Alright here's what I'm trying to say. It's really basic math but something a lot of you are missing

So you guys are thinking of the earth and the mirror like the two objects in the left. A photon is emitted from a (in your mind) unmoving earth, travels straight to the mirror, and straight back to the earth, which are one light year away, for a total round trip of two light years.
But what actually happens is the earth and mirror are moving, so it looks more like the one on the right. The actual distance, in lightyears, is solved by the Pythagorean theorem, a
2 + b
2 = c
2, where c is the total distance traveled by the photon, and a and b are the distances between the mirror and earth, and the distances between the earth/mirror before and after the photon reaches it
Since the speed of the earth and sun are slow compared to light speed, I'm pretty much just nitpicking, but I felt I should make the point
Of course it may change depending on what point of reference you're looking at it from. forget my understanding of relativity