How to Create a Scheduled Job
In this document, you’ll learn how to create a scheduled job in Medusa.
Overview
Medusa allows you to create scheduled jobs that run at specific times during your server’s lifetime. For example, you can synchronize your inventory with an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system once a day.
This guide explains how to create a scheduled job on your Medusa server. The scheduled job in this example will simply change the status of draft products to published
.
Prerequisites
Medusa Components
It is assumed that you already have a Medusa server installed and set up. If not, you can follow the quickstart guide to get started.
Redis
Redis is required for scheduled jobs to work. Make sure you install Redis and configure it with your Medusa server.
1. Create a File
Each scheduled job should reside in a TypeScript or JavaScript file under the src/loaders
directory.
Start by creating the src/loaders
directory. Then, inside that directory, create the JavaScript or TypeScript file that you’ll add the scheduled job in. You can use any name for the file.
For the example in this tutorial, you can create the file src/loaders/publish.ts
.
2. Create Cron Job
To create a scheduled job, add the following code in the file you created, which is src/loaders/publish.ts
in this example:
const publishJob = async (container, options) => {
const jobSchedulerService = container.resolve("jobSchedulerService")
jobSchedulerService.create("publish-products", {}, "0 0 * * *",
async () => {
// job to execute
const productService = container.resolve("productService")
const draftProducts = await productService.list({
status: "draft",
})
for (const product of draftProducts) {
await productService.update(product.id, {
status: "published",
})
}
}
)
}
export default publishJob
The service taking care of background jobs was renamed in v1.7.1. If you are running a previous version, use eventBusService
instead of jobSchedulerService
.
This file should export a function that accepts a container
and options
parameters. container
is the dependency container that you can use to resolve services, such as the JobSchedulerService. options
are the plugin’s options if this scheduled job is created in a plugin.
You then resolve the JobSchedulerService
and use the jobSchedulerService.create
method to create the scheduled job. This method accepts four parameters:
- The first parameter is a unique name to give to the scheduled job. In the example above, you use the name
publish-products
; - The second parameter is an object which can be used to pass data to the job;
- The third parameter is the scheduled job expression pattern. In this example, it will execute the scheduled job once a day at 12 AM.
- The fourth parameter is the function to execute. This is where you add the code to execute once the scheduled job runs. In this example, you retrieve the draft products using the ProductService and update the status of each of these products to
published
.
You can see examples of scheduled job expression patterns on crontab guru.
Pass Data to the Cron Job
To pass data to your scheduled job, you can add them to the object passed as a second parameter under the data
property. This is helpful if you use one function to handle multiple scheduled jobs.
For example:
jobSchedulerService.create("publish-products", {
data: {
productId,
},
}, "0 0 * * *", async (job) => {
console.log(job.data) // {productId: 'prod_124...'}
// ...
})
3. Run Medusa Server
Cron Jobs only run while the Medusa server is running.
In your terminal run the following command to run your Medusa server:
- npm
- Yarn
npm run start
yarn run start
This builds your code under the src
directory into the dist
directory, then runs the Medusa server.
If the scheduled job was registered successfully, you should see a message similar to this logged on your Medusa server:
Registering publish-products
Where publish-products
is the unique name you provided to the scheduled job.
Once it is time to run your scheduled job based on the scheduled job expression pattern, the scheduled job will run and you can see it logged on your Medusa server.
For example, the above scheduled job will run at 12 AM and, when it runs, you can see the following logged on your Medusa server:
info: Processing scheduled job: publish-products
If you log anything in the scheduled job, for example using console.log
, or if any errors are thrown, it’ll also be logged on your Medusa server.
To test the previous example out instantly, you can change the scheduled job expression pattern passed as the third parameter to jobSchedulerService.create
to * * * * *
. This will run the scheduled job every minute.