits.
  • They often try to send their logs to syslog. This conveniently provides centralized logging when a syslog server is running, but with containers, simply logging to stdout or stderr is preferred.

Finally, they are often quiet, making these issues difficult to understand and debug!

Supercronic's goal is to behave exactly how you would expect cron running in a container to behave:

  • Your environment variables are available in jobs
  • Job output is logged to stdout / stderr
  • SIGTERM triggers a graceful shutdown (and so does SIGINT, which you can deliver via CTRL C when used interactively)
  • Job return codes and schedules are logged to stdout / stderr
  • SIGUSR2 triggers a graceful shutdown and reloads the crontab configuration
  • SIGQUIT triggers a graceful shutdown

How does it work?

  • Install Supercronic (see below)
  • Point it at a crontab: supercronic CRONTAB
  • You're done!

Who is it for?

We (Aptible) originally created Supercronic to make it easy for customers of our No Infrastructure Platform to incorporate periodic jobs in their apps, but it's more broadly applicable to anyone running cron jobs in containers.

Installation

Download

The easiest way to install Supercronic is to download a pre-built binary.

Navigate to the releases page, and grab the build that suits your system. The releases include example Dockerfile stanzas to install Supercronic that you can easily include in your own Dockerfile or adjust as needed.

Note: If you are unsure which binary is right for you, try supercronic-linux-amd64.

Build

You can also build Supercronic from source.

Run the following to fetch Supercronic, install its dependencies, and install it:

go get -d github.com/aptible/supercronic
cd "${GOPATH}/src/github.com/aptible/supercronic"
go mod vendor
go install

Crontab format

Broadly speaking, Supercronic tries to process crontabs just like Vixie cron does. In most cases, it should be compatible with your existing crontab.

There are, however, a few exceptions:

  • First, Supercronic supports second-resolution schedules: Under the hood, Supercronic uses the cronexpr package, so refer to its documentation to know exactly what you can do.
  • Second, Supercronic does not support changing users when running tasks. Setting USER in your crontab will have no effect. Changing users is usually best accomplished in container environments via other means, e.g., by adding a USER directive to your Dockerfile.

Here's an example crontab:

# Run every minute
*/1 * * * * echo "hello"

# Run every 2 seconds
*/2 * * * * * * ls 2>/dev/null

# Run once every hour
@hourly echo "$SOME_HOURLY_JOB"

Environment variables

Just like regular cron, Supercronic lets you specify environment variables in your crontab using a KEY=VALUE syntax.

However, this is only here for compatibility with existing crontabs, and using this feature is generally not recommended when using Supercronic.

Indeed, Supercronic does not wipe your environment before running jobs, so if you need environment variables to be available when your jobs run, just set them before starting Supercronic itself, and your jobs will inherit them.

For example, if you're using Docker, jobs started by Supercronic will inherit the environment variables defined using ENV directives in your Dockerfile, and variables passed when you run the container (e.g. via docker run -e SOME_VARIABLE=SOME_VALUE).

Unless you've used cron before, this is exactly how you expect environment variables to work!

Timezone

Supercronic uses your current timezone from /etc/localtime to schedule jobs. You can also override the timezone by setting the environment variable TZ (e.g. TZ=Europe/Berlin) when running Supercronic. You may need to install tzdata in order for Supercronic to find the supplied timezone.

You can override TZ to use a different timezone, but if you need your cron jobs to be scheduled in a timezone A and have them run in a timezone B, you can run with /etc/localtime or TZ set to B and add a CRON_TZ=A line to your crontab.

If you're unsure what timezone Supercronic is using, you can run it with the -debug flag to confirm.

Logging

Supercronic provides rich logging, and will let you know exactly what command triggered a given message. Here's an example:

$ cat ./my-crontab
*/5 * * * * * * echo "hello from Supercronic"

$ ./supercronic ./my-crontab
INFO[2017-07-10T19:40:44 02:00] read crontab: ./my-crontab
INFO[2017-07-10T19:40:50 02:00] starting                                      iteration=0 job.command="echo "hello from Supercronic"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"
INFO[2017-07-10T19:40:50 02:00] hello from Supercronic                        channel=stdout iteration=0 job.command="echo "hello from Supercronic"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"
INFO[2017-07-10T19:40:50 02:00] job succeeded                                 iteration=0 job.command="echo "hello from Supercronic"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"
INFO[2017-07-10T19:40:55 02:00] starting                                      iteration=1 job.command="echo "hello from Supercronic"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"
INFO[2017-07-10T19:40:55 02:00] hello from Supercronic                        channel=stdout iteration=1 job.command="echo "hello from Supercronic"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"
INFO[2017-07-10T19:40:55 02:00] job succeeded                                 iteration=1 job.command="echo "hello from Supercronic"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"

Debugging

If your jobs aren't running, or you'd simply like to double-check your crontab syntax, pass the -debug flag for more verbose logging:

$ ./supercronic -debug ./my-crontab
INFO[2017-07-10T19:43:51 02:00] read crontab: ./my-crontab
DEBU[2017-07-10T19:43:51 02:00] try parse(7): */5 * * * * * * echo "hello from Supercronic"[0:15] = */5 * * * * * *
DEBU[2017-07-10T19:43:51 02:00] job will run next at 2017-07-10 19:44:00  0200 CEST  job.command="echo "hello from Supercronic"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"

Duplicate Jobs

Supercronic will wait for a given job to finish before that job is scheduled again (some cron implementations do this, others don't). If a job is falling behind schedule (i.e. it's taking too long to finish), Supercronic will warn you.

Here is an example:

$ cat ./my-crontab
# Sleep for 2 seconds every second. This will take too long.
* * * * * * * sleep 2

$ ./supercronic ./my-crontab
INFO[2017-07-11T12:24:25 02:00] read crontab: ./my-crontab
INFO[2017-07-11T12:24:27 02:00] starting                                      iteration=0 job.command="sleep 2" job.position=0 job.schedule="* * * * * * *"
INFO[2017-07-11T12:24:29 02:00] job succeeded                                 iteration=0 job.command="sleep 2" job.position=0 job.schedule="* * * * * * *"
WARN[2017-07-11T12:24:29 02:00] job took too long to run: it should have started 1.009438854s ago  job.command="sleep 2" job.position=0 job.schedule="* * * * * * *"
INFO[2017-07-11T12:24:30 02:00] starting                                      iteration=1 job.command="sleep 2" job.position=0 job.schedule="* * * * * * *"
INFO[2017-07-11T12:24:32 02:00] job succeeded                                 iteration=1 job.command="sleep 2" job.position=0 job.schedule="* * * * * * *"
WARN[2017-07-11T12:24:32 02:00] job took too long to run: it should have started 1.014474099s ago  job.command="sleep 2" job.position=0 job.schedule="* * * * * * *"

You can optionally disable this behavior and allow overlapping instances of your jobs by passing the -overlapping flag to Supercronic. Supercronic will still warn about jobs falling behind, but will run duplicate instances of them.

Reload crontab

Send SIGUSR2 to Supercronic to reload the crontab:

# docker environment (Supercronic needs to be PID 1 in the container)
docker kill --signal=USR2 <container id>

# shell
kill -USR2 <pid>

If you are running Supercronic in an environment were sending SIGUSR2 is a bit of a hassle, or you expect frequent updates to your crontab file, you may opt to run Supercronic with the -inotify flag. This will start a watch on the crontab file, reloading it on changes. An example use case would be a kubernetes pod runnning Supercronic that mounts its crontab file from a configMap. With the -inotify flag, any update to this configmap, provided it is not immutable, will trigger a reload in Supercronic, without you having to figure out a mechanism to send the SIGUSR2 signal to the pod. The watch on the crontab file triggers on Write and Remove events, the latter ensures detection of kubernetes' atomic writes.

$ ./supercronic -inotify ./my-crontab
...
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="event: CHMOD         \"./my-crontab\", watch-list: []"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="event: REMOVE        \"./my-crontab\", watch-list: []"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="watched file changed"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=info msg="received user defined signal 2, reloading crontab"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=info msg="waiting for jobs to finish"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="shutting down" job.command="sleep 2" job.position=0 job.schedule="* * * * *"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=info msg="read crontab: ./my-crontab"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="try parse (7 fields): '* * * * * sleep 5'"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="failed to parse (7 fields): '* * * * * sleep 5': failed: syntax error in day-of-week field: 'sleep'"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="try parse (6 fields): '* * * * * sleep'"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="failed to parse (6 fields): '* * * * * sleep': failed: syntax error in year field: 'sleep'"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="try parse (5 fields): '* * * * *'"
time="2024-09-11T09:23:18 02:00" level=debug msg="job will run next at 2024-09-11 09:24:00  0200 CEST" job.command="sleep 5" job.position=0 job.schedule="* * * * *"

Testing your crontab

Use the -test flag to prompt Supercronic to verify your crontab, but not execute it. This is useful as part of e.g. a build process to verify the syntax of your crontab.

Level-based logging

By default, Supersonic routes all logs to stderr. If you wish to change this behaviour to level-based logging, pass the -split-logs flag to route debug and info level logs to stdout:

$ ./supercronic -split-logs ./my-crontab 1>./stdout.log
$ cat ./stdout.log
time="2019-01-12T19:34:57 09:00" level=info msg="read crontab: ./my-crontab"
time="2019-01-12T19:35:00 09:00" level=info msg=starting iteration=0 job.command="echo \"hello from Supercronic\"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"
time="2019-01-12T19:35:00 09:00" level=info msg="hello from Supercronic" channel=stdout iteration=0 job.command="echo \"hello from Supercronic\"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"
time="2019-01-12T19:35:00 09:00" level=info msg="job succeeded" iteration=0 job.command="echo \"hello from Supercronic\"" job.position=0 job.schedule="*/5 * * * * * *"

Integrations

Sentry

Supercronic offers integration with Sentry for real-time error tracking and reporting. This feature helps in identifying, triaging, and fixing crashes in your cron jobs.

Enabling Sentry

To enable Sentry reporting, configure the Sentry Data Source Name (DSN) e.g. use the -sentry-dsn argument when starting Supercronic

$ ./supercronic -sentry-dsn DSN

You can also specify the DSN via the SENTRY_DSN environment variable. When a DSN is specified via both the environment variable and the command line parameter the parameter's DSN has priority.

Additional Sentry Configuration

You can also specify the environment and release for Sentry to provide more context to the error reports:

Environment: Use the -sentry-environment flag or the SENTRY_ENVIRONMENT environment variable to set the environment tag in Sentry.

$ ./supercronic -sentry-dsn YOUR_SENTRY_DSN -sentry-environment YOUR_ENVIRONMENT

Release: Use the -sentry-release flag or the SENTRY_RELEASE environment variable to set the release tag in Sentry.

$ ./supercronic -sentry-dsn YOUR_SENTRY_DSN -sentry-release YOUR_RELEASE

Questions and Support

Please feel free to open an issue in this repository if you have any question about Supercronic!

Note that if you're trying to use Supercronic on Aptible App, we have a dedicated support article.

Contributing

PRs are always welcome! Before undertaking a major change, consider opening an issue for some discussion.

License

See LICENSE.md.

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2019 Aptible. All rights reserved.

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