cronexpression for Go ===================== Go language (golang) cron expression parser. Given a cron expression and a time stamp, you can get the next time stamp which satisfy the cron expression. The reference documentation for this implementation is found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron#CRON_expression, with the following differences: * Supports the second field (before minute field) * If five fields are present, a wildcard year field is appended * If six field are present, "0" is prepended as second field * Domain for day-of-week field is [0-7] instead of [0-6], 7 being Sunday, like zero. * `@reboot` is not supported, as it is meaningless for a cron expression parser library * As of now, the behavior of the code is undetermined if a malformed cron expression is supplied (most likely, code will panic) Install ------- go get github.com/gorhill/cronexpression Usage ----- Import the library: import "github.com/gorhill/cronexpression" import "time" Simplest way: nextTime := cronexpression.NextTimeFromCronString("0 0 29 2 *", time.Now()) Assuming `time.Now()` is "2013-08-29 09:28:00", then `nextTime` will be "2016-02-29 00:00:00". If you need to reuse many times a cron expression in your code, it is more efficient to create a `CronExpression` object once and keep a copy of it for reuse: cronexpr := cronexpression.NewCronExpression("0 0 29 2 *") nextTime := cronexpr.NextTime(time.Now())