Actually I do watchdog("my function', myfunction(10)) so the output goes to
dblog when it works. I never use exit() in Drupal.
Nancy
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. -- Dr. Martin L. King, Jr.
________________________________
From: Ted <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, September 8, 2010 12:24:14 PM
Subject: Re: [development] Cron run exceeded the time limit and was aborted.
Have you tried suppressing the output of your function? Also, make sure you're
not calling drupal_goto--or anything else that calls exit().
Ted
On 9/8/2010 12:17 PM, nan wich wrote:
If I comment that line out, the problem goes away, so yes, I am reasonably
convinced it is my function.
>
>I can clearly see it returning in far less than even 30 seconds, so there is
>no
>way it's taking 240.
>
>Nancy
>
>Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. -- Dr. Martin L. King,
Jr.
>
>
>
>
>
________________________________
From: Earnie Boyd <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected]
>Sent: Wed, September 8, 2010 12:08:25 PM
>Subject: Re: [development] Cron run exceeded the time limit and was aborted.
>
>nan wich wrote:
>> I have a function that runs a few updates and displays a list of what it
>> did.
>>In
>>
>> order to get caught up from a long period of neglect, I decided to add it
>> into
>
>> the hook_cron. Every time I invoke cron, I get "Cron run exceeded the time
>>limit
>>
>> and was aborted" yet it completes in far less than 30 seconds. Any ideas how
>> my
>>
>> code could be inadvertantly triggering this?
>>
>> Nancy
>> Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. -- Dr. Martin L. King,
>>Jr.
>
>Are you sure it is your code? Try using Elysia Cron to schedule the
>hook_cron of different modules. The cron API gives 240 seconds for all
>hook_cron to execute, if all the modules exceed the 240 seconds then
>you'll see the exceeded time limit message.
>
>--
>Earnie
>-- http://progw.com
>-- http://www.for-my-kids.com
>