fugit
Time tools for flor and the floraison group.
It uses et-orbi to represent time instances and raabro as a basis for its parsers.
Fugit is a core dependency of rufus-scheduler 3.5.x.
Related projects
Sister projects
The intersection of those two projects is where fugit is born:
- rufus-scheduler - a cron/at/in/every/interval in-process scheduler, in fact, it’s the father project to this fugit project
- flor - a Ruby workflow engine, fugit provides the foundation for its time scheduling capabilities
Similar, sometimes overlapping projects
- chronic - a pure Ruby natural language date parser
- parse-cron - parses cron expressions and calculates the next occurrence after a given date
- ice_cube - Ruby date recurrence library
- ISO8601 - Ruby parser to work with ISO8601 dateTimes and durations
- …
Projects using fugit
- arask - “Automatic RAils taSKs” uses fugit to parse cron strings
- sideqik-cron - recent versions of Sideqik-Cron use fugit to parse cron strings
- rufus-scheduler -
- flor - used in the cron procedure
- que-scheduler - a reliable job scheduler for que
- …
Fugit.parse(s)
The simplest way to use fugit is via Fugit.parse(s)
.
require 'fugit' Fugit.parse('0 0 1 jan *').class # ==> ::Fugit::Cron Fugit.parse('12y12M').class # ==> ::Fugit::Duration Fugit.parse('2017-12-12').class # ==> ::EtOrbi::EoTime Fugit.parse('2017-12-12 UTC').class # ==> ::EtOrbi::EoTime Fugit.parse('every day at noon').class # ==> ::Fugit::Cron
Fugit::Cron
A class Fugit::Cron
to parse cron strings and then #next_time
and #previous_time
to compute the next or the previous occurrence respectively.
There is also a #brute_frequency
method which returns an array [ shortest delta, longest delta, occurrence count ]
where delta is the time between two occurrences.
require 'fugit' c = Fugit::Cron.parse('0 0 * * sun') # or c = Fugit::Cron.new('0 0 * * sun') p Time.now # => 2017-01-03 09:53:27 +0900 p c.next_time # => 2017-01-08 00:00:00 +0900 p c.previous_time # => 2017-01-01 00:00:00 +0900 p c.brute_frequency # => [ 604800, 604800, 53 ] # [ delta min, delta max, occurrence count ] p c.rough_frequency # => 7 * 24 * 3600 (7d rough frequency) p c.match?(Time.parse('2017-08-06')) # => true p c.match?(Time.parse('2017-08-07')) # => false p c.match?('2017-08-06') # => true p c.match?('2017-08-06 12:00') # => false
Example of cron strings understood by fugit:
'5 0 * * *' # 5 minutes after midnight, every day '15 14 1 * *' # at 1415 on the 1st of every month '0 22 * * 1-5' # at 2200 on weekdays '0 22 * * mon-fri' # idem '23 0-23/2 * * *' # 23 minutes after 00:00, 02:00, 04:00, ... '@yearly' # turns into '0 0 1 1 *' '@monthly' # turns into '0 0 1 * *' '@weekly' # turns into '0 0 * * 0' '@daily' # turns into '0 0 * * *' '@midnight' # turns into '0 0 * * *' '@hourly' # turns into '0 * * * *' '0 0 L * *' # last day of month at 00:00 '0 0 last * *' # idem '0 0 -7-L * *' # from the seventh to last to the last day of month at 00:00 # and more...
Fugit::Duration
A class Fugit::Duration
to parse duration strings (vanilla rufus-scheduler ones and ISO 8601 ones).
Provides duration arithmetic tools.
require 'fugit' d = Fugit::Duration.parse('1y2M1d4h') p d.to_plain_s # => "1Y2M1D4h" p d.to_iso_s # => "P1Y2M1DT4H" ISO 8601 duration p d.to_long_s # => "1 year, 2 months, 1 day, and 4 hours" d += Fugit::Duration.parse('1y1h') p d.to_long_s # => "2 years, 2 months, 1 day, and 5 hours" d += 3600 p d.to_plain_s # => "2Y2M1D5h3600s"
The to_*_s
methods are also available as class methods:
p Fugit::Duration.to_plain_s('1y2M1d4h') # => "1Y2M1D4h" p Fugit::Duration.to_iso_s('1y2M1d4h') # => "P1Y2M1DT4H" ISO 8601 duration p Fugit::Duration.to_long_s('1y2M1d4h') # => "1 year, 2 months, 1 day, and 4 hours"
Fugit::At
Points in time are parsed and given back as EtOrbi::EoTime instances.
Fugit::At.parse('2017-12-12').to_s # ==> "2017-12-12 00:00:00 +0900" (at least here in Hiroshima) Fugit::At.parse('2017-12-12 12:00:00 America/New_York').to_s # ==> "2017-12-12 12:00:00 -0500"
Directly with Fugit.parse_at(s)
is OK too:
Fugit.parse_at('2017-12-12 12:00:00 America/New_York').to_s # ==> "2017-12-12 12:00:00 -0500"
Directly with Fugit.parse(s)
is OK too:
Fugit.parse('2017-12-12 12:00:00 America/New_York').to_s # ==> "2017-12-12 12:00:00 -0500"
Fugit::Nat
Fugit understand some kind of “natural” language:
For example, those “every” get turned into Fugit::Cron
instances:
Fugit::Nat.parse('every day at five') # ==> '0 5 * * *' Fugit::Nat.parse('every weekday at five') # ==> '0 5 * * 1,2,3,4,5' Fugit::Nat.parse('every day at 5 pm') # ==> '0 17 * * *' Fugit::Nat.parse('every tuesday at 5 pm') # ==> '0 17 * * 2' Fugit::Nat.parse('every wed at 5 pm') # ==> '0 17 * * 3' Fugit::Nat.parse('every day at 16:30') # ==> '30 16 * * *' Fugit::Nat.parse('every day at noon') # ==> '0 12 * * *' Fugit::Nat.parse('every day at midnight') # ==> '0 0 * * *' Fugit::Nat.parse('every tuesday and monday at 5pm') # ==> '0 17 * * 1,2' Fugit::Nat.parse('every wed or Monday at 5pm and 11') # ==> '0 11,17 * * 1,3' Fugit::Nat.parse('every day at 5 pm on America/Los_Angeles') # ==> '0 17 * * * America/Los_Angeles' Fugit::Nat.parse('every day at 6 pm in Asia/Tokyo') # ==> '0 18 * * * Asia/Tokyo' Fugit::Nat.parse('every 3 hours') # ==> '0 */3 * * *' Fugit::Nat.parse('every 4 months') # ==> '0 0 1 */4 *' Fugit::Nat.parse('every 5 minutes') # ==> '*/5 * * * *' Fugit::Nat.parse('every 15s') # ==> '*/15 * * * * *'
Directly with Fugit.parse(s)
is OK too:
Fugit.parse('every day at five') # ==> Fugit::Cron instance '0 5 * * *'
LICENSE
MIT, see LICENSE.txt