laipower/wp-content/plugins/wpscan/libraries/action-scheduler/classes/abstracts/ActionScheduler_Abstract_Re...

103 lines
3.1 KiB
PHP

<?php
/**
* Class ActionScheduler_Abstract_RecurringSchedule
*/
abstract class ActionScheduler_Abstract_RecurringSchedule extends ActionScheduler_Abstract_Schedule {
/**
* The date & time the first instance of this schedule was setup to run (which may not be this instance).
*
* Schedule objects are attached to an action object. Each schedule stores the run date for that
* object as the start date - @see $this->start - and logic to calculate the next run date after
* that - @see $this->calculate_next(). The $first_date property also keeps a record of when the very
* first instance of this chain of schedules ran.
*
* @var DateTime
*/
private $first_date = NULL;
/**
* Timestamp equivalent of @see $this->first_date
*
* @var int
*/
protected $first_timestamp = NULL;
/**
* The recurrance between each time an action is run using this schedule.
* Used to calculate the start date & time. Can be a number of seconds, in the
* case of ActionScheduler_IntervalSchedule, or a cron expression, as in the
* case of ActionScheduler_CronSchedule. Or something else.
*
* @var mixed
*/
protected $recurrence;
/**
* @param DateTime $date The date & time to run the action.
* @param mixed $recurrence The data used to determine the schedule's recurrance.
* @param DateTime|null $first (Optional) The date & time the first instance of this interval schedule ran. Default null, meaning this is the first instance.
*/
public function __construct( DateTime $date, $recurrence, DateTime $first = null ) {
parent::__construct( $date );
$this->first_date = empty( $first ) ? $date : $first;
$this->recurrence = $recurrence;
}
/**
* @return bool
*/
public function is_recurring() {
return true;
}
/**
* Get the date & time of the first schedule in this recurring series.
*
* @return DateTime|null
*/
public function get_first_date() {
return clone $this->first_date;
}
/**
* @return string
*/
public function get_recurrence() {
return $this->recurrence;
}
/**
* For PHP 5.2 compat, since DateTime objects can't be serialized
* @return array
*/
public function __sleep() {
$sleep_params = parent::__sleep();
$this->first_timestamp = $this->first_date->getTimestamp();
return array_merge( $sleep_params, array(
'first_timestamp',
'recurrence'
) );
}
/**
* Unserialize recurring schedules serialized/stored prior to AS 3.0.0
*
* Prior to Action Scheduler 3.0.0, schedules used different property names to refer
* to equivalent data. For example, ActionScheduler_IntervalSchedule::start_timestamp
* was the same as ActionScheduler_SimpleSchedule::timestamp. This was addressed in
* Action Scheduler 3.0.0, where properties and property names were aligned for better
* inheritance. To maintain backward compatibility with scheduled serialized and stored
* prior to 3.0, we need to correctly map the old property names.
*/
public function __wakeup() {
parent::__wakeup();
if ( $this->first_timestamp > 0 ) {
$this->first_date = as_get_datetime_object( $this->first_timestamp );
} else {
$this->first_date = $this->get_date();
}
}
}