… my 3rd HEX package for Elixir

Timewrap is a “Time-Wrapper” through which you can access different time-sources, Elixir and Erlang offers you. Other than that you can implement on your own.
Also, Timewrap can do the time-warp, freeze, and unfreeze a
Timewrap.Timer
.
You can instantiate different Timewrap.Timer
s, registered and
supervised by :name
.
The Timewrap.TimeSupervisor
is started with the Timewrap.Application
and implicitly starts the default timer :default_timer
. This
one is used whenever you call Timewrap-functions without a
timer given as the first argument.
Resources
Examples:
use Timewrap # imports some handy Timewrap-functions.
With default Timer
Timewrap.freeze_timer()
item1 = %{ time: current_time() }
:timer.sleep(1000)
item2 = %{ time: current_time() }
assert item1.time == item2.time
Transactions with a given and frozen time
with_frozen_timer(~N[1964-08-31 06:00:00Z], fn ->
... do something while `current_time` will
always return the given timestamp within this
block...
end )
Start several independent timers
{:ok, today} = new_timer(:today)
{:ok, next_week} = new_timer(:next_week)
freeze_time(:today, ~N[2019-02-11 09:00:00])
freeze_time(:next_week, ~N[2019-02-18 09:00:00])
... do something ...
unfreeze_time(:today)
unfreeze_time(:next_week)
Installation
From available Hex package, the package can be installed
by adding timewrap
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:timewrap, "~> 0.1.0"}
]
end
Configuration
config/config.exs
config :timewrap,
timer: :default,
unit: :second,
calendar: Calendar.ISO,
representation: :unix
[Raspberry Experiments]: {{ site.baseurl }}{% post_url 2018-08-26-NervesRpi3 %}