gawel / aiocron

Crontabs for asyncio

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aiocron - Crontabs for asyncio

Usage

aiocron provide a decorator to run function at time:

>>> import aiocron
>>> import asyncio
>>>
>>> @aiocron.crontab('*/30 * * * *')
... async def attime():
...     print('run')
...
>>> asyncio.get_event_loop().run_forever()

You can also use it as an object:

>>> @aiocron.crontab('1 9 * * 1-5', start=False)
... async def attime():
...     print('run')
...
>>> attime.start()
>>> asyncio.get_event_loop().run_forever()

Your function still be available at attime.func

You can also await a crontab. In this case, your coroutine can accept arguments:

>>> @aiocron.crontab('0 9,10 * * * mon,fri', start=False)
... async def attime(i):
...     print('run %i' % i)
...
>>> async def once():
...     try:
...         res = await attime.next(1)
...     except Exception as e:
...         print('It failed (%r)' % e)
...     else:
...         print(res)
...
>>> asyncio.get_event_loop().run_forever()

Finally you can use it as a sleep coroutine. The following will wait until next hour:

>>> await crontab('0 * * * *').next()

If you don't like the decorator magic you can set the function by yourself:

>>> cron = crontab('0 * * * *', func=yourcoroutine, start=False)

Notice that unlike standard unix crontab you can specify seconds at the 6th position.

aiocron use croniter. Refer to it's documentation to know more about crontab format.

About

Crontabs for asyncio

License:MIT License


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