Skip to content

system7-open-source/collective.timedevents

 
 

Repository files navigation

collective.timedevents

collective.timedevents fires clock based Zope 3 events. They can make Zope application react to timers. This is useful for creating services where something must happen regurlarly or after a certain period has expired.

This is a developer level product. This product is indended to replace Products.TickingMachine with more robust Zope 3 codebase.

There are two different styles of using it:

  1. Using the ITickEvent and calculating if action needs to be done in the event subscriber. This will also take care of timing over zope restarts by keeping event timing persistent.
  2. Subscribing to any of the cron-style IIntervalTicks*-events, not worrying about the timing client side. For the longer ticks (weekly, montly) a cron-job as trigger makes most sense, in case of zope restarts.

Tested by Travis:

https://secure.travis-ci.org/collective/collective.timedevents.png?branch=master
  1. Add collective.timedevents to your buildout by adding the egg to your buildout.cfg:

    eggs =
       ...
       collective.timedevents
    
  2. Trigger

Can either be cron-jobs or zope clock-server.

Add clock server to tick timedevents subscribers - use your Plone instance name:

[instance]
...
    zope-conf-additional =
    <clock-server>
        method /mysite/@@tick
        period 90
        user clockserver-user
        password password
        host localhost
    </clock-server>

Or for the cron-like interval-based events, here 900 seconds for the 15-minute event:

<clock-server>
  method /mysite/@@tick_fifteen
  period 900
  user clockserver-user
  password password
  host localhost
</clock-server>

Now you should start to see ticks in the zope event log.

Subscribe to the events/ticks you need.

  1. Using the ITickEvent method:
  1. Add collective.timedevents.interfaces.ITickEvent subscribers to your product ZCML declarations:

    <configure
    xmlns="http://namespaces.zope.org/zope"
    xmlns:browser="http://namespaces.zope.org/browser"
    i18n_domain="harvinaiset.app">
    
         <subscriber
               handler="myproduct.tickers.on_tick"
               for="collective.timedevents.intefaces.ITickEvent"
             />
    
    </configure>
    
  2. Configure your event handler to react after certain period has expired:

    from zope.app.component.hooks import getSite
    
    def on_tick(event):
        """ Do something after one hour has elapsed """
        interval_in_days = 1.0 / 24.0 # One hour, floating point
        context = site.my_magic_context # Persistent object which stores our timing data
        if event.last_tick > context.last_action + interval_in_days: # Check whether enough time has elaped
            do_stuff()
            context.last_action = event.last_tick # Store when we last time did something
    
  1. Using the IIntervalTicks*-events:

Add collective.timedevents.interfaces.IIntervalTicks* subscribers to your module ZCML declarations:

<configure
xmlns="http://namespaces.zope.org/zope"
xmlns:browser="http://namespaces.zope.org/browser"
i18n_domain="mymodule">

     <subscriber
           handler="myproduct.tickers.on_tick_fifteen"
           for="collective.timedevents.intefaces.IIntervalTicks15Event"
         />

</configure>

All ticking code is executed under admin privileges.

ITickEvent tick period is 300 seconds by default. This can be controlled in views.py.

Ticks for ITickEvent are logged by events.tick_logger defined in configure.zcml.

This product fills the following quality criteria:

  • Unit tests provided
  • Good documentation provided
  • Commented code
  • PyPi eggs provided
  • Mikko Ohtamaa <http://opensourcehacker.com>
  • Quintagroup
  • Sune Brøndum Wøller
  • The orignal concept and code was created by Tomasz J. Kotarba <[email protected]> of SYSTEM7.
  • Twinapex Research, Oulu, Finland <http://www.twinapex.com>_ - High quality Python hackers for hire