UI Component For Creating Cron Job Syntax To Send To Server
##Demo ##Installation
Install using bower:
bower install angular-cron-jobs
##Use:
Include the component in your application:
angular.module('myApp', ['angular-cron-jobs']);
Insert the directive where you would like it to appear in your application:
<cron-selection ng-model="myOutput"></cron-selection>
By setting the ng-model attribute equal to a value in your controller (i.e. $scope.myOutput
in the example above) you have access to the cron syntax output.
For example, a job selected to run every month on the 11th at 4:10 AM would output the follow:
'10 4 11 * *'
as a string.
##Configuration:
The directive takes an optional attribute of config
<cron-selection ng-model="myOutput" config="myConfig"></cron-selection>
This is an object in your controller you can use to remove options from the user. For example if you would like the user to be able to set Minute, Hour, and Day but not Week, Month, and Year you would create the following object in your controller:
$scope.myConfig = {
options: {
allowWeek : false,
allowMonth : false,
allowYear : false
}
}
Currently the config object accepts an options property with an object of allowed selections. These include:
- allowMinute
- allowHour
- allowDay
- allowWeek
- allowMonth
- allowYear
Setting the keys as booleans will turn the selection on and off.
You can also set whether or not you want to allow a user to select multiple calues for a cron:
$scope.myConfig = {
allowMultiple: true
}
Setting allowMultiple to either true or false will toggle the ability.
A complete config object may look like the following:
$scope.myConfig = {
allowMultiple: true,
options: {
allowWeek : false,
allowMonth : false,
allowYear : false
}
}
##Custom Templates:
As noted by TimotheeJeannin you can use custom template by setting the template attribute on your cron DOM element:
<cron-selection template="path/to/my/template.html"></cron-selection>
##Initializing UI with data from server
The directive takes an attribute of ng-model
used for init and output data.
<cron-selection ng-model="myOutput" config="myConfig"></cron-selection>
This is a string in your controller of cron syntax that was recieved from your server or any other source:
$scope.myOutput = "30 2 4 * *"
Thew directive will properly build out the UI to reflect this data.
##Setting Cron after directive load
The ng-model
attribute also works as a reset attribute
<cron-selection ng-model="myOutput" config="myConfig"></cron-selection>
This is an expression paired with a value in your controller. Whenever the value changes (or is set for the first time) and passed the angular.isDefined()
method the cron will reset itself to match that value
$timeout(function(){
$scope.myOutput = "0 0 * * *"
}, 3000);
The directive will properly build out the UI to reflect this data.
##Utilize Exposed $scope.myFrequency:
the frequency
attribute grants you exposure to the $scope.myFrequency
object inside the directive. It is two way bound so you can manipulate it from outside the directive as well.
The type of {number|Array.<number>}
depends on the following: number if allowMultiple
is false
and Array if allowMultiple
is true
Properties you now have access to via frequency
attribute include:
- base
{number}
1-6 (minute thru year) - minuteValue
{number|Array.<number>}
0-55 (increments of 5) - hourValue
{number|Array.<number>}
1-23 - dayOfMonthValue
{number|Array.<number>}
0-6 (Sunday thru Saturday) - monthValue
{number|Array.<number>}
1-12
###You can get away from using select inputs in your custom temple using the frequency
attribute.
####Demo Without Using Selects
##Contributors
[@immertreu] (https://github.com/immertreu)
[@TSteele27] (https://github.com/TSteele27)
[@DmitryEfimenki] (https://github.com/DmitryEfimenko)
##Coming Soon:
The next big to-do's on my list include:
- Support generlized selections such as a one button click for "Every Five Minutes" or "Last Thursday of Every Month"