Kind of a unique problem here, but one I thought I'd see if anyone had some insight into from experience.
Need to store a weekly schedule for call center employees in a web application. The web application has three entities:
Employees - Belong to groups
Employee groups - Contain employees, have a base schedule that is applied to new employees added to group
Administrators - responsible for maintaining employee groups. For the sake of the example, Administrators can also be employees.
Requirements
Administrators can change the base schedule for an Employee Group
Administrators can choose to allow Employees to deviate from the schedule, controlled by the Administrator
Administrators can further choose to allow Employees to deviate from the schedule themselves
Administrators use a UI widget to determine the schedule for an Employee Group. Schedules come in three types, sorted by general horribleness ASC
- Type 1 - 24/7 availability (representing this as a simple flag on the schedule vs marking full Mon-Sun availability)
- Type 2 - A set start/end time, or group of start/end times for the selected days. (Ex. 9a-11a, 1p-4p, Mon-Fri)
- Type 3 - A variable group of start/end times, varying by day (Ex. 9a-12p, Mon, 1p-4p, 5p-9p, Tue, etc)
Administrators can change schedule types at any time through UI
Employees that are allowed to deviate can also change schedule types at any time through the UI
Lookups must be fast, as we have to reach into a separate DB for more info on available employees
For good measure, availability needs to be calculated relative to the callers timezone. So there is a chance that a group in EST with a Type 2 schedule may not actually be available, depending on where the caller is placing the call from
I did talk them down into allowing us to just blow out the schedule entries in the event that the original schedule could not be easily translated into the new schedule based on UI requirements. Best example would be Type 3 -> Type 2.
However, an additional requirement came down yesterday (3 working days til deadline), that for Type 3, user's must be able to specify time ranges that span past midnight. For example:
Start [Monday] at [9:00pm] until [Tuesday] at [3:00am] [Add new time block]
Start [Tuesday] at [8:00am] until [Tuesday] at [5:00pm] [Add new time block]
Also need to detect schedule overlaps and adjacencies at merge them automatically when changes are made through the Type 3 UI.
Example schema that should facilitate quick lookups given a time, day of week, and a group_id
employee_schedule
_________________
id (int) auto-inc // PK
employee_id (int) // FK
employee_group_id (int) // FK
start_day (int) // 0-6
start_time (time)
end_day (int) // 0-6
end_time (time)
However the UI - for type 3 at least - makes adding/editing/updating an exercise in tedium, given that you can't trust user input.
Has anyone come across a similar problem? I'm trying to figure out if I should do a bunch of front-end validation to detect overlaps/adjacencies and merge them prior to sending them to the server, or if PHP would be better suited. Or if there is a rock-solid argument against the whole thing, ha. Any insight would be appreciated.