HuCron
turns human readable strings about time and turns them into valid crontabs.
phppkg/hucron
is froked from the https://github.com/ajbdev/cronlingo
composer install phppkg/hucron
There are some examples for parse human statement.
use HuCron\HuCron;
echo HuCron::fromStatement('@hourly'); // "0 * * * *"
echo HuCron::fromStatement('@daliy'); // "0 0 * * *"
echo HuCron::fromStatement('@weekly'); // "0 0 * * 0"
echo HuCron::fromStatement('@monthly'); // "0 0 1 * *"
// echo HuCron::fromStatement('@yearly');
echo HuCron::fromStatement('@annually'); // "0 0 1 1 *"
use HuCron\HuCron;
echo HuCron::fromStatement('Every day at midnight');
// "0 0 * * *"
echo HuCron::fromStatement('Every 15 minutes at midnight on the weekend');
// "*/15 0 * * 0,6"
echo HuCron::fromStatement('Every other minute in August at noon on a weekday');
// "*/2 12 * 8 1,2,3,4,5"
echo HuCron::fromStatement('The 1st day in April at midnight');
// "0 0 1 4 *"
echo HuCron::fromStatement('Every day on the weekday at 2:25pm');
// "25 14 * * 1,2,3,4,5"
HuCron
identifies the parts of a string with specific time-related keywords such as "on, to, at" and uses this to deduce the time meaning and convert it into part of a cron tab.
It's not particular about the order of these statements.
Here's a brief list of things that it will pick up and parse into a crontab:
- Periods (
daily, weekly, monthly
) - Exact times (
9:30 PM, 8a, 3p
) - Meridiems (
AM/PM/A/P
) - Intervals (
1st, second, other, ninth, etc
) - Specific fields (
second, minute, hour, day, month
) - Day of week (
sunday, monday
etc) - 12 o'clocks (
noon, midnight
) - Lists (e.g.
5 to 12 minutes
) - Month names (
january, february
, etc) - Weekend / weekday
A cron tab is an expression that defines a recurring period of time.
It looks something like this:
* * * * *
- - - - -
| | | | |
| | | | +----- day of week (0 - 7) (Sunday=0 or 7)
| | | +---------- month (1 - 12)
| | +--------------- day of month (1 - 31)
| +-------------------- hour (0 - 23)
+------------------------- min (0 - 59)
From Wikipedia:
The software utility Cron is a time-based job scheduler in Unix-like computer operating systems. People who set up and maintain software environments use cron to schedule jobs (commands or shell scripts) to run periodically at fixed times, dates, or intervals. It typically automates system maintenance or administration—though its general-purpose nature makes it useful for things like connecting to the Internet and downloading email at regular intervals.
- https://github.com/dragonmantank/cron-expression Calculate the next or previous run date and determine
- https://github.com/lorisleiva/cron-translator Makes CRON expressions human-readable