fork of the wakatime cli program for rana
9ce9d528fd
Improves on
|
||
---|---|---|
tests | ||
wakatime | ||
.coveragerc | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
AUTHORS | ||
dev-requirements.txt | ||
HISTORY.rst | ||
LICENSE | ||
MANIFEST.in | ||
NOTICE | ||
README.rst | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py | ||
tox.ini |
WakaTime ======== .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/wakatime/wakatime.svg :target: https://travis-ci.org/wakatime/wakatime :alt: Tests .. image:: https://coveralls.io/repos/wakatime/wakatime/badge.svg?branch=master&service=github :target: https://coveralls.io/github/wakatime/wakatime?branch=master :alt: Coverage .. image:: https://badge.fury.io/py/wakatime.svg :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/wakatime :alt: Version .. image:: https://gemnasium.com/badges/github.com/wakatime/wakatime.svg :target: https://gemnasium.com/github.com/wakatime/wakatime :alt: Dependencies .. image:: https://wakaslack.herokuapp.com/badge.svg :target: https://wakaslack.herokuapp.com :alt: Slack Command line interface to `WakaTime <https://wakatime.com/>`_ used by all WakaTime `text editor plugins <https://wakatime.com/editors>`_. Go to http://wakatime.com/editors to install the plugin for your text editor or IDE. Installation ------------ Note: You shouldn't need to directly use this package unless you are `building your own plugin <https://wakatime.com/help/misc/creating-plugin>`_ or your text editor's plugin asks you to install the WakaTime CLI manually. Each `plugin <https://wakatime.com/editors>`_ installs the WakaTime CLI for you, except for the `Emacs WakaTime plugin <https://github.com/wakatime/wakatime-mode>`_. Install the plugin for your IDE/editor: https://wakatime.com/editors Each plugin either comes pre-bundled with WakaTime CLI, or downloads the latest version from GitHub for you. Usage ----- If you are building a plugin using the `WakaTime API <https://wakatime.com/developers/>`_ then follow the `Creating a Plugin <https://wakatime.com/help/misc/creating-plugin>`_ guide. For command line options, run ``wakatime --help``. Some more usage information is available in the `FAQ <https://wakatime.com/faq>`_. Configuring ----------- Options can be passed via command line, or set in the ``$WAKATIME_HOME/.wakatime.cfg`` config file. Command line arguments take precedence over config file settings. The ``$WAKATIME_HOME/.wakatime.cfg`` file is in `INI <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/INI_file>`_ format. An example config file with all available options:: [settings] debug = false api_key = your-api-key hidefilenames = false exclude = ^COMMIT_EDITMSG$ ^TAG_EDITMSG$ ^/var/ ^/etc/ include = .* offline = true proxy = https://user:pass@localhost:8080 timeout = 30 hostname = machinename [projectmap] projects/foo = new project name ^/home/user/projects/bar(\d+)/ = project{0} For commonly used configuration options, see examples in the `FAQ <https://wakatime.com/faq>`_. Troubleshooting --------------- Read the `FAQ <https://wakatime.com/faq>`_ for solutions to common problems. WakaTime CLI writes errors to a common log file in your User ``$WAKATIME_HOME`` directory:: ~/.wakatime.log Set ``debug=true`` in ``~/.wakatime.cfg`` for more verbose logging, but don't forget to set it back to ``debug=false`` afterwards or your editor might be laggy while waiting for WakaTime CLI to finish executing. Each plugin also has it's own log file for things outside the scope of WakaTime CLI: * **Atom** writes errors to the developer console (View -> Developer -> Toggle Developer Tools) * **Brackets** errors go to the developer console (Debug -> Show Developer Tools) * **Cloud9** logs to the browser console (View -> Developer -> JavaScript Console) * **Coda** logs to ``/var/log/system.log`` so use ``sudo tail -f /var/log/system.log`` in Terminal to watch Coda 2 logs * **Eclipse** logs can be found in the Eclipse ``Error Log`` (Window -> Show View -> Error Log) * **Emacs** messages go to the *messages* buffer window * **Jetbrains IDEs (IntelliJ IDEA, PyCharm, RubyMine, PhpStorm, AppCode, AndroidStudio, WebStorm)** log to ``idea.log`` (`locating IDE log files <https://intellij-support.jetbrains.com/hc/en-us/articles/207241085-Locating-IDE-log-files>`_) * **Komodo** logs are written to ``pystderr.log`` (Help -> Troubleshooting -> View Log File) * **Netbeans** logs to it's own log file (View -> IDE Log) * **Notepad++** errors go to ``AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\config\WakaTime.log`` (this file is only created when an error occurs) * **Sublime** Text logs to the Sublime Console (View -> Show Console) * **TextMate** logs to stderr so run TextMate from Terminal to see any errors (`enable logging <https://github.com/textmate/textmate/wiki/Enable-Logging>`_) * **Vim** errors get displayed in the status line or inline (use ``:redraw!`` to clear inline errors) * **Visual Studio** logs to the Output window, but uncaught exceptions go to ActivityLog.xml (`more info... <http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2010/02/24/troubleshooting-with-the-activity-log.aspx>`_) * **Vscode** logs to the developer console (Help -> Toggle Developer Tools) * **Xcode** type ``sudo tail -f /var/log/system.log`` in a Terminal to view Xcode errors Check that heartbeats are received by the WakaTime api with the ``last_heartbeat`` and ``last_plugin`` attributes from the `current user <https://wakatime.com/api/v1/users/current>`_ api resource. You can also see a list of all your plugins and when they were last seen by the api with the `user_agents <https://wakatime.com/api/v1/users/current/user_agents>`_ api endpoint. Note: Saving a file forces a heartbeat to be sent. `Official API Docs <https://wakatime.com/api>`_ Contributing ------------ Before contributing a pull request, make sure tests pass:: virtualenv venv . venv/bin/activate pip install tox tox The above will run tests on all Python versions available on your machine. To just run tests on a single Python version:: virtualenv venv . venv/bin/activate pip install -r dev-requirements.txt nosetests Many thanks to all `contributors <https://github.com/wakatime/wakatime/blob/master/AUTHORS>`_!