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A dinosaur with a clock around its neck.

Building for the web is increasingly complex. Writing modern software includes leveraging cloud infrastructure, dissecting boilerplate code, and managing intricate configurations — when developers only want to focus on writing business logic.

Deno aims to radically simplify web development by removing config and unnecessary boilerplate. We’ve built Deno KV, a serverless database, and Deno Queues, a way to offload tasks or schedule future work, right into the runtime, so adding them to your application only requires a few lines of code.

Today, we’re thrilled to take another step in simplifying web development by introducing Deno Cron, an easy way to create scheduled jobs:

Deno.cron("Sample cron job", "*/10 * * * *", () => {
  console.log("This will run every 10 minutes");
});

In this post, we’ll go over:

Learn some tips and tricks about Deno.cron() in the above YouTube video.

Using Deno Cron

Deno.cron() (available behind the --unstable flag as of 1.38), is a function that takes three parameters:

  • name , the name of your scheduled job
  • schedule , which uses the Unix cron format and where the time is in the UTC timezone
  • handler, a function that is executed on the schedule provided

Unlike cron on UNIX/Linux, Deno Cron executions do not overlap. This means that if you schedule something to run every 10 minutes, but the task takes 30 minutes to complete, Deno Cron automatically skips the next scheduled run until the task is complete. Overlapping cron jobs can lead to unintended issues and requires extra tedious logic to avoid, but Deno Cron side steps that completely.

We’re also working to support a JavaScript friendly API for specifying the cron schedule.

Deno Cron on Deno Deploy

On Deno Deploy, our multi-tenant distributed serverless JavaScript platform, Deno.cron() is automatically detected and managed so you don’t need to worry about anything.

You can run cron jobs without a web server or even consistent incoming requests to keep your isolate alive. That’s because whenever your project is deployed, Deno Deploy automatically detects your cron jobs and evaluates them. When its time for your handler to run, Deno Deploy automatically spins up an isolate on-demand to run them.

This code works on Deno Deploy. Check out the playground.

We’ve also added a new Cron tab in the Deno Deploy dashboard, which shows all active cron jobs in your project:

The new Cron tab in your project settings will show your scheduled jobs detected by Deno Deploy.

A new cron tab in your Project that shows your active cron jobs.

Your cron jobs will also appear in your logs.

Your cron jobs will appear in your logs.

To modify or stop an existing cron, change your code and create a new deployment. For example, if you remove a  Deno.cron from your code and deploy it, those jobs will no longer be scheduled to run.

Your Deno Cron handlers can perform all sorts of actions, such as updating state in Deno KV, pinging a website, sending an email, initiating a database backup, calling an API at regular intervals, and more.

How does it work on Deno Deploy?

How exactly does Deno Deploy know there’s a cron in your code, even when there’s no web server handling requests?

When a new production deployment of your project is created, an ephemeral V8 isolate is used to evaluate your project’s top-level scope and to discover any Deno.cron definitions. A global cron scheduler is then updated with your project’s latest cron definitions, which includes updates to your existing crons, new crons, and deleted crons.

The global cron scheduler is a reliable service that’s responsible for scheduling and dispatching cron jobs based on the specified schedule. During dispatch, an on-demand v8 isolate is spun up to execute the job using the same production deployment.

These 24 lines of code creates a cron job to fetch weather data from a public API and adds it to Deno KV every hour. The web server endpoint prints out all of the timestamps and weather data.

Using Deno Cron on Deno Deploy makes it simple to create cron jobs and host them in the cloud without any configuration in a matter of minutes.

Other resources

What’s next?

Building a scalable business requires the ability to schedule jobs reliably and easily. Deno Cron is a simple way to schedule jobs without unnecessary configuration.

With Deno Cron, Deno KV, Deno Queues, npm, and web standards APIs, building and launching a production-ready server on Deno is simpler and more productive. But we are not there yet. We have a few more cloud primitives that we hope to add to the runtime — stay tuned.

Join the discussion on Hacker News.

🚨️ We’re actively seeking feedback for Deno Cron 🚨️

If you’re using it (or plan to use it) in a commercial capacity and want to connect directly to one of our engineers for technical support, please let us know via email or Discord.