i set my php file in cron jobs with command /home/findia/public_html/ifs/ifs-admin/reminder_mail.php.
But i am getting mail by cron jobs it contains,
/bin/sh: /home/findia/public_html/ifs/ifs-admin/reminder_mail.php: Permission denied
Inside your cron tab put this command instead:
/usr/bin/php -q /home/findia/public_html/ifs/ifs-admin/reminder_mail.php
Assuming your php binary is in /usr/bin; change it accordingly, if needed.
I put this line /usr/bin/curl http://YOURDOMAIN/whmcs/crons/cron.php
(change YOURDOMAIN for the right domain or IP address) n the crontab file and it works
You need to make sure the file permissions are set correctly for the user that is executing the cron job.
php CLI scripts need to be run with /usr/bin/php
so for example, your "cron" entry would be (assuming php exists in /usr/bin)..
[insert frequency of execution here>] /usr/bin/php /home/findia/public_html/ifs/ifs-admin/reminder_mail.php
Related
I schedule a new job on cronjob. But it's not working. Is there any way to run cronjob in cpanel using commands.
There is a bunch of way to running script with CRON. I do use this way on my web application most of the time when I need to use CRON.
The first step is to choose a setting. The setting means when you want to run this script.
and after then simply just use CURL with Cron to get this work properly like this: curl http://example.com/script.php on command box and click on the add button and whola! You have successfully added your first CRON Task.
You may have a look at this picture below to get it properly
Go to CRON JOB option on your cpanle menus
Set url like this and set time according to your functionality
php /home/username/public_html/filename.php
Run it in putty
/usr/bin/php /var/www/html/project_name/artisan schedule:run 1>> /dev/null 2>&1 this is for laravel project
you can simply use like this - /usr/local/bin/ea-php74 /home/username/domainname.com/script_path/yourfile.php
replace username to your cpanel username, domain name to your domain name, script path where you want to run it, then replace the main file for corn job in yourfile.php
As implied in the title, the Cron Job is supposed to execute a php file (update.php, to be specific). The php file then writes to a csv file stored in the same directory.
I have the time set to * * * * * so that it executes every minute. The command is written as follows:
php -q /home//public_html/wallboard/update.php
I don't believe this is causing any errors, though it also doesn't seem to write to the CSV file. When I visit update.php in a browser, however, it executes and writes to the CSV file immediately. I'm not experienced with Cron Jobs and I'm sure there's an issue, but I don't know what exactly that issue is. Let me know if you have suggestions/questions. Any help is appreciated!
Current Command:
* * * * * usr/bin/php -q /home/<user>/public_html/wallboard/update.php
update.php:
<?php
include('lib/HelpDeskView.php');
include('lib/WallboardDisplay.php');
include('helpdesk.csv');
$helpdesk = new HelpDeskView();
$text="\r\ntest,test,test";
file_put_contents( "helpdesk.csv" , $text, FILE_APPEND);
Since your script resides in your public_html directory you can use wget for your Cron Job
wget -O - -q https://yoursite.com/wallboard/update.php
-O - output is written to the standard output in this case it will go to the email address you specify in CPanel
-q quiet mode
IMHO the best way is to contact support and ask them about command line syntax.
This is how I'm doing it at my linux server using cPanel.
This runs script.php which is stored in public root. Course, replace <username> in command line with your username.
At another server I'm using same command line with /usr/bin/php instead of php at the beginning of line, but I'm aware that not all servers use same command line. Some require php-cli in command line instead of php, some don't "like" -f argument, etc. So try various combinations.
To find more suggestions check out this SO topic too: Run a PHP file in a cron job using CPanel
Important thing: When trying different commands wait at least a minute (this case) to see if it works because Cron doesn't fire your script immediately.
Try to execute the same command in PHP CLI and check if it gives you any error, you might be missing some libraries or references required for CLI execution.
/usr/bin/php -d register_argc_argv=On /home/USERNAME/public_html/DOMAIN/artisan AMIR:HOME
i want to set a cron job on a server but its not working. I know there are hundreds of links on web that shows how to setup a cron job but i cant seem to make it work. What im doing now is:
1) Running crontab -e.
Then it shows bunch of lines in the command line.
2) I go to the bottom and add */5 * * * * path/to/myfile.php
and then i exit the editor in command line. Please tell me whats wrong here. Do i need to put my file in a specific folder? or do i need to go to the desired folder and then use crontab -e, or something else. Please forgive me, this is my first cronjob, hoping to be better next time.
Here are the pictures of what im doing.
Did you restart the cron service after you updated the file?
Have you tried executing the php script from the command line first to verify that it's executing as expected? It might be that the cron task is executing but the script is failing. If the script is fine, you might want to try using php as a command followed by the path and filename of the php file and then quitting the execution after it's done with -q.
*/5 * * * * php path/to/myfile.php -q
The problem could well be that you are trying to execute a PHP file and your system is unaware of what to do with it.
Is your PHP file executable?
You can make it executable by running
$ chmod +x file.php
and if you add a shebang to it
#!/usr/bin/php
<?php
// ...
the PHP script can be executed by running
$ ./file.php
Alternatively, you need to run the PHP interpreter and pass it the path to the file as an argument.
$ php file.php
For reference, see:
http://php.net/manual/en/features.commandline.usage.php
How to set up a cron job via PHP (not CPanel)?
Most Linux systems with crond installed provides a few directories you can set up jobs with:
/etc/cron.d/
/etc/cron.daily/
/etc/cron.weekly/
/etc/cron.monthly/
...
The idea here is to create a file in one of these directories. You will need to set the proper permissions/ownership to those (or one of those) directories so that the user launching the PHP script can write to it (Apache user if it's a web script, or whatever CLI user if CLI is used).
The easiest thing is to create an empty file, assign proper permission/ownership to it, and have the PHP script append/modify it.
Per example:
$ touch /etc/cron.d/php-crons
$ chown www-data /etc/cron.d/php-crons
Then in PHP:
$fp = fopen('/etc/cron.d/php-crons', 'a');
fwrite($fp, '* 23 * * * echo foobar'.PHP_EOL);
fclose($fp);
If what you're getting at is dynamically adding lots of jobs to crontab form your application, a better way to do that is manually add ONE cron job:
php -f /path/to/your/runner.php
Store your jobs that you would be adding to cron manually in a table (or one table per task-type), and then have your runner go through the table(s) every minute/hour/day/whatever and execute all the ones that should be executed at that time.
From pure PHP I will create deamon that will manage this (those) cron job(s).
how to create it:
http://kevin.vanzonneveld.net/techblog/article/create_daemons_in_php/ to start with
Finding crontab file isn't easy on shared hosting and there's no certainty that cron will read that file again while it's already running.
Actually I the best way is to use corntab command.
If you don't have access to shell you can use for example PHPShell. Try this.
Uplode a txt file via FTP with jobs in crontab fomat for example
5 * * * * /some/file/to/run.sh > /dev/null
(remember to put a newline at the end of that line)
Log in to your PHPShell and run
crontab uploded_filename.txt
Remember to change file permissions
chmod 775 uploded_filename.txt
Check your cron jobs using
crontab -l
Cheers
There is an embargo on the use of PHP to edit crontabs which has been in place since 2004. You may not be allowed to do this if you live outside of the United States, check with your local government agency.
But seriously, you could always call "crontab -" with a system call. If you need to do this for some user other than the webserver, you'll need some ssh or sudo magic. But it all seems like a bad idea.
I'm trying to run a test script using crontab within Plesk. The php file simply emails me a message
mail('me#somewhere.com','Cron Test','Test');
My path to php is /user/bin/php
I have entered * in every field, to run the script every minute with the following command:
/usr/bin/php -q /usr/httpdocs/crontest.php
However, the script is not being run.
Can anyone help?
I'm probably missing something simple, I've never used cron before.
Any advice appreciated.
Thanks.
I would start by getting it to write to a log file. eg:
* * * * * /usr/bin/php -q /usr/httpdocs/crontest.php >> /a-location/crontest.log 2>&1
This will at least give you any obvious errors like not being able to find php etc.
I found that when using the user based cron in plesk, there are a number of issues:
first I found that you should reference the script from the virtual domain. If your script has an absolute address of /var/www/vhosts/domain.com/httpdocs/email-this.php, you should reference it as httpdocs/email-this.php in the crontab.
Second, the script has to have very particular permissions, but not sure what they "must be." apache:apache is all that ever worked for me. Even with the group write permission set, user still had to be apache... weird.
Third, the easiest way to do the testing was to edit the crontab directly instead of going back into plesk every time I needed to make a change... Edit your crontab like this:
crontab -u [filesystem-username] -e
Fourth, I could never get the crontab to write to a log file outside of httpdocs (I tried statistics/logs/cron_log every way I could think of... lol... no dice). I ended up just adding the MAILTO directive at the top of the crontab file during testing:
eg:
MAILTO=you#domain.com
## * * * * * php -q httpdocs/cron.php
Also see this if you have Plesk 10 or above: http://shaun.net/2011/09/solving-plesk-10-3-1-cron-issues/
I had to do this
/usr/local/psa/bin/server_pref -u -crontab-secure-shell "/bin/sh"
to get this (example) working: wget -O - http://www.yourdomain.com/cron.php