Using Heroku Scheduler with Node.js
node.jsHerokuSchedulernode.js Problem Overview
There is literally no tutorial about using Heroku Scheduler with Node.js. Assume that I have a function called sayHello() and I would like to run it every 10 mins. How can I use it in controller. In ruby you write rake function_name() however no explanation made for Node. Can I write '/sayHello' or I should do extra configuration?
node.js Solutions
Solution 1 - node.js
Create the file <project_root>/bin/say_hello
:
#! /app/.heroku/node/bin/node
function sayHello() {
console.log('Hello');
}
sayHello();
process.exit();
Deploy to Heroku and test it with $ heroku run say_hello
then add it to the scheduler with task name say_hello
.
Explanation
Take say_hello.js
as an example of a Node.js script that you would normally run using $ node say_hello.js
.
Turn it into a script by
- removing the
.js
ending - inserting the 'shebang' at the top:
#! /app/bin/node
[1][2] - moving it into the
bin
directory [3]
[1] Read about the shebang on Wikipedia.
[2] The node
executable is installed in app/bin/node
on Heroku. You can check it out by logging into bash on Heroku with $ heroku run bash
then asking $ which node
.
[3] Heroku requires scripts to be placed in the bin
directory. See Defining Tasks in the Heroku Dev Center.
I agree that the Heroku documentation for scheduling tasks is not very clear for anything other than Ruby scripts. I managed to work it out after some trial and error. I hope this helps.
Solution 2 - node.js
A better approach is to define your schedule file called for example worker.js
with following content:
function sayHello() {
console.log('Hello');
}
sayHello();
and then in the heroku schedule, you just write node worker
like you define it in the Procfile
and that's all!
Solution 3 - node.js
Christophe's answer worked for me until I needed to pass a parameter to the script, at which point it failed. The issue is that node
should not be specified in the task. Here is how exactly to get it working:
-
In your Procfile, define a process type for your script. See below for a typical Procfile with a web process and, for running "scheduled_job.js", a second process type imaginatively named "worker".
> web: node app.js > worker: node scheduled_job.js
-
In the Heroku scheduler's Task column, just enter the name of the process type ("worker" in this example) with or without parameters. Don't enter 'node' before it. Heroku shows a dollar sign in front of it, so examples of a valid setup would be
$ worker
(run without arguments) or$ worker 123 abc
(to execute scheduled_job.js with arguments "123" and "abc")
Solution 4 - node.js
I am confused that nobody tried:
$ heroku run node yourScript.js
So put this in Heroku Scheduler
node yourScript.js
Worked for me.
PS: be sure to import
everything your script needs.
Solution 5 - node.js
Following steps work in my situation.
- In the root folder add
worker.js
file. - In worker.js. Write an simple function, like above.
function sayHello() { console.log('Hello'); } sayHello();
- Go to heroku Scheduler add-ons. Click 'add new job' and type 'worker' in the field. Then set time interval and click save.
Here are something should notice
- After update works setting.If using above example, you can use
heroku run node worker.js
to check if it work. It should be show 'Hello' in your terminal. - I use express-babel starter for my node.js project.
Solution 6 - node.js
Thnks so much for the previous answers here.
I found the following worked for me where feed.js
is the script to run as a job on Heroku.:
<PROJECT_ROOT>/bin/feed.js
The contents of feed.js
start with:
#!/usr/bin/env node
async function mediumFeed() {
await fetch('https://medium.com/feed/stokedinfluence')
And end with:
}
mediumFeed();
And on Heroku the job is defined as node bin/medium_feed.js
:
To run the node js script locally feed.js
you can use from the root of your project directory node bin/feed.js
and to run via heroku you can use heroku run feed.js --app <APP_NAME_NOT_PIPELINE_NAME>.
When using heroku command, this will run the job from the server where as running node bin/feed.js
will run locally. Run locally to test and verify the code works, once deployed verify it works with the heroku run...
command