In Debian Jessie and up (incl. Ubuntu) cron is not executed for Certbot renewal.
Instead the systemd timer is used. See timer: /lib/systemd/system/certbot.timer
This timer runs the following service: /lib/systemd/system/certbot.service
Which contains:
[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/usr/bin/certbot -q renew
PrivateTmp=true
In order to list all the timers, execute the following command in the terminal:
systemctl list-timers
Hopefully Certbot is part of this:
Mon 2019-02-04 08:38:45 CET 9h left Sun 2019-02-03 15:25:41 CET
8h ago certbot.timer certbot.service
UPDATE:
Due to the down votes. I'll add how to install Certbot on a Debian based distro (it may vary depending on your Linux distribution).
But within Debian Stretch for example you can install the back-port package of certbot
via:
sudo apt-get install certbot -t stretch-backports
This will install the files I showed above for you automatically! And thus automatically schedule a certbot timer for you, which runs the service, which runs again the renew.
Manually running a renew is always possible via:
sudo /usr/bin/certbot renew
Can be forced via --force-renewal
flag. For more info see the help text of renew:
/usr/bin/certbot --help renew
Files part of the certbot package (incl. but not limited by):
dpkg-query -L certbot
...
/lib/systemd/system/certbot.service
/lib/systemd/system/certbot.timer
...