# Parse the line passed down in the first argument as a calendar entry. # Sets the values parsed into the associative array reply, consisting of: # time The time as an integer (as per EPOCHSECONDS) of the (next) event. # text1 The text from the line not including the date/time, but # including any WARN or RPT text. This is useful for rescheduling # events, since the keywords need to be retained in this case. # warntime Any warning time (WARN keyword) as an integer, else an empty # string. This is the time of the warning in units of EPOCHSECONDS, # not the parsed version of the original number (which was a time # difference). # warnstr Any warning time as the original string (e.g. "5 mins"), not # including the WARN keyword. # schedrpttime The next scheduled recurrence (which may be cancelled # or rescheduled). # rpttime The actual occurrence time: the event may have been rescheduled, # in which case this is the time of the actual event (for use in # programming warnings etc.) rather than that of the normal # recurrence (which is recorded by calendar_add as RECURRENCE). # # rptstr Any repeat/recurrence time as the original string. # text2 The text from the line with the date and other keywords and # values removed. # # Note that here an "integer" is a string of digits, not an internally # formatted integer. # # Return status 1 if parsing failed. reply is set to an empty # in this case. Note the caller is responsible for # making reply local. emulate -L zsh setopt extendedglob local vdatefmt="%Y%m%dT%H%M%S" local REPLY REPLY2 timefmt occurrence skip try_to_recover before after local -a match mbegin mend integer now then replaced firstsched schedrpt # Any text matching "OCCURRENCE " # may occur multiple times. We set occurrences[]=disposition. local -A occurrences autoload -Uz calendar_scandate typeset -gA reply reply=() if (( $# != 1 )); then print "Usage: $0 calendar-entry" >&2 return 2 fi # This call sets REPLY to the date and time in seconds since the epoch, # REPLY2 to the line with the date and time removed. calendar_scandate -as $1 || return 1 reply[time]=$(( REPLY )) schedrpt=${reply[time]} reply[text1]=${REPLY2##[[:space:]]#} reply[text2]=${reply[text1]} while true; do case ${reply[text2]} in # First check for a scheduled repeat time. If we don't find one # we'll use the normal time. ((#b)(*[[:space:]\#])RECURRENCE[[:space:]]##([^[:space:]]##)([[:space:]]*|)) strftime -rs then $vdatefmt ${match[2]} || print "format: $vdatefmt, string ${match[2]}" >&2 schedrpt=$then reply[text2]="${match[1]}${match[3]##[ ]#}" ;; # Look for specific warn time. ((#b)(|*[[:space:],])WARN[[:space:]](*)) if calendar_scandate -asm -R $reply[time] $match[2]; then reply[warntime]=$REPLY reply[warnstr]=${match[2]%%"$REPLY2"} # Remove spaces and tabs but not newlines from trailing text, # else the formatting looks funny. reply[text2]="${match[1]}${REPLY2##[ ]#}" else # Just remove the keyword for further parsing reply[text2]="${match[1]}${match[2]##[ ]#}" fi ;; ((#b)(|*[[:space:],])RPT[[:space:]](*)) before=${match[1]} after=${match[2]} if [[ $after = CANCELLED(|[[:space:]]*) ]]; then reply[text2]="$before${match[2]##[ ]#}" reply[rptstr]=CANCELLED reply[rpttime]=CANCELLED reply[schedrpttime]=CANCELLED elif calendar_scandate -a -R $schedrpt $after; then # It's possible to calculate a recurrence, however we don't # do that yet. For now just keep the current time as # the recurrence. Hence we ignore REPLY. reply[text2]="$before${REPLY2##[ ]#}" reply[rptstr]=${after%%"$REPLY2"} # Until we find an individual occurrence, the actual time # of the event is the regular one. reply[rpttime]=$schedrpt else # Just remove the keyword for further parsing reply[text2]="$before${after##[[:space:]]#}" fi ;; ((#b)(|*[[:space:]\#])OCCURRENCE[[:space:]]##([^[:space:]]##)[[:space:]]##([^[:space:]]##)(*)) occurrences[${match[2]}]="${match[3]}" # as above reply[text2]="${match[1]}${match[4]##[ ]#}" ;; (*) break ;; esac done if [[ -n ${reply[rpttime]} && ${reply[rptstr]} != CANCELLED ]]; then # Recurring event. We need to find out when it recurs. (( now = EPOCHSECONDS )) # First find the next recurrence. replaced=0 reply[schedrpttime]=$schedrpt if (( schedrpt >= now )); then firstsched=$schedrpt fi while (( ${reply[schedrpttime]} < now || replaced )); do if ! calendar_scandate -a -R ${reply[schedrpttime]} ${reply[rptstr]}; then break fi if (( REPLY <= ${reply[schedrpttime]} )); then # going backwards --- pathological case break; fi reply[schedrpttime]=$REPLY reply[rpttime]=$REPLY if (( ${reply[schedrpttime]} > now && firstsched == 0 )); then firstsched=$REPLY fi replaced=0 # do we have an occurrence to compare against? if (( ${#occurrences} )); then strftime -s timefmt $vdatefmt ${reply[schedrpttime]} occurrence=$occurrences[$timefmt] if [[ -n $occurrence ]]; then # Yes, this replaces the scheduled one. replaced=1 fi fi done # Now look through occurrences (values only) and see which are (i) still # to happen (ii) early than the current rpttime. for occurrence in $occurrences; do if [[ $occurrence != CANCELLED ]]; then strftime -rs then $vdatefmt $occurrence || print "format: $vdatefmt, string $occurrence" >&2 if (( then > now && then < ${reply[rpttime]} )); then reply[rpttime]=$then fi fi done # Finally, update the scheduled repeat time to the earliest # possible value. This is so that if an occurrence replacement is # cancelled we pick up the regular one. Can this happen? Dunno. reply[schedrpttime]=$firstsched fi reply[text2]="${reply[text2]##[[:space:],]#}" return 0