Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: cronrepo
Version: 0.2
Summary: Maintain a set of cron jobs in your code repository
Home-page: https://github.com/isaacto/cronrepo
Author: Isaac To
Author-email: isaac.to@gmail.com
License: UNKNOWN
Description: # cronrepo: Maintain a set of cron jobs in your code repository.
        
        In Unix conventions, periodic tasks are invoked by cron jobs.  These
        jobs are normally configured by the user interactively.  When building
        a complex system that contains code that needs to be executed
        periodically, one usually needs to configure many related cron jobs
        and to ensure that they are installed exactly at the moment when the
        repository gets deployed.  This is cumbersome and error-prone.
        
        The cronrepo system eases that pain.
        
        ## Cron job files
        
        A directory should be created for the cron job files.  They are
        normally shell scripts, although you can use other type of programs as
        well.  They need to be line-based, and need to allow a comment style
        headed by "#" (or otherwise allowing such lines to be inserted freely,
        e.g., through a multi-line string syntax).  So using Perl or Python
        scripts or even Makefile as such jobs are okay.
        
        The cron job files will be tagged by "taglines" to tell what cron jobs
        should be installed on each target.  The simplest ones look like this:
        
            # CRON@alice::1-10/2 05 01-07 * 2,4
        
        The above tagline configures a cron job running when the following
        criteria is matched:
        
          * minute: between 1 to 10, if divisible by 2.
          * hour: equals 5
          * day: between 01 and 07
          * month: any month
          * day of week: 2 (Tuesday) and 4 (Thursday)
        
        So it is a job which is invoked 5 times on the first Tuesday and first
        Thursday of every month, at 05:02, 05:04, 05:06, 05:08 and 05:10.
        
        Not all cron time formats are supported, and the above demonstrated
        all the supported types.
        
        The "alice" is called the "target" of the cron job.  When the cron
        jobs are installed on the system, one target is installed at a time.
        This allows you to have a cron directory containing jobs that runs
        differently on different targets, e.g., different machines.
        
        Multiple taglines may be created for the same target.  It is at times
        handy to be able to differentiate them.  We can add a "job ID" to the
        above line, like this:
        
            # CRON@alice%second:5:11-20/2 05 01-07 * 2,4 + foo bar
        
        The job ID consists of word characters (letters, digits and
        underscores).  The job ID is set as the environment variable
        CRONREPO_JID.
        
        The above job shows two more features of the tagline:
        
          * We can put an integer between the double-colon to give a level
            number to the job.  The default level is 0.  This is useful in the
            show-inv command described below.
          * We can add parameters to the cron job, by adding it to the tagline
            after a "+" character.  The above job will be executed with two
            arguments "foo" and "bar".
        
        # The cronrepo program
        
        The cronrepo program manages the cron jobs given a directory of cron
        job files.  This is done by the followings:
        
          * Generation and installation
        
                # cronrepo generate <dir> --target <target>
                # cronrepo install <dir> --target <target>
        
            Generate cron jobs entries and show it on the command line or
            install them as cron jobs.  Only jobs of the specific target is
            generated or installed.  If not specified, generate/install all
            jobs.  The job is started by a "cron runner" generated if you use
            "install".
        
          * Uninstallation
        
                # cronrepo uninstall <dir> --target <target>
        
            This undos the modification to your crontab, thus uninstalling the
            cron job.  It also uninstalls the cron runner file generated
            during installation.
        
          * Listing invocations
        
                # cronrepo list-inv <dir> --target <target> --minlevel <level> \
                      --start <dt> --end <dt>
        
            This lists the expected invocations of the cron job entries that
            occur between the specified `<dt>` (datetime, in
            'YYYY-mm-ddTHH:MM'), inclusive.  Jobs are listed only if it has a
            level of at least `<level>`.  The output is in a format that you
            can save and run in the shell.
        
        # The cron runner
        
        If you ever written a cron job you know that the environment as seen
        by the cron job is quite different from your normal environment: PATH
        is very simplistic (usually so simplistic that you end up setting up
        your PATH in your script as the first step).  In cronrepo this is done
        for you.
        
        In particular, when you use "cronrepo install", a "runner script" is
        created.  All current environment variables (except a few) are
        converted into variable exporting commands in the runner script, and
        the current directory is also set in the script.  So at the end, the
        cron jobs will run in a very similar environment as simply running the
        job on the command line of your terminal running "cronrepo install".
        
        # The trampoline
        
        Normally, if a cron jobs fails or emit output, notification will be
        sent to the owner of the cron job via E-mail.  You can globally
        disable this feature, but having nobody to take care of cron job
        failures is not a good idea.
        
        You can write a program to actually run your cron jobs, and have the
        runner file to run that instead of the cron job.  This is done by
        adding `--trampoline "your_program"` when you run `cronrepo install`.
        The arguments to `your_program` is simply the path to the cron job
        file, followed by all the arguments to be passed to your job (as
        specified in `+ ...` in the cron job file).
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX :: Linux
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
