@hackage arbtt0.4.5

Automatic Rule-Based Time Tracker

arbtt, the Automatic Rule-Based Time Tracker

© 2009 Joachim Breitner mail@joachim-breitner.de

The Automatic Rule-Based Time Tracker is a desktop daemon that runs in the background and, every minute, records what windows are open on your desktop, what their titles are, which one is active. The accompanied statistics program lets you derive information from this log file, i.e. what how much of your time have you been spending with e-Mail, or what projects are your largest time wasters. The mapping from the raw window titles to sensible „tags“ is done by a configuration file with an powerful syntax.

Installation

You can build and install this program as any other Cabalized program: $ runhaskell Setup.hs configure $ runhaskell Setup.hs build $ runhaskell Setup.hs install

You also need to make sure that arbtt-capture is started with your X session. If you use GNOME or KDE, you can copy the file "arbtt-capture.desktop" to ~/.config/autostart/. You might need to put the full path to arbtt-capture in the Exec line there, if you did not do a system wide installation.

If you want to record samples at a different rate than one per minute, you will have to pass the "--sample-rate" parameter to arbtt-capture.

Documentation

Full documentation is now provided in the user manual in the doc/ directory. If you have the docbook xsl toolchain installed, you can generate the HTML documentation by entering "make" in that directory. Otherwise, you can use the online version at http://darcs.nomeata.de/arbtt/doc/users_guide/ Beware that this will also reflect the latest version.

Creating the Windows Installer

The file setup.iss contains an installer script for Inno Setup and can be used to create the windows installer for arbtt. It can be used under wine. To build arbtt under Windows, you need to install the Haskell Platform. Because the Haskell Platform ships an older version of the w32api package from mingw, you also need to download w32api-3.14-mingw32-dev.tar.gz and copy at least the files include/psapi.h and lib/libpsapi.a over the files installed by the Haskell Platform. For the pcre-light package, you need to install the pcre library. Unless you run a German version of Windows, you’ll need to adjust the path to the pcre3.dll file in setup.iss. Install Inno Setup. Create the documentation (make -C doc) and configure arbtt with the --with-ISCC-flag: $ wine runhaskell Setup.hs configure --with-ISCC='C:\Programme\Inno Setup 5\ISCC.exe' again adjusting the path if you do not have a German version of Windows. This will put the version name into setup.iss and create the output file as dist/arbtt-setup-.exe.

Download links:

Development

You are very welcome to help the developement of arbtt. You can find the latest source at the darcs repository at http://darcs.nomeata.de/arbtt

Some of my plans or ideas include:

  • A graphical viewer that allows you to expore the tags in an appealing, interactive way. Possibly based on the Charts haskell library.
  • Looking forward and backwards in time when writing rules. (Information is already passed to the categorizing function, but not exposed to the syntax).
  • $total_idle time, which is the maximum idle time until it is reset. This would allow the user to catch the idle times more exactly.
  • Rules based on day of time, to create tags for worktime, weekend, late at night. (Partially done)
  • Storing the current timezone in the tags, for the prevoius entry to be more to be more useful.
  • Storing the hostname, in case a user has several.
  • Statistics based on time, to visualize trends.
  • Possibly more data sources?

Any help cleaning, documenting or testing the current code is appreciated as well.