beste / clock
A collection of Clock implementations
Fund package maintenance!
jeromegamez
Tidelift
Installs: 9 205 221
Dependents: 13
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 57
Watchers: 2
Forks: 1
Open Issues: 0
Requires
- php: ^8.0
- psr/clock: ^1.0
Requires (Dev)
- phpstan/extension-installer: ^1.2
- phpstan/phpstan: ^1.9.1
- phpstan/phpstan-phpunit: ^1.2.2
- phpstan/phpstan-strict-rules: ^1.4.4
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.5.26
- psalm/plugin-phpunit: ^0.16.1
- vimeo/psalm: ^4.29
Provides
README
A collection of PSR-20 Clock implementations.
Table of Contents
- Installation
- Clocks
SystemClock
- Time, as your computer (k)nows itLocalizedClock
- A clock in a(nother) time zoneUTCClock
- The clock that you should™ useFrozenClock
- A clock that stopped moving (perfect for tests)MinuteClock
- Who cares about seconds or even less?WrappingClock
- Allows wrapping a non-clock with anow()
method in a clock
- Running Tests
Installation
composer require beste/clock
Clocks
SystemClock
A System Clock will return a time just as if you would use new DateTimeImmutable()
. The time zone of the returned
value is determined by the clock's environment, for example by the time zone that has been configured in your
application, by a previously used date_default_timezone_set()
or by the value of date.timezone
in the
php.ini
. If none of these are explicitly set, it uses the UTC
timezone.
# examples/system_clock.php use Beste\Clock\SystemClock; $clock = SystemClock::create(); printf("On your system, the current date and time is %s\n", $clock->now()->format('Y-m-d H:i:s T (P)')); date_default_timezone_set('America/Los_Angeles'); printf("Now it's %s\n", $clock->now()->format('Y-m-d H:i:s T (P)')); date_default_timezone_set('Europe/Berlin'); printf("Now it's %s\n", $clock->now()->format('Y-m-d H:i:s T (P)'));
LocalizedClock
A localized clock is aware of the time zone in which it is located. While the time zone of the SystemClock
is
determined from the environment (your PHP configuration), this clock uses the time zone that you initialize it with.
# examples/localized_clock.php use Beste\Clock\LocalizedClock; $berlin = LocalizedClock::in('Europe/Berlin'); $denver = LocalizedClock::in(new DateTimeZone('America/Denver')); printf("Berlin: %s\n", $berlin->now()->format('Y-m-d H:i:s T (P)')); printf("Denver: %s\n", $denver->now()->format('Y-m-d H:i:s T (P)'));
UTCClock
UTC
is the abbreviation for Coordinated Universal Time
and a special kind of time zone that is not affected by daylight saving time. It is commonly used for the communication
of time across different systems (e.g. between your PHP application and a database, or between a backend
and a frontend). An UTCClock
instance behaves exactly the same as an instance of LocalizedClock::in('UTC')
.
# examples/utc_clock.php use Beste\Clock\UTCClock; $clock = UTCClock::create(); $anotherTimeZone = 'Africa/Casablanca'; date_default_timezone_set($anotherTimeZone); printf("The system time zone is %s.\n", $anotherTimeZone); printf("The clock's time zone is %s.\n", $clock->now()->getTimezone()->getName());
FrozenClock
A frozen clock doesn't move - the time we set it with will stay the same... unless we change it. That makes the frozen clock perfect for testing the behaviour of your time-based use cases, for example in Unit Tests.
# examples/frozen_clock.php use Beste\Clock\FrozenClock; use Beste\Clock\SystemClock; $frozenClock = FrozenClock::withNowFrom(SystemClock::create()); printf("\nThe clock is frozen at %s", $frozenClock->now()->format('Y-m-d H:i:s T (P)')); printf("\nLet's wait a second…"); sleep(1); printf("\nIt's one second later, but the clock is still frozen at %s", $frozenClock->now()->format('Y-m-d H:i:s T (P)')); $frozenClock->setTo($frozenClock->now()->modify('-5 minutes')); printf("\nAfter turning back the clock 5 minutes, it's %s", $frozenClock->now()->format('Y-m-d H:i:s T (P)'));
MinuteClock
In some cases, microseconds, milliseconds, or even seconds are too precise for some use cases - sometimes it's just enough if something happened in the same minute. Using the minute
# examples/minute_clock.php use Beste\Clock\FrozenClock; use Beste\Clock\MinuteClock; $frozenClock = FrozenClock::at(new DateTimeImmutable('01:23:45')); $clock = MinuteClock::wrapping($frozenClock); printf("For %s, the minute clock returns %s\n", $frozenClock->now()->format('H:i:s'), $clock->now()->format('H:i:s') ); $frozenClock->setTo($frozenClock->now()->modify('+10 seconds')); // 01:23:55 printf("For %s, the minute clock still returns %s\n", $frozenClock->now()->format('H:i:s'), $clock->now()->format('H:i:s') );
WrappingClock
If you already have an object with a now()
method returning a DateTimeImmutable
object, you can wrap it
in a WrappingClock
to make it a "real" Clock.
as a "real" clock.
# examples/wrapping_clock.php use Beste\Clock\WrappingClock; // Create a frozen $now so that we can test the wrapping clock. $now = new DateTimeImmutable('2012-04-24 12:00:00'); // Create an object that is NOT a clock, but has a now() method returning the frozen $now. $clock = new class($now) { private \DateTimeImmutable $now; public function __construct(\DateTimeImmutable $now) { $this->now = $now; } public function now(): \DateTimeImmutable { return $this->now; } }; // We can now wrap the object in a clock. $wrappedClock = WrappingClock::wrapping($clock); assert($now->format(DATE_ATOM) === $wrappedClock->now()->format(DATE_ATOM));
Running tests
composer test