I have a Flask web hosting with no access to cron
command.
How can I execute some Python function every hour?
I have a Flask web hosting with no access to cron
command.
How can I execute some Python function every hour?
You can use BackgroundScheduler()
from APScheduler package (v3.5.3):
import time
import atexit
from apscheduler.schedulers.background import BackgroundScheduler
def print_date_time():
print(time.strftime("%A, %d. %B %Y %I:%M:%S %p"))
scheduler = BackgroundScheduler()
scheduler.add_job(func=print_date_time, trigger="interval", seconds=60)
scheduler.start()
# Shut down the scheduler when exiting the app
atexit.register(lambda: scheduler.shutdown())
Note that two of these schedulers will be launched when Flask is in debug mode. For more information, check out this question.
I'm a little bit new with the concept of application schedulers, but what I found here for APScheduler v3.3.1 , it's something a little bit different. I believe that for the newest versions, the package structure, class names, etc., have changed, so I'm putting here a fresh solution which I made recently, integrated with a basic Flask application:
#!/usr/bin/python3
""" Demonstrating Flask, using APScheduler. """
from apscheduler.schedulers.background import BackgroundScheduler
from flask import Flask
def sensor():
""" Function for test purposes. """
print("Scheduler is alive!")
sched = BackgroundScheduler(daemon=True)
sched.add_job(sensor,'interval',minutes=60)
sched.start()
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route("/home")
def home():
""" Function for test purposes. """
return "Welcome Home :) !"
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run()
I'm also leaving this Gist here, if anyone have interest on updates for this example.
Here are some references, for future readings:
You could make use of APScheduler
in your Flask application and run your jobs via its interface:
import atexit
# v2.x version - see https://stackoverflow.com/a/38501429/135978
# for the 3.x version
from apscheduler.scheduler import Scheduler
from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
cron = Scheduler(daemon=True)
# Explicitly kick off the background thread
cron.start()
@cron.interval_schedule(hours=1)
def job_function():
# Do your work here
# Shutdown your cron thread if the web process is stopped
atexit.register(lambda: cron.shutdown(wait=False))
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run()
I've tried using flask instead of a simple apscheduler what you need to install is
pip3 install flask_apscheduler
Below is the sample of my code:
from flask import Flask
from flask_apscheduler import APScheduler
app = Flask(__name__)
scheduler = APScheduler()
def scheduleTask():
print("This test runs every 3 seconds")
if __name__ == '__main__':
scheduler.add_job(id = 'Scheduled Task', func=scheduleTask, trigger="interval", seconds=3)
scheduler.start()
app.run(host="0.0.0.0")
For a simple solution, you could add a route such as
@app.route("/cron/do_the_thing", methods=['POST'])
def do_the_thing():
logging.info("Did the thing")
return "OK", 200
Then add a unix cron job that POSTs to this endpoint periodically. For example to run it once a minute, in terminal type crontab -e
and add this line:
* * * * * /opt/local/bin/curl -X POST https://YOUR_APP/cron/do_the_thing
(Note that the path to curl has to be complete, as when the job runs it won't have your PATH. You can find out the full path to curl on your system by which curl
)
I like this in that it's easy to test the job manually, it has no extra dependencies and as there isn't anything special going on it is easy to understand.
If you'd like to password protect your cron job, you can pip install Flask-BasicAuth
, and then add the credentials to your app configuration:
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config['BASIC_AUTH_REALM'] = 'realm'
app.config['BASIC_AUTH_USERNAME'] = 'falken'
app.config['BASIC_AUTH_PASSWORD'] = 'joshua'
To password protect the job endpoint:
from flask_basicauth import BasicAuth
basic_auth = BasicAuth(app)
@app.route("/cron/do_the_thing", methods=['POST'])
@basic_auth.required
def do_the_thing():
logging.info("Did the thing a bit more securely")
return "OK", 200
Then to call it from your cron job:
* * * * * /opt/local/bin/curl -X POST https://falken:joshua@YOUR_APP/cron/do_the_thing
You could try using APScheduler's BackgroundScheduler to integrate interval job into your Flask app. Below is the example that uses blueprint and app factory (init.py) :
from datetime import datetime
# import BackgroundScheduler
from apscheduler.schedulers.background import BackgroundScheduler
from flask import Flask
from webapp.models.main import db
from webapp.controllers.main import main_blueprint
# define the job
def hello_job():
print('Hello Job! The time is: %s' % datetime.now())
def create_app(object_name):
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config.from_object(object_name)
db.init_app(app)
app.register_blueprint(main_blueprint)
# init BackgroundScheduler job
scheduler = BackgroundScheduler()
# in your case you could change seconds to hours
scheduler.add_job(hello_job, trigger='interval', seconds=3)
scheduler.start()
try:
# To keep the main thread alive
return app
except:
# shutdown if app occurs except
scheduler.shutdown()
Hope it helps :)
Ref :
Another alternative might be to use Flask-APScheduler which plays nicely with Flask, e.g.:
More information here:
You may use flask-crontab module, which is quite easy.
Step 1: pip install flask-crontab
Step 2:
from flask import Flask
from flask_crontab import Crontab
app = Flask(__name__)
crontab = Crontab(app)
Step 3:
@crontab.job(minute="0", hour="6", day="*", month="*", day_of_week="*")
def my_scheduled_job():
do_something()
Step 4: On cmd, hit
flask crontab add
Done. now simply run your flask application, and you can check your function will call at 6:00 every day.
You may take reference from Here (Official DOc).
A complete example using schedule and multiprocessing, with on and off control and parameter to run_job()
the return codes are simplified and interval is set to 10sec, change to every(2).hour.do()
for 2hours. Schedule is quite impressive it does not drift and I've never seen it more than 100ms off when scheduling. Using multiprocessing instead of threading because it has a termination method.
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import schedule
import time
import datetime
import uuid
from flask import Flask, request
from multiprocessing import Process
app = Flask(__name__)
t = None
job_timer = None
def run_job(id):
""" sample job with parameter """
global job_timer
print("timer job id={}".format(id))
print("timer: {:.4f}sec".format(time.time() - job_timer))
job_timer = time.time()
def run_schedule():
""" infinite loop for schedule """
global job_timer
job_timer = time.time()
while 1:
schedule.run_pending()
time.sleep(1)
@app.route('/timer/<string:status>')
def mytimer(status, nsec=10):
global t, job_timer
if status=='on' and not t:
schedule.every(nsec).seconds.do(run_job, str(uuid.uuid4()))
t = Process(target=run_schedule)
t.start()
return "timer on with interval:{}sec\n".format(nsec)
elif status=='off' and t:
if t:
t.terminate()
t = None
schedule.clear()
return "timer off\n"
return "timer status not changed\n"
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)
You test this by just issuing:
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:5000/timer/on
timer on with interval:10sec
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:5000/timer/on
timer status not changed
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:5000/timer/off
timer off
$ curl http://127.0.0.1:5000/timer/off
timer status not changed
Every 10sec the timer is on it will issue a timer message to console:
127.0.0.1 - - [18/Sep/2018 21:20:14] "GET /timer/on HTTP/1.1" 200 -
timer job id=b64ed165-911f-4b47-beed-0d023ead0a33
timer: 10.0117sec
timer job id=b64ed165-911f-4b47-beed-0d023ead0a33
timer: 10.0102sec
You might want to use some queue mechanism with scheduler like RQ scheduler or something more heavy like Celery (most probably an overkill).