Manual talk:RunJobs.php

Interpreting the Output
What do these mean please?
 * start
 * end
 * t

t is the time in milliseconds --Planetenxin (talk) 13:43, 17 April 2012 (UTC)

Duplicate jobs?
If a refreshlinks2 is done twice (in a row), naming the same template, is the second time redundant? If so, could the jobs table specify a unique key for each row? If not, why not? thanks.

Getting Timeout yy when running the runJobs.php
MW: 1.17.2 I get Timeout yy when running php ./runJobs.php maintenance script and I see that job queue is not decreasing. Is there anywhere a place to increase the timeout. I use Semantic Mediawiki and many of the failed pages contains heavy queries, which may take 10 seconds to load. Does this have impact?  

Error
Everytime I try to run this i get the following errors:

PHP Notice: Undefined index: HTTP_USER_AGENT in /var/www/*****.com/public/w/extensions/MobileDetect/MobileDetect.php on line 27 PHP Notice: Undefined index: HTTP_ACCEPT in /var/www/*****.com/public/w/extensions/MobileDetect/MobileDetect.php on line 28

Any idea what the issue is? --Zackmann08 (talk) 14:08, 17 August 2012 (UTC)


 * HTTP_USER_AGENT and HTTP_ACCEPT sound like they are these "request variables", which are set when you access a webpage with a browser. However, the maintenance script are run from shell and there these variables naturally are not set. The extension should be fixed to either not use these variables when in CLI mode or it should maybe be deactivated in CLI mode completely. --88.130.121.146 13:50, 26 February 2014 (UTC)

LoadBalancer
I'm running runJobs.php via Cronjob like this: php /path/to/my/wiki/w/maintenance/runJobs.php --maxjobs 1000

I added the following to my LocalSettings.php:

$wgDebugLogFile = "/path/to/log/mediawiki/debug-{$wgDBname}.log";

...and I keep getting these entries in my log files:

Start command line script /path/to/my/wiki/w/maintenance/runJobs.php [caches] main: MemcachedPhpBagOStuff, message: MemcachedPhpBagOStuff, parser: MemcachedPhpBagOStuff [caches] LocalisationCache: using store LCStoreDB Fully initialised Connected to database 0 at 12.34.56.78 LoadBalancer::reuseConnection: this connection was not opened as a foreign connection

Does anyone know what this means?

Thanks and cheers,

--Till Kraemer (talk) 10:51, 28 December 2014 (UTC)

runJobs runs nothing, yet there are items in the job queue
I checked the API to see how many jobs I had. it says JOBS: 25 I run "PHP runjobs.php", and it processes with no actions

I go to the mysql database, look at the mw_job table. It has 25 records in it.

Am I safe to truncate mw_job because the runjobs is not picking up any?

I have had to terminate runjobs.php quite a few times over the last week, due to caching. -Bob


 * Yes, you can truncate it. Maybe they're skipped because of previous failed attempts. In that case, they may have the  field of the job table with a number different than 0. In that case, updating that field to 0 may execute them again. In any case, the behavior of that field, how to reset it, or how to force to run such jobs through this script is not documented in any way :(  --Ciencia Al Poder (talk) 10:43, 6 March 2015 (UTC)


 * Thank you Ciencia Al Poder. The job_attempts field was 1 for all of them.   I ran    I re-ran the runjobs.php script, it ran with 0 jobs. I'm now just truncating the table  Bob.spencer (talk) 16:53, 10 March 2015 (UTC)

I have had some success in getting stuck jobs to run (again) by setting job_attempts back to 0 and also clearing the job_token field. This doesn't always work, though. As you say, the documentation is lacking. --Darenwelsh (talk) 14:55, 25 August 2016 (UTC)

what does the output from --globals actually mean?
What does the output from --globals actually mean? Should it just be listing Manual:Global object variables? Mine seems to run forever, with many "RECUSRION" lines. Is that normal? Tenbergen (talk) 04:13, 5 January 2017 (UTC)


 * Those global objects often reference other globals, which may give those recursion issues. I think this is normal. --Ciencia Al Poder (talk) 10:38, 5 January 2017 (UTC)

runJobs does not close as expect when both --maxtime & --wait where used
0,30 2-19 * * * php /wiki/maintenance/runJobs.php --memory-limit=1000M --procs 2 --maxtime 1770 -q --wait

What I am expected is the runJobs keep alive 1770 seconds then kill itself. & runJobs where called every 30 mins (30*60=1800s).

But the fact is once --wait enabled all these runJobs will not stop themselves. Then the ram were quickly filled up, and them boom.

If I ran it without --wait, them the runJobs stop very often, way earlier than the 30 mins limit. If I shrink the maxtime to 295 and start the runJobs every 5 mins(5*60=300s). Then lots of job will be claimed but not actually run due to timeout.

Does anyone have a good strategy to get runJobs.php work? Thank you in advance! --Zoglun (talk) 04:03, 11 April 2017 (UTC)


 * You can try using a wrapper bash script that only start a new instance of runJobs if there's no other instance of runJobs running, then you can keep the --wait. --Ciencia Al Poder (talk) 09:04, 11 April 2017 (UTC)


 * Very interesting point which brings me to the following questions: How would such a bash script look like? Is it also possible to differentiate between jobs emitted by different wikis? On a machine I could imagine something like  to find processes but from there ...? Perhaps  ? --91.65.247.224 21:53, 26 May 2017 (UTC)


 * On different wikis it may need different bash scripts for each wiki (or put some more logic on the bash script to differentiate each instance). I was thinking of this:
 * Check if a file (wikiname) exists.
 * If exists, check if a process exists with the same process id and the name is the current script
 * If exists, exit
 * If not, remove the file
 * create the file placing the current pid as the contents of the file
 * call runJobs.php
 * remove the file
 * --Ciencia Al Poder (talk) 15:18, 27 May 2017 (UTC)