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php - Configure and test Laravel Task Scheduling

Environment

  • Laravel Version : 5.1.45 (LTS)

  • PHP Version : 5.6.1


Description

I'm trying to run a command every 1 minute using Laravel Task Scheduling.


Attempt

I've added this line to my cron tab file

* * * * * php artisan schedule:run >> /dev/null 2>&1

Here is my /app/Console/Kernel.php

<?php

namespace AppConsole;

use IlluminateConsoleSchedulingSchedule;
use IlluminateFoundationConsoleKernel as ConsoleKernel;

class Kernel extends ConsoleKernel
{
    /**
     * The Artisan commands provided by your application.
     *
     * @var array
     */
    protected $commands = [
        AppConsoleCommandsInspire::class,
    ];

    /**
     * Define the application's command schedule.
     *
     * @param  IlluminateConsoleSchedulingSchedule  $schedule
     * @return void
     */
    protected function schedule(Schedule $schedule)
    {
        $schedule->command('inspire')->hourly();
        $schedule->command('echo "Happy New Year!" ')->everyMinute(); //<---- ADD HERE        }
}

I've added this line $schedule->command('echo "Happy New Year!" ')->everyMinute();


Question

How do I test this ?

How do I trigger my echo to display ?

How do I know if what I did is not wrong ?

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1 Answer

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by (71.8m points)

command() runs an artisan command. What you're trying to achieve - issuing a command to the OS - is done by exec('echo "Happy New Year!"')

Testing depends on what you want to test:

  • Whether the scheduler (every minute) is working?

In this case, you don't have to. It is tested in the original framework code.

  • Whether the command succeeds?

Well, you can manually run php artisan schedule:run and see the output.

The scheduler does not produce any output on default (>> /dev/null 2>&1). You can, however, redirect the output of the runned scripts to any file by chaining writeOutputTo() or appendOutputTo() (https://laravel.com/docs/5.1/scheduling#task-output).


For more complex logic, write a console command instead (https://laravel.com/docs/5.1/artisan#writing-commands) and use command() - this way you can write nice, testable code.


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