timely 0.2.0
Released: 2-Sep-2015
timely is a Python package that allows users to manage the uptime of their Amazon Web Services EC2 containers by providing times at which the containers should be running for any day of the week.
timely requires an AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and an AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY. These can be configured by either exporting environment variables or creating a ~/.boto configuration file.
All commits are tested with Travis CI and also require the AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY environment variables to be set.
>>> from timely import Timely
>>> timely = Timely()
>>> print(timely.all())
{u'i-6dc5bc92': [Time(weekday='Monday', start_time=datetime.time(9, 0, tzinfo=<DstTzInfo 'US/Eastern' LMT-1 day, 19:04:00 STD>), end_time=datetime.time(17, 0, tzinfo=<DstTzInfo 'US/Eastern' LMT-1 day, 19:04:00 STD>))]}>>> from timely import Timely
>>> from datetime import time
>>> timely = Timely()
>>> t1 = time(9, 0)
>>> t2 = time(17, 0)
>>> timely.set(t1, t2, weekdays=['Monday'])>>> from timely import Timely
>>> timely = Timely(verbose=True)
>>> timely.check()
starting instance: i-6dc5bc92By default, timely sets the default timezone to US/Eastern. However, this can be changed upon instantiation of the timely class or via the set_tz method. For example:
>>> from timely import Timely
>>> timely = Timely(tz='US/Pacific')
>>> timely.tz = 'US/Mountain'
>>> print(timely.tz)
US/MountainIf the timezone specified does not exist, then UTC is used.
When assigning the timezone, the set method will create a tag tz for EC2 containers with the timezone that was specified. Whenever the check method is called, the tz tag that is assigned to the EC2 container is used to determine whether or not it should be running.