Cron

Basics

Cron is a tool to run background jobs and is essential for the production environment. Periodically executed Cron modules recalculate visibility, generate XML feeds and sitemaps, provide error reporting etc.

By default you can configure your own cron configurations in config/services/cron.yaml file.

If you want to show Cron overview table for non-superadmin users you need add parameter shopsys.display_cron_overview_for_superadmin_only set to false in your config/parameters.yaml:

Note

All default crons are translated only to English. If you want to translate it to another language, you need to set readableName property for cron in config/services/cron.yaml.

Default Cron Commands

There is some prepared configuration in a file config/services/cron.yaml in project-base.

Note

Hours set in config/services/cron.yaml are consider to be in timezone set in shopsys.cron_timezone parameter in config/parameters_common.yaml file.

Running Cron Jobs

Do not forget to set up a cron on your server to execute php phing cron every 5 minutes.

Multiple Cron Instances

By default, all cron jobs are run as part of one, default, instance. However, you may want to have several instances to be able to run, for example, lots of transfers from/into ERP systems and these transfers could block other cron processes. Separating the cron jobs into two (or more) cron instances allows you to run some jobs in parallel.

The instance of cron is actually a named group of cron jobs.

You can learn how to set up multiple cron instances in Working with Multiple Cron Instances cookbook.

Cron Limitations

One cron run can only be run for a limited time by default to prevent high memory usage of long-running jobs in PHP. In shopsys/framework/src/Resources/config/services.yaml is set the default timeout to 240 seconds:

Shopsys\FrameworkBundle\Component\Cron\CronModuleExecutor:
    arguments:
        $secondsTimeout: 240

That means, if the time needed to run all planned cron modules is higher than 240s, not all cron modules will be run in a current iteration. That's usually not a problem as long-running cron modules are not executed every iteration (eg. every 5 minutes), but in some cases, the overall time of the "every 5 minutes" cron modules can be higher (for example considerable amount of products to export to Elasticsearch). Then it's possible, some cron modules will never be run.

It's crucial to monitor your crons and, if necessary, split them into multiple Cron Instances.