As pointed out by Remus Rusanu, PowerShell would be the way to go. Here's a simple one-liner that you can use to create a scheduled task, without needing to write a separate .ps1 file:
powershell -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Command
Invoke-WebRequest 'http://localhost/cron.aspx' -UseBasicParsing
Note that line breaks are added only for clarity in all of these command lines. Remove them before you try running the commands.
You can create the scheduled task like this: (run this from an elevated command prompt)
schtasks /create /tn "MyAppDailyUpdate"
/tr "powershell -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Command
Invoke-WebRequest 'http://localhost/cron.aspx' -UseBasicParsing"
/sc DAILY /ru System
The above will work for PowerShell 3+. If you need something that will work with older versions, here's the one-liner:
powershell -ExecutionPolicy unrestricted -Command
"(New-Object Net.WebClient).DownloadString("http://localhost/cron.aspx")"
You can create the scheduled task like this: (from an elevated command prompt)
schtasks /create /tn "MyAppDailyUpdate"
/tr "powershell -ExecutionPolicy unrestricted -Command
"(New-Object Net.WebClient).DownloadString("http://localhost/cron.aspx")""
/sc DAILY /ru System
The schtasks
examples set up the task to run daily - consult the schtasks documentation for more options.
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