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README.md |
Summary
This container is designed to run along side your Nextcloud container to execute its
/var/www/html/cron.php
at a regular interval. There is an "official" way of doing this, however it
doesn't work when you run your Nextcloud container using a non-root user. I also personally feel
that this solution is easier to manage, since it doesn't require the same environment as Nextcloud
itself (i.e. no network requirements, no database requirements, etc).
Setup Instructions
Since Nextcloud's entire setup can get rather complex with Docker, I highly recommend you set up everything using Docker Compose.
Below is an example of how you set up your docker-compose.yml
to work with Nextcloud using this
container. Note that the app
service is greatly simplified for example purposes. It is only to
show usage of the cronjob image in conjunction with your Nextcloud container.
version: '3.7'
services:
app:
image: nextcloud:apache
cron:
image: voidpointer/nextcloud-cronjob
restart: always
network_mode: none
depends_on:
- app
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro
- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
environment:
- NEXTCLOUD_CONTAINER_NAME=app
- NEXTCLOUD_PROJECT_NAME=nextcloud
In this example, the cron
service runs with a dependency on app
(which is Nextcloud itself).
Every 15 minutes (default) the cron
service will execute php -f /var/www/html/cron.php
via the
docker exec
command. The NEXTCLOUD_CONTAINER_NAME
and NEXTCLOUD_PROJECT_NAME
work together to
help identify the right container to execute the command in.
Note that if you don't use Docker Compose, you can leave NEXTCLOUD_PROJECT_NAME
blank or omitted
entirely.
Environment Variables
-
NEXTCLOUD_CONTAINER_NAME
Required. This is the name of the running Nextcloud container (or the service, ifNEXTCLOUD_PROJECT_NAME
is specified). -
NEXTCLOUD_PROJECT_NAME
The name of the project if you're using Docker Compose. The name of the project, by default, is the name of the context directory you ran yourdocker-compose.yml
from. This helps to build a "hint" used to identify the Nextcloud container by name. The hint is built as:${NEXTCLOUD_PROJECT_NAME}_${NEXTCLOUD_CONTAINER_NAME}
-
NEXTCLOUD_CRON_MINUTE_INTERVAL
The interval, in minutes, of how often the cron task executes. The default is 15 minutes.
Container Health
If you do docker-compose ps
, you will see the active health of the container. The following logic
is checked every interval of the health check. If any of these checks fail, it is likely the
container's health status will become unhealthy. In this case, you should restart the container.
- The
crond
process must be running. - The Nextcloud container must be available and running. One important note here: When this container starts up, it immediately searches for the container by name and remembers it by the container's ID. If for whatever reason the Nextcloud container changes in such a way that the ID is no longer valid, the health check would fail.
Customizing Cron Tasks
This container provides the ability for you to run additional tasks inside the Nextcloud container
in addition to the default cron.php
task. To add your custom tasks, follow these steps:
-
Write a shell script that runs the commands that will be part of your task. This shell script must have the
.sh
extension. An example of the contents of such a script is below. As an optional security measure, do not make this shell script executable. The contents of the file are piped intobash
, so the executable bit is not used.#!/usr/bin/env bash php -f /var/www/html/cron.php
-
Mount this shell script inside the
/cron-scripts
directory. Here's an example if you're usingdocker-compose.yml
:services: cron: image: voidpointer/nextcloud-cronjob volumes: - ./my-scripts/do-something.sh:/cron-scripts/do-something.sh:ro
-
Recreate the container. Your script will now execute in the Nextcloud container at a regular interval.
Notes
- All cron task shell scripts run at the same interval defined by
NEXTCLOUD_CRON_MINUTE_INTERVAL
. - Modification of your own shell scripts on the host do not require that you restart/recreate the container.
Debugging
All logs from crond
are configured to print to stdout, so you can monitor container logs (via
docker-compose logs -f
). This should allow you to make sure your cron job is working. You can also
use the "Overview" page in Nextcloud Settings to see if the cron job is being run regularly. Here is
an example of the logs you will see:
Started crond
-------------------------------------------------------------
Executing Cron Tasks: Thu Dec 6 17:28:00 CST 2018
-------------------------------------------------------------
> Running Script: occ-preview-pre-generate.sh
> Running Script: run_cron_php.sh
> Done