I tried to use the recommended WP-Crontrol plugin but there is no option to "Add PHP Cron Event" - I am logged in as an Admin so should have full access rights.
I have tried to follow How to set the cron job notifications in Amelia Booking? in the Amelia FAQ section but I can't see anyway to add a php cron event.
Could you could tell me where and how exactly to add this text . The attachment shows the only options that seem to be available to me.
cron is a Linux utility which schedules a command or script on your server to run automatically at a specified time and date. A cron job is the scheduled task itself. Cron jobs can be very useful to automate repetitive tasks like in our plugin for notifications.
Depending on the server, there are different configurations for it, which you can contact your hosting provider about, or you can check out one of the solutions for it on this link.
GET 'https://yourdomain.com/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php?action=wpamelia_api&call=/notifications/scheduled/send' > /dev/null
WP Crontrol plugin is the best option if you're not familiar with cron jobx. You can find more info about it, and detailed instructions on how to set it up in our FAQ section.
So, if you already read that, and still need some clarification here's some further info.
You copy only the URL from below a scheduled notification:
Then, in Crontrol go to "Cron Schedules", and scroll all the way down. Add a 15 minute interval:
Then go to "Add PHP Cron Event" and add the URL you've copied like this:
So:
file_get_contents("yourURL");
Below it add the name, and set it to run a few minutes in the future, using the provided time format. So, if you're adding the cron event at 12:45, set it to run at 12:50; and then select the schedule you previously selected:
Click on Add Event, and that's it.
The cron runs every 15 minutes, and checks if there's an email to be sent. So, in Amelia Notifications, your scheduled notifications are set to run every day at a certain time. If you set that time to be 15:00 (for example), the emails will be sent when the cron runs after that time.
For example, there's an appointment booked for tomorrow, and it's currently 14:44 - the cron runs, but since it's not yet 15:00, it doesn't send anything. It runs again after 15 minutes, so at 14:59, but there are still no emails flagged by Amelia, so it doesn't send anything. Then it runs again at 15:14 and it sees there's an email that should've been sent at 15:00, so it sends the email. It will only send emails when Amelia sees an appointment scheduled for the next day.
Aleksander - this is exactly what I was after thank you.
Perhaps this could be made available in the general documentation as I was falling over because I included the ' */15 * * * * ' in the cron job I was setting up. This is very helpful for beginners with Cron
I have no idea where to add the following line to cron to be able to use the appointment follow up notification.
*/15 * * * * https://www.wellingearwaxclinic.co.uk/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php?action=wpamelia_api&call=/notifications/scheduled/send
I tried to use the recommended WP-Crontrol plugin but there is no option to "Add PHP Cron Event" - I am logged in as an Admin so should have full access rights.
I have tried to follow How to set the cron job notifications in Amelia Booking? in the Amelia FAQ section but I can't see anyway to add a php cron event.
Could you could tell me where and how exactly to add this text . The attachment shows the only options that seem to be available to me.
Hello samantha
cron is a Linux utility which schedules a command or script on your server to run automatically at a specified time and date. A cron job is the scheduled task itself. Cron jobs can be very useful to automate repetitive tasks like in our plugin for notifications.
Depending on the server, there are different configurations for it, which you can contact your hosting provider about, or you can check out one of the solutions for it on this link.
Also, you can try this:
*/15 * * * * wget -q -O - "https://www.yourwebsite.com/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php?action=wpamelia_api&call=/notifications/scheduled/send"
Or this:
*/15 * * * * /usr/local/bin/php ~/public_html/wp-cron.php --action='wpamelia_api' --call='/notifications/scheduled/send'
Or this:
GET 'https://yourdomain.com/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php?action=wpamelia_api&call=/notifications/scheduled/send' > /dev/null
WP Crontrol plugin is the best option if you're not familiar with cron jobx. You can find more info about it, and detailed instructions on how to set it up in our FAQ section.
So, if you already read that, and still need some clarification here's some further info.
You copy only the URL from below a scheduled notification:
Then, in Crontrol go to "Cron Schedules", and scroll all the way down. Add a 15 minute interval:
Then go to "Add PHP Cron Event" and add the URL you've copied like this:
So:
Below it add the name, and set it to run a few minutes in the future, using the provided time format. So, if you're adding the cron event at 12:45, set it to run at 12:50; and then select the schedule you previously selected:
Click on Add Event, and that's it.
The cron runs every 15 minutes, and checks if there's an email to be sent. So, in Amelia Notifications, your scheduled notifications are set to run every day at a certain time. If you set that time to be 15:00 (for example), the emails will be sent when the cron runs after that time.
For example, there's an appointment booked for tomorrow, and it's currently 14:44 - the cron runs, but since it's not yet 15:00, it doesn't send anything. It runs again after 15 minutes, so at 14:59, but there are still no emails flagged by Amelia, so it doesn't send anything. Then it runs again at 15:14 and it sees there's an email that should've been sent at 15:00, so it sends the email. It will only send emails when Amelia sees an appointment scheduled for the next day.
I hope that helps.
Kind Regards,
Aleksandar Vuković
[email protected]
Rate my support
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Aleksander - this is exactly what I was after thank you.
Perhaps this could be made available in the general documentation as I was falling over because I included the ' */15 * * * * ' in the cron job I was setting up. This is very helpful for beginners with Cron
Hi again Samantha, I'm glad to hear you found what you were looking for.
I've added this to our documentation, so hopefully it will help other people, without the need to reach out to us.
Kind Regards,
Aleksandar Vuković
[email protected]
Rate my support
wpDataTables: FAQ | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Front-end and back-end demo | Docs
Amelia: FAQ | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Amelia demo sites | Docs | Discord Community
You can try wpDataTables add-ons before purchasing on these sandbox sites:
Powerful Filters | Gravity Forms Integration for wpDataTables | Formidable Forms Integration for wpDataTables | Master-Detail Tables