gecko-dev/taskcluster/docs/cron.rst

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Periodic Taskgraphs
===================
The cron functionality allows in-tree scheduling of task graphs that run
periodically, instead of on a push.
Cron.yml
--------
In the root of the Gecko directory, you will find `.cron.yml`. This defines
the periodic tasks ("cron jobs") run for Gecko. Each specifies a name, what to
do, and some parameters to determine when the cron job should occur.
See `the scema <https://hg.mozilla.org/ci/ci-admin/file/default/build-decision/src/build_decision/cron/schema.yml>`_
for details on the format and meaning of this file.
How It Works
------------
The `TaskCluster Hooks Service <https://firefox-ci-tc.services.mozilla.com/hooks>`_
has a hook configured for each repository supporting periodic task graphs. The
hook runs every 15 minutes, and the resulting task is referred to as a "cron task".
That cron task runs the `build-decision
<https://hg.mozilla.org/ci/ci-admin/file/default/build-decision>`_ image in a
checkout of the Gecko source tree.
The task reads ``.cron.yml``, then consults the current time (actually the time
the cron task was created, rounded down to the nearest 15 minutes) and creates
tasks for any cron jobs scheduled at that time.
Each cron job in ``.cron.yml`` specifies a ``job.type``, corresponding to a
function responsible for creating TaskCluster tasks when the job runs.
Describing Time
---------------
This cron implementation understands the following directives when
describing when to run:
* ``minute``: The minute in which to run, must be in 15 minute increments (see above)
* ``hour``: The hour of the day in which to run, in 24 hour time.
* ``day``: The day of the month as an integer, such as `1`, `16`. Be cautious above `28`, remember February.
* ``weekday``: The day of the week, `Monday`, `Tuesday`, etc. Full length ISO compliant words.
Setting both 'day' and 'weekday' will result in a cron job that won't run very often,
and so is undesirable.
*Examples*
.. code-block:: yaml
# Never
when: []
# 4 AM and 4 PM, on the hour, every day.
when:
- {hour: 16, minute: 0}
- {hour: 4, minute: 0}
# The same as above, on a single line
when: [{hour: 16, minute: 0}, {hour: 4, minute: 0}]
# 4 AM on the second day of every month.
when:
- {day: 2, hour: 4, minute: 0}
# Mondays and Thursdays at 10 AM
when:
- {weekday: 'Monday', hour: 10, minute: 0}
- {weekday: 'Thursday', hour: 10, minute: 0}
.. note::
Times are expressed in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time)
Decision Tasks
..............
For ``job.type`` "decision-task", tasks are created based on
``.taskcluster.yml`` just like the decision tasks that result from a push to a
repository. They run with a distinct ``taskGroupId``, and are free to create
additional tasks comprising a task graph.
Scopes
------
The cron task runs with the sum of all cron job scopes for the given repo. For
example, for the "sequoia" project, the scope would be
``assume:repo:hg.mozilla.org/projects/sequoia:cron:*``. Each cron job creates
tasks with scopes for that particular job, by name. For example, the
``check-frob`` cron job on that repo would run with
``assume:repo:hg.mozilla.org/projects/sequoia:cron:check-frob``.
.. important::
The individual cron scopes are a useful check to ensure that a job is not
accidentally doing something it should not, but cannot actually *prevent* a
job from using any of the scopes afforded to the cron task itself (the
``..cron:*`` scope). This is simply because the cron task runs arbitrary
code from the repo, and that code can be easily modified to create tasks
with any scopes that it possesses.