549 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
549 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
Metadata-Version: 2.4
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Name: croniter
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Version: 6.2.2
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Summary: croniter provides iteration for datetime object with cron like format
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Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/pallets-eco/croniter
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Author-email: Matsumoto Taichi <taichino@gmail.com>, kiorky <kiorky@cryptelium.net>, Ash Berlin-Taylor <ash@apache.org>, Jarek Potiuk <jarek@potiuk.com>
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License-Expression: MIT
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License-File: LICENSE
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Keywords: cron,datetime,iterator
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Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
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Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
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Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
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Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.13
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Requires-Python: >=3.9
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Requires-Dist: python-dateutil
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Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Introduction
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============
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.. contents::
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croniter provides iteration for the datetime object with a cron like format.
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::
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_ _
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___ _ __ ___ _ __ (_) |_ ___ _ __
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/ __| '__/ _ \| '_ \| | __/ _ \ '__|
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| (__| | | (_) | | | | | || __/ |
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\___|_| \___/|_| |_|_|\__\___|_|
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Website: https://github.com/pallets-eco/croniter
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Build Badge
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===========
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.. image:: https://github.com/pallets-eco/croniter/actions/workflows/cicd.yml/badge.svg
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:target: https://github.com/pallets-eco/croniter/actions/workflows/cicd.yml
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Pallets Community Ecosystem
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===========================
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.. important::
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This project is part of the Pallets Community Ecosystem. Pallets is the open
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source organization that maintains Flask; Pallets-Eco enables community
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maintenance of Flask extensions. If you are interested in helping maintain
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this project, please reach out on the `Pallets Discord server
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<https://discord.gg/pallets>`_.
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Usage
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============
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A simple example::
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>>> from croniter import croniter
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>>> from datetime import datetime
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>>> base = datetime(2010, 1, 25, 4, 46)
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>>> iter = croniter('*/5 * * * *', base) # every 5 minutes
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-01-25 04:50:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-01-25 04:55:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-01-25 05:00:00
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>>>
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>>> iter = croniter('2 4 * * mon,fri', base) # 04:02 on every Monday and Friday
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-01-26 04:02:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-01-30 04:02:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-02-02 04:02:00
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>>>
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>>> iter = croniter('2 4 1 * wed', base) # 04:02 on every Wednesday OR on 1st day of month
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-01-27 04:02:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-02-01 04:02:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-02-03 04:02:00
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>>>
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>>> iter = croniter('2 4 1 * wed', base, day_or=False) # 04:02 on every 1st day of the month if it is a Wednesday
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-09-01 04:02:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-12-01 04:02:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2011-06-01 04:02:00
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>>>
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>>> iter = croniter('0 0 * * sat#1,sun#2', base) # 1st Saturday, and 2nd Sunday of the month
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-02-06 00:00:00
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>>>
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>>> iter = croniter('0 0 * * 5#3,L5', base) # 3rd and last Friday of the month
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-01-29 00:00:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-02-19 00:00:00
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All you need to know is how to use the constructor and the ``get_next``
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method, the signature of these methods are listed below::
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>>> def __init__(self, cron_format, start_time=time.time(), day_or=True)
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croniter iterates along with ``cron_format`` from ``start_time``.
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``cron_format`` is **min hour day month day_of_week**, you can refer to
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron for more details. The ``day_or``
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switch is used to control how croniter handles **day** and **day_of_week**
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entries. Default option is the cron behaviour, which connects those
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values using **OR**. If the switch is set to False, the values are connected
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using **AND**. This behaves like fcron and enables you to e.g. define a job that
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executes each 2nd Friday of a month by setting the days of month and the
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weekday.
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::
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>>> def get_next(self, ret_type=float)
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get_next calculates the next value according to the cron expression and
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returns an object of type ``ret_type``. ``ret_type`` should be a ``float`` or a
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``datetime`` object.
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Supported added for ``get_prev`` method. (>= 0.2.0)::
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>>> base = datetime(2010, 8, 25)
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>>> itr = croniter('0 0 1 * *', base)
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>>> print(itr.get_prev(datetime)) # 2010-08-01 00:00:00
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>>> print(itr.get_prev(datetime)) # 2010-07-01 00:00:00
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>>> print(itr.get_prev(datetime)) # 2010-06-01 00:00:00
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You can validate your crons using ``is_valid`` class method. (>= 0.3.18)::
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 1 * *') # True
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 wrong_value 1 * *') # False
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Strict validation
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-----------------
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By default, ``is_valid`` and ``expand`` only check that each field is within its own range
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(e.g. day 1-31, month 1-12). They do not cross-validate fields, so expressions like
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``0 0 31 2 *`` (February 31st) are considered valid even though they can never match a real date.
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Use ``strict=True`` to enable cross-field validation that rejects impossible day/month
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combinations::
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 31 2 *') # True (default: syntax only)
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 31 2 *', strict=True) # False (Feb has at most 29 days)
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 31 4 *', strict=True) # False (Apr has 30 days)
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 30 1,2 *', strict=True) # True (day 30 is valid in Jan)
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When ``strict=True`` and the expression does not include a year field, February is assumed to
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have 29 days (since leap years exist)::
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 29 2 *', strict=True) # True (leap years exist)
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If the expression includes a year field (7-field format), leap year status is determined from
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the specified years::
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 29 2 * 0 2024', strict=True) # True (2024 is a leap year)
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 29 2 * 0 2023', strict=True) # False (2023 is not)
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 29 2 * 0 2023-2025', strict=True) # True (2024 in range is a leap year)
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For 5- or 6-field expressions, you can pass ``strict_year`` to provide the year(s) for
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leap year checking without adding a year field to the expression::
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 29 2 *', strict=True, strict_year=2024) # True (leap year)
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 29 2 *', strict=True, strict_year=2023) # False (not a leap year)
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>>> croniter.is_valid('0 0 29 2 *', strict=True, strict_year=[2023, 2024]) # True (2024 is a leap year)
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The ``strict`` and ``strict_year`` parameters are also available on ``expand()``::
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>>> croniter.expand('0 0 31 2 *', strict=True) # raises CroniterBadCronError
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Nearest weekday (W)
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===================
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The ``W`` character is supported in the day-of-month field to specify the nearest weekday
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(Monday-Friday) to the given day. Both ``nW`` and ``Wn`` formats are accepted::
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>>> base = datetime(2024, 6, 1)
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>>> itr = croniter('0 9 15W * *', base)
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>>> itr.get_next(datetime) # Jun 15 2024 is Saturday -> fires on Friday 14th
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datetime.datetime(2024, 6, 14, 9, 0)
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Rules:
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- If the specified day falls on a weekday, the trigger fires on that day.
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- If the specified day falls on Saturday, the trigger fires on the preceding Friday.
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- If the specified day falls on Sunday, the trigger fires on the following Monday.
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- The nearest weekday never crosses month boundaries. If the 1st is a Saturday, the trigger
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fires on Monday the 3rd. If the last day of the month is a Sunday, the trigger fires on the
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preceding Friday.
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- ``W`` can only be used with a single day value, not in a range or list.
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Examples::
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>>> croniter('0 9 1W * *', datetime(2024, 5, 31)).get_next(datetime) # Jun 1 is Sat -> Mon 3rd
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datetime.datetime(2024, 6, 3, 9, 0)
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>>> croniter('0 9 W15 * *', datetime(2024, 1, 1)).get_next(datetime) # Wn format also works
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datetime.datetime(2024, 1, 15, 9, 0)
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Day-of-month and day-of-week
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============================
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When both the day-of-month and day-of-week fields are restricted (not ``*``),
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the default POSIX cron behavior is to match when **either** field matches (OR).
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This is controlled by the ``day_or`` parameter::
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>>> # OR (default): fires on every Wednesday OR on the 1st of the month
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>>> iter = croniter('2 4 1 * wed', datetime(2010, 1, 25))
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-01-27 04:02:00 (Wed)
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-02-01 04:02:00 (1st)
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>>> # AND: fires only on the 1st of the month IF it is a Wednesday
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>>> iter = croniter('2 4 1 * wed', datetime(2010, 1, 25), day_or=False)
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2010-09-01 04:02:00 (Wed AND 1st)
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This can be used to express patterns like "the first Tuesday of the month"
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by combining a day range with a weekday::
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>>> # First Tuesday of each month: days 1-7 AND Tuesday
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>>> iter = croniter('1 1 1-7 * 2', datetime(2024, 7, 12), day_or=False)
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2024-08-06 01:01:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2024-09-03 01:01:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2024-10-01 01:01:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2024-11-05 01:01:00
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Vixie cron bug compatibility
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----------------------------
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Some vixie/ISC cron implementations have a `known bug
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<https://crontab.guru/cron-bug.html>`_ where expressions that start with
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``*`` in the day-of-month or day-of-week field (e.g. ``*/32,1-7``) use AND
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logic instead of OR, even though those fields are technically restricted.
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If you need to replicate this behavior (e.g. ``*/32,1-7`` as a hack for days
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1-7), use ``implement_cron_bug=True``::
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>>> iter = croniter('1 1 */32,1-7 * 2', datetime(2024, 7, 12), implement_cron_bug=True)
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2024-08-06 01:01:00
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>>> print(iter.get_next(datetime)) # 2024-09-03 01:01:00
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About DST
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=========
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Be sure to init your croniter instance with a TZ aware datetime for this to work!
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Example using zoneinfo::
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>>> import zoneinfo
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>>> tz = zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("Europe/Berlin")
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>>> local_date = datetime(2017, 3, 26, tzinfo=tz)
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>>> val = croniter('0 0 * * *', local_date).get_next(datetime)
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Example using pytz::
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>>> import pytz
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>>> tz = pytz.timezone("Europe/Paris")
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>>> local_date = tz.localize(datetime(2017, 3, 26))
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>>> val = croniter('0 0 * * *', local_date).get_next(datetime)
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Example using python_dateutil::
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>>> import dateutil.tz
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>>> tz = dateutil.tz.gettz('Asia/Tokyo')
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>>> local_date = datetime(2017, 3, 26, tzinfo=tz)
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>>> val = croniter('0 0 * * *', local_date).get_next(datetime)
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Example using python built in module::
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>>> from datetime import datetime, timezone
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>>> local_date = datetime(2017, 3, 26, tzinfo=timezone.utc)
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>>> val = croniter('0 0 * * *', local_date).get_next(datetime)
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About second repeats
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=====================
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Croniter is able to do second repetition crontabs form and by default seconds are the 6th field::
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>>> base = datetime(2012, 4, 6, 13, 26, 10)
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>>> itr = croniter('* * * * * 15,25', base)
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>>> itr.get_next(datetime) # 4/6 13:26:15
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>>> itr.get_next(datetime) # 4/6 13:26:25
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>>> itr.get_next(datetime) # 4/6 13:27:15
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You can also note that this expression will repeat every second from the start datetime.::
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>>> croniter('* * * * * *', local_date).get_next(datetime)
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You can also use seconds as first field::
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>>> itr = croniter('15,25 * * * * *', base, second_at_beginning=True)
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About year
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===========
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Croniter also support year field.
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Year presents at the seventh field, which is after second repetition.
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The range of year field is from 1970 to 2099.
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To ignore second repetition, simply set second to ``0`` or any other const::
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>>> base = datetime(2012, 4, 6, 2, 6, 59)
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>>> itr = croniter('0 0 1 1 * 0 2020/2', base)
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>>> itr.get_next(datetime) # 2020 1/1 0:0:0
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>>> itr.get_next(datetime) # 2022 1/1 0:0:0
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>>> itr.get_next(datetime) # 2024 1/1 0:0:0
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Support for start_time shifts
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==============================
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See https://github.com/pallets-eco/croniter/pull/76,
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You can set start_time=, then expand_from_start_time=True for your generations to be computed from start_time instead of calendar days::
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>>> from pprint import pprint
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>>> iter = croniter('0 0 */7 * *', start_time=datetime(2024, 7, 11), expand_from_start_time=True);pprint([iter.get_next(datetime) for a in range(10)])
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[datetime.datetime(2024, 7, 18, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 7, 25, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 4, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 11, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 18, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 25, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 4, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 11, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 18, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 25, 0, 0)]
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>>> # INSTEAD OF THE DEFAULT BEHAVIOR:
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>>> iter = croniter('0 0 */7 * *', start_time=datetime(2024, 7, 11), expand_from_start_time=False);pprint([iter.get_next(datetime) for a in range(10)])
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[datetime.datetime(2024, 7, 15, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 7, 22, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 7, 29, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 1, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 8, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 15, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 22, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 8, 29, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 1, 0, 0),
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datetime.datetime(2024, 9, 8, 0, 0)]
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Testing if a date matches a crontab
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===================================
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Test for a match with (>=0.3.32)::
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>>> croniter.match("0 0 * * *", datetime(2019, 1, 14, 0, 0, 0, 0))
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True
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>>> croniter.match("0 0 * * *", datetime(2019, 1, 14, 0, 2, 0, 0))
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False
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>>>
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>>> croniter.match("2 4 1 * wed", datetime(2019, 1, 1, 4, 2, 0, 0)) # 04:02 on every Wednesday OR on 1st day of month
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True
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>>> croniter.match("2 4 1 * wed", datetime(2019, 1, 1, 4, 2, 0, 0), day_or=False) # 04:02 on every 1st day of the month if it is a Wednesday
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False
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By default, ``match`` uses a precision of **60 seconds** for standard 5-field cron
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expressions and **1 second** for 6-field expressions (with seconds). This means a
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datetime up to 60 (or 1) seconds after the scheduled time will still match.
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You can override this with the ``precision_in_seconds`` parameter::
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>>> # With default precision (60s), 59 seconds past midnight still matches
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>>> croniter.match("0 0 * * *", datetime(2019, 1, 14, 0, 0, 59, 0))
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True
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>>> # With precision=1, only an exact match within 1 second works
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>>> croniter.match("0 0 * * *", datetime(2019, 1, 14, 0, 0, 59, 0), precision_in_seconds=1)
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False
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Testing if a crontab matches in datetime range
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==============================================
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Test for a match_range with (>=2.0.3)::
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>>> croniter.match_range("0 0 * * *", datetime(2019, 1, 13, 0, 59, 0, 0), datetime(2019, 1, 14, 0, 1, 0, 0))
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True
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>>> croniter.match_range("0 0 * * *", datetime(2019, 1, 13, 0, 1, 0, 0), datetime(2019, 1, 13, 0, 59, 0, 0))
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False
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>>> croniter.match_range("2 4 1 * wed", datetime(2019, 1, 1, 3, 2, 0, 0), datetime(2019, 1, 1, 5, 1, 0, 0))
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# 04:02 on every Wednesday OR on 1st day of month
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True
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>>> croniter.match_range("2 4 1 * wed", datetime(2019, 1, 1, 3, 2, 0, 0), datetime(2019, 1, 1, 5, 2, 0, 0), day_or=False)
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# 04:02 on every 1st day of the month if it is a Wednesday
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False
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The ``precision_in_seconds`` parameter is also available on ``match_range``.
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Gaps between date matches
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=========================
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For performance reasons, croniter limits the amount of CPU cycles spent attempting to find the next match.
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Starting in v0.3.35, this behavior is configurable via the ``max_years_between_matches`` parameter, and the default window has been increased from 1 year to 50 years.
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The defaults should be fine for many use cases.
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Applications that evaluate multiple cron expressions or handle cron expressions from untrusted sources or end-users should use this parameter.
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Iterating over sparse cron expressions can result in increased CPU consumption or a raised ``CroniterBadDateError`` exception which indicates that croniter has given up attempting to find the next (or previous) match.
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Explicitly specifying ``max_years_between_matches`` provides a way to limit CPU utilization and simplifies the iterable interface by eliminating the need for ``CroniterBadDateError``.
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The difference in the iterable interface is based on the reasoning that whenever ``max_years_between_matches`` is explicitly agreed upon, there is no need for croniter to signal that it has given up; simply stopping the iteration is preferable.
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This example matches 4 AM Friday, January 1st.
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Since January 1st isn't often a Friday, there may be a few years between each occurrence.
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Setting the limit to 15 years ensures all matches::
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>>> it = croniter("0 4 1 1 fri", datetime(2000,1,1), day_or=False, max_years_between_matches=15).all_next(datetime)
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>>> for i in range(5):
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... print(next(it))
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...
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2010-01-01 04:00:00
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2016-01-01 04:00:00
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2021-01-01 04:00:00
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2027-01-01 04:00:00
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2038-01-01 04:00:00
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However, when only concerned with dates within the next 5 years, simply set ``max_years_between_matches=5`` in the above example.
|
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This will result in no matches found, but no additional cycles will be wasted on unwanted matches far in the future.
|
|
|
|
Iterating over a range using cron
|
|
=================================
|
|
Find matches within a range using the ``croniter_range()`` function. This is much like the builtin ``range(start,stop,step)`` function, but for dates. The `step` argument is a cron expression.
|
|
Added in (>=0.3.34)
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|
|
|
List the first Saturday of every month in 2019::
|
|
|
|
>>> from croniter import croniter_range
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>>> for dt in croniter_range(datetime(2019, 1, 1), datetime(2019, 12, 31), "0 0 * * sat#1"):
|
|
>>> print(dt)
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|
|
|
|
|
Hashed expressions
|
|
==================
|
|
|
|
croniter supports Jenkins-style hashed expressions, using the "H" definition keyword and the required hash_id keyword argument.
|
|
Hashed expressions remain consistent, given the same hash_id, but different hash_ids will evaluate completely different to each other.
|
|
This allows, for example, for an even distribution of differently-named jobs without needing to manually spread them out.
|
|
|
|
>>> itr = croniter("H H * * *", hash_id="hello")
|
|
>>> itr.get_next(datetime)
|
|
datetime.datetime(2021, 4, 10, 11, 10)
|
|
>>> itr.get_next(datetime)
|
|
datetime.datetime(2021, 4, 11, 11, 10)
|
|
>>> itr = croniter("H H * * *", hash_id="hello")
|
|
>>> itr.get_next(datetime)
|
|
datetime.datetime(2021, 4, 10, 11, 10)
|
|
>>> itr = croniter("H H * * *", hash_id="bonjour")
|
|
>>> itr.get_next(datetime)
|
|
datetime.datetime(2021, 4, 10, 20, 52)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Random expressions
|
|
==================
|
|
|
|
Random "R" definition keywords are supported, and remain consistent only within their croniter() instance.
|
|
|
|
>>> itr = croniter("R R * * *")
|
|
>>> itr.get_next(datetime)
|
|
datetime.datetime(2021, 4, 10, 22, 56)
|
|
>>> itr.get_next(datetime)
|
|
datetime.datetime(2021, 4, 11, 22, 56)
|
|
>>> itr = croniter("R R * * *")
|
|
>>> itr.get_next(datetime)
|
|
datetime.datetime(2021, 4, 11, 4, 19)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note about Ranges
|
|
=================
|
|
|
|
Note that as a deviation from cron standard, croniter is somehow laxist with ranges and will allow ranges of ``Jan-Dec``, & ``Sun-Sat`` in reverse way and interpret them as following examples:
|
|
|
|
- ``Apr-Jan``: from April to january
|
|
- ``Sat-Sun``: Saturday, Sunday
|
|
- ``Wed-Sun``: Wednesday to Saturday, Sunday
|
|
|
|
Please note that if a /step is given, it will be respected.
|
|
|
|
Note about Sunday
|
|
=================
|
|
|
|
Note that as a deviation from cron standard, croniter like numerous cron implementations supports ``SUNDAY`` to be expressed as ``DAY7``, allowing such expressions:
|
|
|
|
- ``0 0 * * 7``
|
|
- ``0 0 * * 6-7``
|
|
- ``0 0 * * 6,7``
|
|
|
|
|
|
Keyword expressions
|
|
===================
|
|
|
|
Vixie cron-style "@" keyword expressions are supported.
|
|
What they evaluate to depends on whether you supply hash_id: no hash_id corresponds to Vixie cron definitions (exact times, minute resolution), while with hash_id corresponds to Jenkins definitions (hashed within the period, second resolution).
|
|
|
|
============ ============ ================
|
|
Keyword No hash_id With hash_id
|
|
============ ============ ================
|
|
@midnight 0 0 * * * H H(0-2) * * * H
|
|
@hourly 0 * * * * H * * * * H
|
|
@daily 0 0 * * * H H * * * H
|
|
@weekly 0 0 * * 0 H H * * H H
|
|
@monthly 0 0 1 * * H H H * * H
|
|
@yearly 0 0 1 1 * H H H H * H
|
|
@annually 0 0 1 1 * H H H H * H
|
|
============ ============ ================
|
|
|
|
Upgrading
|
|
==========
|
|
|
|
To 2.0.0
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
- Install or upgrade pytz by using version specified requirements/base.txt if you have it installed `<=2021.1`.
|
|
|
|
Develop this package
|
|
====================
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
git clone https://github.com/pallets-eco/croniter.git
|
|
cd croniter
|
|
virtualenv --no-site-packages venv3
|
|
venv3/bin/pip install --upgrade -r requirements/test.txt -r requirements/lint.txt -r requirements/format.txt -r requirements/tox.txt
|
|
venv3/bin/black src/
|
|
venv3/bin/isort src/
|
|
venv3/bin/tox --current-env -e fmt,lint,test
|
|
|
|
|
|
Make a new release
|
|
====================
|
|
We use zest.fullreleaser, a great release infrastructure.
|
|
|
|
Do and follow these instructions
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
venv3/bin/pip install --upgrade -r requirements/release.txt
|
|
./release.sh
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contributors
|
|
===============
|
|
Thanks to all who have contributed to this project!
|
|
If you have contributed and your name is not listed below please let us know.
|
|
|
|
- Aarni Koskela (akx)
|
|
- ashb
|
|
- bdrung
|
|
- chris-baynes
|
|
- djmitche
|
|
- evanpurkhiser
|
|
- GreatCombinator
|
|
- Hinnack
|
|
- ipartola
|
|
- jlsandell
|
|
- kiorky
|
|
- lowell80 (Kintyre)
|
|
- mag009
|
|
- mrmachine
|
|
- potiuk
|
|
- Ryan Finnie (rfinnie)
|
|
- salitaba
|
|
- scop
|
|
- shazow
|
|
- yuzawa-san
|
|
- zed2015
|