This is how you should do if you had some async tasks to manage:
(function schedule() {
background.asyncStuff().then(function() {
console.log('Process finished, waiting 5 minutes');
setTimeout(function() {
console.log('Going to restart');
schedule();
}, 1000 * 60 * 5);
}).catch(err => console.error('error in scheduler', err));
})();
You cannot guarantee however when it will start, but at least you will not run multiple time the job at the same time, if your job takes more than 5 minutes to execute.
You may still use setInterval
for scheduling an async job, but if you do so, you should at least flag the processed tasks as "being processed", so that if the job is going to be scheduled a second time before the previous finishes, your logic may decide to not process the tasks which are still processed.