Chadburn is a modern and low footprint job scheduler for docker environments, written in Go. Chadburn aims to be a replacement for the old fashioned cron.
*** SPECIAL NOTE ***
Chadburn is a new project based on the previous and continuous work incorporated into Ofelia and a fork of Ofelia provided by @rdelcorro, of which Chadburn was forked from. This project was started as a result of needing a version of Ofelia that incorporated the following fixes:
- Update tasks if docker containers are started, stopped, restarted, or changed
- Do not require a dummy task on the Chadburn container just to use Chadburn.
- Support INI and docker labels at the same time. The configs will simply be merged.
- Do not require a restart in order to pick up new or remove tasks.
PremoWeb will be responsive to addressing issues raised in this project and will also be monitoring issues in the original Ofelia source code repository and applying changes that should be reflected in Chadburn.
It has been a long time since cron
was released by AT&T Bell Laboratories in March 1975, almost a half centry ago! The world has changed a lot and especially since the Docker
revolution.
Vixie's cron works great but it's not extensible and it's hard to debug when something goes wrong.
Many solutions are available: ready to go containerized crons
, wrappers for your commands, etc. but in the end simple tasks become complex.
The main feature of Chadburn is the ability to execute commands directly on Docker containers. Using Docker's API Chadburn emulates the behavior of exec
, being able to run a command inside of a running container. Also you can run the command in a new container destroying it at the end of the execution.
A wiki is being written to document how to use Chadburn. Caprover users can use a One Click App (coming soon) to deploy and implement scheduled jobs using Service Label Overrides.
For everyone else, here's the general approach to use Chadburn:
Scheduling format is the same as the Go implementation of cron
. E.g. @every 10s
or 0 0 1 * * *
(every night at 1 AM).
Note: the format starts with seconds, instead of minutes. (UPDATE: It appears this is not actually the case in the most recent version of Chadburn. PremoWeb is earmarking some serious development time in the very near future to overhaul this project to address the many issues that people have reported in both Ofelia and the Chadburn fork. -- Please accept our appologies as we can't get to the development right away!)
you can configure four different kind of jobs:
job-exec
: this job is executed inside of a running container.job-run
: runs a command inside of a new container, using a specific image.job-local
: runs the command inside of the host running Chadburn.job-service-run
: runs the command inside a new "run-once" service, for running inside a swarm
See Jobs reference documentation for all available parameters.
Run with chadburn daemon --config=/path/to/config.ini
[job-exec "job-executed-on-running-container"]
schedule = @hourly
container = my-container
command = touch /tmp/example
[job-run "job-executed-on-new-container"]
schedule = @hourly
image = ubuntu:latest
command = touch /tmp/example
[job-local "job-executed-on-current-host"]
schedule = @hourly
command = touch /tmp/example
[job-service-run "service-executed-on-new-container"]
schedule = 0,20,40 * * * *
image = ubuntu
network = swarm_network
command = touch /tmp/example
In order to use this type of configurations, Chadburn need access to docker socket.
docker run -it --rm \
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
premoweb/chadburn:latest daemon
Labels format: chadburn.<JOB_TYPE>.<JOB_NAME>.<JOB_PARAMETER>=<PARAMETER_VALUE>
.
This type of configuration supports all the capabilities provided by INI files.
Also, it is possible to configure job-exec
and job-run
by setting labels configurations on the target container. To do that, additional label chadburn.enabled=true
need to be present on the target container.
For example, we want chadburn
to execute uname -a
command in the existing container called my_nginx
.
To do that, we need to we need to start my_nginx
container with next configurations:
docker run -it --rm \
--label chadburn.enabled=true \
--label chadburn.job-exec.test-exec-job.schedule="@every 5s" \
--label chadburn.job-exec.test-exec-job.command="uname -a" \
nginx
Now if we start chadburn
container with the command provided above, it will execute the task:
- Exec -
uname -a
Or with docker-compose:
version: "3"
services:
chadburn:
image: premoweb/chadburn:latest
depends_on:
- nginx
command: daemon
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro
nginx:
image: nginx
labels:
chadburn.enabled: "true"
chadburn.job-exec.datecron.schedule: "@every 5s"
chadburn.job-exec.datecron.command: "uname -a"
You can start Chadburn in its own container or on the host itself, and it will magically pick up any container that starts, stops or is modified on the fly. In order to achieve this, you simply have to use docker containers with the labels described above and let Chadburn take care of the rest.
You can specify part of the configuration on the INI files, such as globals for the middlewares or even declare tasks in there but also merge them with docker. The docker labels will be parsed, added and removed on the fly but also, the file config can be used to execute tasks that are not possible using just docker labels such as:
- job-local
- job-run
Use the INI file to:
- Configure the slack or other middleware integration
- Configure any global setting
- Create a job-run so it executes on a new container each time
[global]
slack-webhook = https://myhook.com/auth
[job-run "job-executed-on-new-container"]
schedule = @hourly
image = ubuntu:latest
command = touch /tmp/example
Use docker to:
docker run -it --rm \
--label chadburn.enabled=true \
--label chadburn.job-exec.test-exec-job.schedule="@every 5s" \
--label chadburn.job-exec.test-exec-job.command="uname -a" \
nginx
Chadburn comes with three different logging drivers that can be configured in the [global]
section:
mail
to send mailssave
to save structured execution reports to a directoryslack
to send messages via a slack webhook
-
smtp-host
- address of the SMTP server. -
smtp-port
- port number of the SMTP server. -
smtp-user
- user name used to connect to the SMTP server. -
smtp-password
- password used to connect to the SMTP server. -
email-to
- mail address of the receiver of the mail. -
email-from
- mail address of the sender of the mail. -
mail-only-on-error
- only send a mail if the execution was not successful. -
insecure-skip-verify
- ignore certificate checks on SMTP host. (+1.0.2 only!) -
gotify-webhook
- URL of the gotify webhook. (format:https://GOTIFY_URL/message?token=TOKEN
) -
gotify-only-on-error
- only send a gotify message if the execution was not succesful. -
gotify-priority
- priority of the gotify message -
save-folder
- directory in which the reports shall be written. -
save-only-on-error
- only save a report if the execution was not successful. -
slack-webhook
- URL of the slack webhook. -
slack-only-on-error
- only send a slack message if the execution was not successful.
Chadburn can prevent that a job is run twice in parallel (e.g. if the first execution didn't complete before a second execution was scheduled. If a job has the option no-overlap
set, it will not be run concurrently.
The easiest way to deploy Chadburn is using Docker. See examples above.
If don't want to run Chadburn using our Docker image you can download a binary from releases page.
Chadburn has been added as a One Click App in the official Caprover app repository. Once deployed, you can setup the scheduler for each of your apps using the Service Override section of your app's config like so:
TaskTemplate:
ContainerSpec:
Labels:
chadburn.enabled: "true"
chadburn.job-exec.rotate-puzzles.command: "php /var/www/rotate_games.php"
chadburn.job-exec.rotate-puzzles.schedule: "@every 10m"
A special thanks to @rdelcorro for the work in fixing the issues referenced in this pull request mcuadros/ofelia#137, despite this pull request having been ignored for 30 days. PremoWeb aims to ensure that open software is continously improve and will remain responsive to raised issues and pull requests.
Much thanks to the original work that went into Ofelia by it's author and contributors.