This module manages cronjobs by placing a file in /etc/cron.d
.
It is a detached fork of torrancew/puppet-cron which seems to be abandoned.
It is backwards compatible with it and can be used as a drop-in-replacement.
This fork is Puppet 4 / future parser compatible.
It defines the following types:
cron::job
- basic job resourcecron::job::multiple
- basic job resource for multiple jobs per filecron::hourly
- wrapper for hourly jobscron::daily
- wrapper for daily jobscron::weekly
- wrapper for weekly jobscron::monthly
- wrapper for monthly jobs
Additionally there is the cron
class which can be used to install the correct cron package.
As usual use puppet module install rmueller-cron
to install it.
The title of the job (e.g. cron::job { 'title':
) is completely arbitrary. However, there can only be one cron job by that name.
The file in /etc/cron.d/
will be created with the $title
as the file name.
Keep that in mind when choosing the name to avoid overwriting existing system cronjobs and use characters that don't cause problems when used in filenames.
This module can optionally install the cron package if needed.
Most systems ship with cron already installed, doing this is usually not required. But you can use it via:
include cron
or:
class { 'cron': }
It allows specifiying the following parameter:
package_ensure
- optional - defaults to "installed"
cron::job
creates generic jobs in /etc/cron.d
.
It allows specifying the following parameters:
ensure
- optional - defaults to "present"command
- required - the command to executeminute
- optional - defaults to "*"hour
- optional - defaults to "*"date
- optional - defaults to "*"month
- optional - defaults to "*"weekday
- optional - defaults to "*"user
- optional - defaults to "root"environment
- optional - defaults to ""mode
- optional - defaults to "0644"
Example:
This would create the file /etc/cron.d/mysqlbackup
and run the command mysqldump -u root mydb
as root at 2:40 AM every day:
cron::job { 'mysqlbackup':
minute => '40',
hour => '2',
date => '*',
month => '*',
weekday => '*',
user => 'root',
command => 'mysqldump -u root mydb',
environment => [ 'MAILTO=root', 'PATH="/usr/bin:/bin"', ],
}
cron:job::multiple
creates a file in /etc/cron.d
with multiple cron jobs configured in it.
It allows specifiying the following parameters:
ensure
- optional - defaults to "present"jobs
- required - a hash of multiple cron jobs using a similar structure ascron::job
-parametersenvironment
- optional - defaults to ""mode
- optional - defaults to "0644"
And parameters of the jobs hash are:
command
- required - the command to executeminute
- optional - defaults to "*"hour
- optional - defaults to "*"date
- optional - defaults to "*"month
- optional - defaults to "*"weekday
- optional - defaults to "*"user
- optional - defaults to "root"
Example:
cron::job::multiple { 'test':
jobs => [
{
minute => '55',
hour => '5',
date => '*',
month => '*',
weekday => '*',
user => 'rmueller',
command => '/usr/bin/uname',
},
{
command => '/usr/bin/sleep 1',
},
],
environment => [ 'PATH="/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin"' ],
}
That will generate the file /etc/cron.d/test
with essentially this content:
PATH="/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin"
55 5 * * * rmueller /usr/bin/uname
* * * * * root /usr/bin/sleep 1
cron::hourly
creates jobs in /etc/cron.d
that run once per hour.
It allows specifying the following parameters:
ensure
- optional - defaults to "present"command
- required - the command to executeminute
- optional - defaults to "0"user
- optional - defaults to "root"environment
- optional - defaults to ""mode
- optional - defaults to "0644"
Example:
This would create the file /etc/cron.d/mysqlbackup_hourly
and run the command mysqldump -u root mydb
as root on the 20th minute of every hour:
cron::hourly { 'mysqlbackup_hourly':
minute => '20',
user => 'root',
command => 'mysqldump -u root mydb',
environment => [ 'MAILTO=root', 'PATH="/usr/bin:/bin"', ],
}
cron::daily
creates jobs in /etc/cron.d
that run once per day.
It allows specifying the following parameters:
ensure
- optional - defaults to "present"command
- required - the command to executeminute
- optional - defaults to "0"hour
- optional - defaults to "0"user
- optional - defaults to "root"environment
- optional - defaults to ""mode
- optional - defaults to "0644"
Example:
This would create the file /etc/cron.d/mysqlbackup_daily
and run the command mysqldump -u root mydb
as root at 2:40 AM every day, like the above generic example:
cron::daily { 'mysqlbackup_daily':
minute => '40',
hour => '2',
user => 'root',
command => 'mysqldump -u root mydb',
}
cron::weekly
creates jobs in /etc/cron.d
that run once per week.
It allows specifying the following parameters:
ensure
- optional - defaults to "present"command
- required - the command to executeminute
- optional - defaults to "0"hour
- optional - defaults to "0"weekday
- optional - defaults to "0"user
- optional - defaults to "root"environment
- optional - defaults to ""mode
- optional - defaults to "0644"
Example:
This would create the file /etc/cron.d/mysqlbackup_weekly
and run the command mysqldump -u root mydb
as root at 4:40 AM every Sunday, like the above generic example:
cron::weekly { 'mysqlbackup_weekly':
minute => '40',
hour => '4',
weekday => '0',
user => 'root',
command => 'mysqldump -u root mydb',
}
cron::monthly
creates jobs in /etc/cron.d
that run once per month.
It allows specifying the following parameters:
ensure
- optional - defaults to "present"command
- required - the command to executeminute
- optional - defaults to "0"hour
- optional - defaults to "0"date
- optional - defaults to "1"user
- optional - defaults to "root"environment
- optional - defaults to ""mode
- optional - defaults to "0644"
Example:
This would create the file /etc/cron.d/mysqlbackup_monthly
and run the command mysqldump -u root mydb
as root at 3:40 AM the 1st of every month, like the above generic example:
cron::monthly { 'mysqlbackup_monthly':
minute => '40',
hour => '3',
date => '1',
user => 'root',
command => 'mysqldump -u root mydb',
}
- Kevin Goess (@kgoess) - Environment variable support + fixes
- Andy Shinn (@andyshinn) - RedHat derivatives package name fix
- Chris Weyl (@RsrchBoy) - Fixed Puppet 3.2 deprecation warnings
- Mathew Archibald (@mattyindustries) - Fixed file ownership issues
- The Community - Continued improvement of this module via bugs and patches