Setting up Magento 2.1.1 Cronjob - cron

I am a bit lost on how to setup cronjob for Magento 2.1.1 in Cpanel using Cron Jobs. If someone could guide me that would be awesome. I did a search and I have 4 cron.php files in file manager.
/public_html/store/vendor/magento/magento2-base/pub/cron.php
/public_html/store/pub/cron.php
/public_html/store/update/cron.php
/public_html/store/update/dev/tests/integration/framework/cron.php

So this what you want to do.
Navigate to Cpanel
Open Cron Jobs
Add new job. In the Common Settings drop down option, select the Once Per Five Minutes option.
In the Command field enter wget -q -O /dev/null http://www.example.com/cron.php / make sure you use your domain name.
Click Add New Cron Job.
Take/make certain the newly created cron.php file is placed it in the root folder of your magento site.
That's it.

Related

How do I start a cron service on a web server programatically?

I have been stuck on this for a while and this is new territory for me so I need some help. I am working on a project where a cron service is created when a user is created with a web application. However, I am running into problems actually getting the cron service to run. Here is what I have tried
1) Creating a cron service using
crontab -l | { cat; echo "'comand'"; } | crontab -
This creates the job fine. However, it creates it with www-data as the user and those do not show to execute.
I should mention that I am setting path to
PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/sbin
as I am running a python script that I have made executable using chmod +x and put the appropriate headers to make sure it runs properly (which it does). In addition, all paths are full paths. To be more clear, here is the actual command I am using inside the crontab
*/10 * * * * /home/user/path-to script/script.py --user_id 1 --db_file /home/user/path-to-file/file.db
However, the script never runs.
2) Creating a file under /etc/cron.d, but from my testing, I have realized that this only works if the file is created as a root user, which since the user creating the file is www-data, the job will again, not execute.
for reference, I am doing that as such:
*/10 * * * * user /home/user/path-to script/script.py --user_id 1 --db_file /home/user/path-to-file/file.db
What does work is repeating steps 2 & 3 using a user that is part of the sudo group or is the root user. This tells me that I need to create the cron job using one of those two users, but I am not sure how to do that programmatically when www-data is being used for web activities.
Another option I have considered is using crontab -u user to programmatically add the job to a user I know works, but the issue with that is that in order to do that I need sudo access and I don't want to pass in the sudo password when creating the cronjob or do something that might be potentially dangerous (like removing the need to use sudo as I know that is possible, but in my opinion could be very bad is someone gains access to the account and therefore has escalated privileges)
Help would really be appreciated.
As for the stack, if it's helpful, I am using Ubuntu 18.04.3 (LTS) x64 and Apacahe2

cPanel cron job, no input file specified?

I've just set up my first cron-jon to run a stock script every night.
Running it manually works fine.
It's stored in /admin/stock_update.php
The command i'm running is /usr/bin/php -q /admin/stock_update.php
But I'm getting emails saying no input file is specified?
Any ideas?
Cheers
Network services almost never expose actual paths on the server's hard disk drive and even if they could it isn't a behaviour you can rely on. So the fact that your file is located at /admin/stock_update.php in the FTP server doesn't say much about actual location on disk, which is what local command-line utilities expect.
In PHP, you can find path on disk of current file with the __FILE__ magic constant. You can create a test script:
<?php
var_dump(__FILE__);
... upload it to the same FTP location and execute through the web server. If that's not an option because files in your FTP account in not visible from the web you can run the file from cron and check the email.
Do you have CloudLinux kernel installed on that server and CageFS filestyem? If yes try running this:
cagefsctl -w cpaneluser; cagefsctl -m cpaneluser
Then try running the cron again

How do I restore CronTab to my WebMin system

I don't know if this was an effect of the shellshock attack which my server was victim to (or another attack that worked) but it basically enabled the hacker to overwrite my SSH config file when the server rebooted.
This new file used wget to load in a file from a website, then another library of hack functions which I guessed he then used to run hacks/DOS from my server. I caught it pretty fast and ideally want to upgrade but because I have cancer and just had a big operation it is too much effort at the moment.
Therefore I did a lot of house keeping, changing passwords, removing shell access, reverting back to DASH, replacing the default shell for root and any other users to another folder with symbolic links, restoring the config file for SSH, removing CGI functionality from config files e.g
ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /home/searchmysite/cgi-bin/
#
allow from all
#
Removed AW stats and Webalizer for all virtual min sites.
I already had DenyHosts and Fail2Ban installed.
I also blocked in/outbound traffic to the IPs of the sites he was getting the files from.
However it seems since this change I have lost the visual cron manager from webmin.
When I go to the menu item "Scheduled Cron Jobs", it says, "The command crontab for managing user Cron configurations was not found. Maybe Cron is not installed on this system?"
However I can see in the file system it exists.
When I run crontab -l or crontab -e I get "Permission Denied"
whoami shows "root"
I did think at the time of the hack this was all related and he had used SSH and a Cron job to get his hack running.
What I want to know is how I can get the CronTab manager back.
All the cron jobs are still running such as importing feeds into my websites, running scheduled emails and so on, what I don't know is how to resolve this without a full rebuild.
If I had the time and energy I would do that but I am totally drained and before this hack everything was just running smoothly and my websites which bring me in money were working fine.
They currently are still working fine and I regularly check my logs for IPs that look odd, have strong htacess rules for xss/sql/path travesal/file hacks and ban whole countries from Cloudflare which the site sits behind. So I don't "think" the machine is compromised at the moment even if it is old - could be wrong though!
details of box
Operating system Debian Linux 5.0 Virtualmin version 3.98.gpl GPL WebMin Version: 1.610 Kernel and CPU Linux 2.6.32.9-rscloud on x86_64
So if anyone can help me get my crontab manager back that would be great.
Thanks
1) check if chattr exists, if not, download a new one.
2) type whereis crontab, then chattr -isa /path/to/crontab.(usually /usr/bin/cron) then chmod crontab back to it original settings.
3) navigate to /var/spool/ and
chattr -isa cron
cd cron
chattr -isa crontabs
4) remove cron entry in /etc/cron.weekly
Look in /etc/cron.weekly for any new

Upload files from linux vps to web host

I want to somehow automatically upload files every 5 minutes. I want to upload/transfer the files from my linux vps to my web host.
What I'm trying to do is upload some logs files generated on my vps to my web host so administrators can access it with an .htaccess file.
use wput along with cron to ftp files to your host
wput [options] [file]... ftp://[username[:password]#]hostname[:port][/[path/][file]]
You will probably have to install the tool as its not included by default (at least it hasnt been on most of my installs)
You'll want to set up a cron job for this. The Wikipedia page for this has a nice overview of how the crontab file is laid out. However, you should check your distribution's documentation for better information (they could be using a different version or a completely different cron daemon).
The line you'd add to the crontab would look something like this:
*/5 * * * * <user to run command as> <your command>
See also: http://www.unixgeeks.org/security/newbie/unix/cron-1.html
Hopefully your web host provides SCP or FTP servers to allow you to copy files over. How do you transfer files when you're uploading your web site files?
If it's ftp, use the ftp command:
ftp -u user:password#host/destination_folder/ sourcefile.txt
If it's scp, use the scp command:
scp foobar.txt username#host:/some/remote/directory

Cronjob on Amazon EC2 Deleted?

I had a cronjob set up to run a php script daily, which went well for about a month. Today, I realized it didn't run the script so I opened up the crontab. The crontab is completely empty - what happened?
I don't know too much about cronjobs, but as far as I understand, they do not delete themselves if the server is reset. How can I make sure cronjobs are always running and that it doesnt get deleted?
It is probably under a different user. Check root user sudo crontab -e. Each user has it's own crontab and there's one for the whole system. Note: Through the crontab configuration you can disable per-user crontabs.

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