elstc / cakephp-time-interval
TimeInterval type plugin for CakePHP
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Type:cakephp-plugin
Requires
- php: >=8.1
- ext-json: *
- ext-pdo: *
- cakephp/cakephp: ^5.0
Requires (Dev)
- cakephp/cakephp-codesniffer: ^5.0
- cakephp/migrations: ^4.0
- phpunit/phpunit: ^10.1
README
This plugin provide time_interval
custom type for MySQL's TIME
, Postgres's INTERVAL
,
and provide time_interval_int
custom type for seconds as INTEGER
.
This is a custom type to represent intervals, which CakePHP can treat as a TimeInterval
object that inherits from DateInterval
.
Version Map
Installation
You can install this plugin into your CakePHP application using composer.
The recommended way to install composer packages is:
composer require elstc/cakephp-time-interval
Load plugin
Load the plugin by adding the following statement in your project's src/Application.php
:
$this->addPlugin('Elastic/TimeInterval');
Usage
Add column definitions to Table class
use Cake\Database\Schema\TableSchema; class WorkTimesTable extends Table { protected function _initializeSchema(TableSchema $schema) { parent::_initializeSchema($schema); $schema->setColumnType('duration', 'time_interval'); // If your column type is seconds as INTEGER, Use `time_interval_int` instead. $schema->setColumnType('duration_sec', 'time_interval_int'); return $schema; } }
Add column validation to Table class
Use timeInterval
rule instead of time
.
The timeInterval
rule is in the timeInterval
validation provider.
use Cake\Validation\Validator; use Elastic\TimeInterval\Validation\TimeIntervalValidation; class WorkTimesTable extends Table { public function validationDefault(Validator $validator) { // ... $validator->add('duration', 'timeInterval', [ 'rule' => 'timeInterval', 'provider' => 'timeInterval', ]); return $validator; } }
In addition, add mutator to Entity class, it is useful.
use Cake\Database\Type; class WorkTime extends Entity { protected function _setDuration($value) { // convert to TimeInterval return Type::build('time_interval')->marshal($value); } } $workTime->duration = '00:15:00'; $workTime->duration = ($startTime)->diff($endTime); // $startTime, $endTime is FrozenTime object. $workTime->duration = 3600; // as a seconds
NOTE
MySQL TIME column limitation.
MySQL :: MySQL 8.0 Reference Manual :: 13.2.3 The TIME Type
By default, values that lie outside the TIME range but are otherwise valid are clipped to the closest endpoint of the range. For example,
'-850:00:00' and '850:00:00' are converted to '-838:59:59' and '838:59:59'. Invalid TIME values are converted to '00:00:00'.
Note that because '00:00:00' is itself a valid TIME value, there is no way to tell, from a value of '00:00:00' stored in a table,
whether the original value was specified as '00:00:00' or whether it was invalid.
DateInterval / TimeInterval construct with date part will be broken time
If you initialize DateInterval with date part, time will not be interpreted correctly.
$workTime->duration = new DateInterval('PT75H4M5S'); // OK $workTime->duration = new DateInterval('P1M2DT3H4M5S'); // can't get expected time