Skip to content

johnsmclay/parse-crontab

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

24 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Copyright 2011-2016 Josiah Carlson

Released under the LGPL license version 2.1 and version 3 (you can choose which you'd like to be bound under).

Description

This package intends to offer a method of parsing crontab schedule entries and determining when an item should next be run. More specifically, it calculates a delay in seconds from when the .next() method is called to when the item should next be executed.

Comparing the below chart to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron#CRON_expression you will note that W and # symbols are not supported.

Field Name Mandatory Allowed Values Allowed Special Characters
Minutes Yes 0-59 * / , -
Hours Yes 0-23 * / , -
Day of month Yes 1-31 * / , - ? L
Month Yes 1-12 or JAN-DEC * / , -
Day of week Yes 0-6 or SUN-SAT * / , - ? L
Year No 1970-2099 * / , -

Sample individual crontab fields

Examples of supported entries are as follows:

*
*/5
7/8
3-25/7
3,7,9
0-10,30-40/5

For month or day of week entries, 3 letter abbreviations of the month or day can be used to the left of any optional / where a number could be used.

For days of the week:

mon-fri
sun-thu/2

For month:

apr-jul
mar-sep/3

Example uses

>>> from crontab import CronTab
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> # define the crontab for 25 minutes past the hour every hour
... entry = CronTab('25 * * * *')
>>> # find the delay from when this was run (around 11:13AM)
... entry.next()
720.81637899999998
>>> # find the delay from when it was last scheduled
... entry.next(datetime(2011, 7, 17, 11, 25))
3600.0

Notes

At most one of 'day of week' or 'day of month' can be a value other than '?' or ''. We violate spec here and allow '' to be an alias for '?', in the case where one of those values is specified (seeing as some platforms don't support '?').

This module also supports the convenient aliases:

@yearly
@annually
@monthly
@weekly
@daily
@hourly

Example full crontab entries and their meanings:

30 */2 * * * -> 30 minutes past the hour every 2 hours
15,45 23 * * * -> 11:15PM and 11:45PM every day
0 1 ? * SUN -> 1AM every Sunday
0 1 * * SUN -> 1AM every Sunday (same as above)
0 0 1 jan/2 * 2011-2013 ->
    midnight on January 1, 2011 and the first of every odd month until
    the end of 2013
24 7 L * * -> 7:24 AM on the last day of every month
24 7 * * L5 -> 7:24 AM on the last friday of every month
24 7 * * Lwed-fri ->
    7:24 AM on the last wednesday, thursday, and friday of every month

About

Parse and use crontab schedules in Python

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 99.1%
  • Makefile 0.9%