How to create a scheduled task – Introducing the Matomo Platform

Contents

This is the next post of our blog series where we introduce the capabilities of the Matomo (Piwik) platform (our previous post was How to create a custom theme in Matomo). This time you’ll learn how to execute scheduled tasks in the background, for instance sending a daily email. For this tutorial you will need to have basic knowledge of PHP.

What can you do with scheduled tasks?

Scheduled tasks let you execute tasks regularly (hourly, weekly, …). For instance you can:

  • create and send custom reports or summaries
  • sync users and websites with other systems
  • clear any caches
  • import third-party data into Matomo
  • monitor your Matomo instance
  • execute any other task you can think of

Getting started

In this series of posts, we assume that you have already set up your development environment. If not, visit the Matomo Developer Zone where you’ll find the tutorial Setting up Matomo.

To summarize the things you have to do to get setup:

  • Install Matomo (for instance via git).
  • Activate the developer mode: ./console development:enable --full.
  • Generate a plugin: ./console generate:plugin --name="MyTasksPlugin". There should now be a folder plugins/MyTasksPlugin.
  • And activate the created plugin under Settings => Plugins.

Let’s start creating a scheduled task

We start by using the Matomo Console to create a tasks template:

./console generate:scheduledtask

The command will ask you to enter the name of the plugin the task should belong to. I will simply use the above generated plugin name « MyTasksPlugin ». There should now be a file plugins/MyTasksPlugin/Tasks.php which contains some examples to get you started easily:

class Tasks extends \Piwik\Plugin\Tasks
{
    public function schedule()
    {
        $this->hourly('myTask');  // method will be executed once every hour
        $this->daily('myTask');   // method will be executed once every day
        $this->weekly('myTask');  // method will be executed once every week
        $this->monthly('myTask'); // method will be executed once every month

        // pass a parameter to the task
        $this->weekly('myTaskWithParam', 'anystring');

        // specify a different priority
        $this->monthly('myTask', null, self::LOWEST_PRIORITY);
        $this->monthly('myTaskWithParam', 'anystring', self::HIGH_PRIORITY);
    }

    public function myTask()
    {
        // do something
    }

    public function myTaskWithParam($param)
    {
        // do something
    }
}

A simple example

As you can see in the generated template you can execute tasks hourly, daily, weekly and monthly by registering a method which represents the actual task:

public function schedule()
{
    // register method remindMeToLogIn to be executed once every day
    $this->daily('remindMeToLogIn');  
}

public function remindMeToLogIn()
{
    $mail = new \Piwik\Mail();
    $mail->addTo('me@example.com');
    $mail->setSubject('Check stats');
    $mail->setBodyText('Log into your Matomo instance and check your stats!');
    $mail->send();
}

This example sends you an email once a day to remind you to log into your Matomo daily. The Matomo platform makes sure to execute the method remindMeToLogIn exactly once every day.

How to pass a parameter to a task

Sometimes you want to pass a parameter to a task method. This is useful if you want to register for instance one task for each user or for each website. You can achieve this by specifying a second parameter when registering the method to execute.

public function schedule()
{
    foreach (\Piwik\Site::getSites() as $site) {
        // create one task for each site and pass the URL of each site to the task
        $this->hourly('pingSite', $site['main_url']); 
    }
}

public function pingSite($siteMainUrl)
{
    file_get_contents($siteMainUrl);
}

How to test scheduled tasks

After you have created your task you are surely wondering how to test it. First, you should write a unit or integration test which we will cover in one of our future blog posts. Just one hint: You can use the command ./console generate:test to create a test. To manually execute all scheduled tasks you can execute the API method CoreAdminHome.runScheduledTasks by opening the following URL in your browser:

http://piwik.example.com/index.php?module=API&method=CoreAdminHome.runScheduledTasks&token_auth=YOUR_API_TOKEN

Don’t forget to replace the domain and the token_auth URL parameter.

There is one problem with executing the scheduled tasks: The platform makes sure they will be executed only once an hour, a day, etc. This means you can’t simply reload the URL and test the method again and again as you would have to wait for the next hour or day. The proper solution is to set the constant DEBUG_FORCE_SCHEDULED_TASKS to true within the file Core/TaskScheduler.php. Don’t forget to set it back to false again once you have finished testing it.

Starting from Matomo 2.6.0 you can alternatively execute the following command:

./console core:run-scheduled-tasks --force --token-auth=YOUR_TOKEN_AUTH

The option « –force » will make sure to execute even tasks that are not due to run at this time. So you won’t have to modify any files.

Which tasks are registered and when is the next execution time of my task?

The TasksTimetable plugin from the Marketplace can answer this question for you. Simply install and activate the plugin with one click by going to Settings => Marketplace => Get new functionality. It’ll add a new admin menu item under Settings named Scheduled Tasks.

Publishing your Plugin on the Marketplace

In case you want to share your task(s) with other Matomo users you can do this by pushing your plugin to a public GitHub repository and creating a tag. Easy as that. Read more about how to distribute a plugin.

Advanced features

Isn’t it easy to create scheduled tasks? We never even created a file! Of course, based on our API design principle « The complexity of our API should never exceed the complexity of your use case. » you can accomplish more if you want. For instance, you can define priorities, you can directly register methods from different objects and classes, you can specify at which time of a day a task should run and more.

Would you like to know more about tasks? Go to our Tasks class reference in the Matomo Developer Zone.

If you have any feedback regarding our APIs or our guides in the Developer Zone feel free to send it to us.

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A powerful web analytics platform that gives you and your business 100% data ownership and user privacy protection.

No credit card required.

Free forever.