├── .gitignore ├── LICENSE ├── README.md └── logger-txt /.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | log.txt 2 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /LICENSE: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 3 | 4 | Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies 6 | of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. 7 | 8 | Preamble 9 | 10 | The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for 11 | software and other kinds of works. 12 | 13 | The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed 14 | to take away your freedom to share and change the works. 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It is safest 630 | to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively 631 | state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least 632 | the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. 633 | 634 | 635 | Copyright (C) 636 | 637 | This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify 638 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 639 | the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or 640 | (at your option) any later version. 641 | 642 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 643 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 644 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 645 | GNU General Public License for more details. 646 | 647 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 648 | along with this program. If not, see . 649 | 650 | Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. 651 | 652 | If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short 653 | notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: 654 | 655 | Copyright (C) 656 | This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. 657 | This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it 658 | under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. 659 | 660 | The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate 661 | parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands 662 | might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". 663 | 664 | You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, 665 | if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. 666 | For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see 667 | . 668 | 669 | The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program 670 | into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you 671 | may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with 672 | the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General 673 | Public License instead of this License. But first, please read 674 | . 675 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | Logger TXT - Quick command line logging 2 | ======================================= 3 | 4 | Logger TXT is a small, shell based tool to log activities throughout the day to a simple, portable text file, along with the date/time. Options are available to log a specific entry under a type and project. All entries are stored in a simple TXT file. Whether you track purchases, what you ate that day, progress on projects at work or all of the above and more, you will always have a simple, solid way of storing that information and a script that gets out of your way to get it there. 5 | 6 | Installation 7 | ============ 8 | 9 | Location of log script 10 | ---------------------- 11 | 12 | To install loggerTXT simply copy logger.sh to where you would like it to be stored on your computer. If you have multiple computers logger works really well within a folder in Dropbox. For example you could keep logger.sh and your log file in ~/Dropbox/log/ and it will automatically be synced between computers. 13 | 14 | Location of log file 15 | -------------------- 16 | 17 | There are two options for defining where your log file is to be saved. 18 | 19 | 1) Setting an environment variable 20 | 21 | - In ~/.profile add: 22 | 23 | export LOGGERTXT\_PATH=~/Dropbox/log/log.txt 24 | 25 | - Make sure you include the name of your log file. This allows you to set it to a hidden file if you desire. 26 | 27 | 2) Default action if no environment variable set 28 | 29 | - If no LOGGERTXT\_PATH is set, a log.txt file will be created in the folder where logger.sh is located. 30 | 31 | 32 | Quick Command Line Access 33 | ========================= 34 | In ~/.profile add: 35 | 36 | alias l="/path/to/script/logger.sh" 37 | 38 | Example Input 39 | ============= 40 | 41 | Without Alias 42 | ------------- 43 | 44 | ./logger.sh -t personal -p project "This is a log note with a type and project" 45 | 46 | With Alias 47 | ---------- 48 | 49 | l -t personal -p project "This is a log note with a type and project" 50 | 51 | Example output in log.txt 52 | ========================= 53 | 54 | 31/01/11 13:30 - PERSONAL (PROJECT) - This is a log note with a type and project 55 | 31/01/11 13:35 - PERSONAL - This is a log not with just a type 56 | 31/01/11 13:40 - (PROJECT) - This is a log not with just a project 57 | 31/01/11 13:45 - This is just a general event which doesn't belong to anything 58 | 59 | Main Goals 60 | ========== 61 | 62 | The main goal of this project was to create a simple logging tool which could be accessed quickly from within the command line environment. By storing all data in a TXT file, you're not locked into always using this tool or limited to only viewing log events with this script. The data portability that a TXT file offers between tools, operating systems and environments is crucial to having a smooth workflow that is extremely dependable. 63 | 64 | What do you use it for anyways?!? 65 | ================================= 66 | 67 | Over time the act of logging will become habitual. Over the course of a day you may log any of the following and anything else you deem important. 68 | 69 | - Progress of tasks related to work and/or specific projects 70 | - Extremely handy when it comes to filling in hours with an employer as you can easily look up what projects were worked on, on that Tuesday two weeks ago. 71 | - Progress of personal tasks or projects 72 | - Progress logging is the main use of this tool 73 | - Purchases made 74 | - Extremely useful when the credit card bill comes with cryptic names of companies. 75 | - Log important events or anything where the time that it happened is important. 76 | - Had an important conversation with someone? Log that you had it so you can also know when it exactly happened. 77 | - Log anything! 78 | 79 | Tools to make it simpler and easier 80 | =================================== 81 | 82 | OS X 83 | ---- 84 | 85 | - [iTerm2](http://www.iterm2.com/) 86 | - **Recommended** 87 | - More advanced program than the stock Terminal.app 88 | - Comes with a built in quick view window so you can quickly bring up a terminal window to user LoggerTXT 89 | - [Visor](http://visor.binaryage.com/) 90 | - Terminal.app symbol plug-in which keeps a terminal window always available with a quick keyboard shortcut as per the game Doom and ~ 91 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /logger-txt: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #!/bin/bash 2 | 3 | version() 4 | { 5 | cat <<-EndVersion 6 | Logger-TXT 7 | Version 2.0 8 | Author: Grant Lucas (contact@grantlucas.com) 9 | Last updated: 11/02/2014 10 | Release date: 26/07/2010 11 | License: GPL, http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html 12 | EndVersion 13 | 14 | exit 1 15 | } 16 | 17 | usage() 18 | { 19 | cat<<-EndUsage 20 | 21 | Usage: $SCRIPT_NAME [-hVv] [-t type] [-p project] [-d count] [-s|S] [-f path] text 22 | Try '$SCRIPT_NAME -h' for more information. 23 | EndUsage 24 | 25 | exit 1 26 | } 27 | 28 | help() 29 | { 30 | cat <<-EndHelp 31 | 32 | Usage: $SCRIPT_NAME [-hVv] [-t type] [-p project] [-d count] [-s|S] [-f path] text 33 | 34 | With no options or input, $SCRIPT_NAME outputs the last 10 lines of the log. 35 | 36 | Options: 37 | -t TYPE 38 | The type classification that the log event belongs to. example: work, school etc. 39 | -p PROJECT 40 | The project that the log event belongs to. This helps group log events together 41 | which might belong to the same type or which my not belong to a type at all. 42 | -c COUNT 43 | The number of lines to show when output the tail of the log. Defaults to 10. 44 | -s text 45 | Case insensitive search of the log file for the given text 46 | -S text 47 | Case sensitive search of the log file for the given text 48 | -f path 49 | File path to use for the log file. This is mainly for testing and the recommended 50 | method is to export LOGGERTXT_PATH as an environment variable. 51 | -h 52 | Help Text. 53 | -V | v 54 | Show version information and credits. 55 | -x 56 | Deletes the last line from the log file. This allows for quick corrections of 57 | log items which were just entered. 58 | EndHelp 59 | exit 1 60 | } 61 | 62 | deleteLast() 63 | { 64 | #only act if the log file exists 65 | if [ -e $LOG_PATH ]; then 66 | echo "" 67 | echo "Deleted last line from file"; 68 | `sed '$d' < $LOG_PATH > $dir"/log.txt.backup"` 69 | `mv $dir"/log.txt.backup" $LOG_PATH` 70 | fi 71 | 72 | } 73 | 74 | confirmDeleteLast() 75 | { 76 | #delete the last line from the file. mainly used for quick fixes of mistakes 77 | 78 | #get the last line for confirmation 79 | LAST_LINE=`tail -n 1 $LOG_PATH` 80 | echo "" 81 | echo "Warning: You are removing the line below which appears at the end of the log file." 82 | echo "" 83 | echo "-------------------" 84 | echo $LAST_LINE 85 | echo "-------------------" 86 | echo "" 87 | echo "Do you wish to continue? (Y/n)" 88 | 89 | read CONFIRM 90 | 91 | case $CONFIRM in 92 | Y) deleteLast;; 93 | n|*) 94 | echo "" 95 | echo "No line deleted" 96 | ;; 97 | esac 98 | exit 1 99 | } 100 | 101 | check_log_file() 102 | { 103 | if [ -e $LOG_PATH ]; then 104 | if [ ! -w $LOG_PATH ]; then 105 | echo "$app: Log file not writeable" 106 | exit 1 107 | fi 108 | else 109 | # create log file if it does not exist 110 | echo "$app: Creating log file" 111 | `touch $LOG_PATH` 112 | `chmod +w $LOG_PATH` 113 | if [ -e $LOG_PATH ]; then 114 | echo "$app: Log file successfully created" 115 | else 116 | echo "$app: Log file couldn't be created" 117 | exit 1 118 | fi 119 | fi 120 | 121 | if [ ! -r $LOG_PATH ]; then 122 | echo "$app: Log file is not readable" 123 | exit 1 124 | fi 125 | } 126 | 127 | # Case insensitive search 128 | search_log() 129 | { 130 | local file=$1 131 | local term=$2 132 | local count=$3 133 | 134 | check_log_file 135 | 136 | # grep the file for the search term 137 | results=`grep -i "$term" "$file" | tail -n $count` 138 | 139 | # Add to the end of the results 140 | OUTPUT="$OUTPUT$results" 141 | } 142 | 143 | # Case sensitive search 144 | search_log_sensitive() 145 | { 146 | local file=$1 147 | local term=$2 148 | local count=$3 149 | 150 | check_log_file 151 | 152 | # grep the file for the search term 153 | results=`grep "$term" "$file" | tail -n $count` 154 | 155 | # Add to the end of the results 156 | OUTPUT="$OUTPUT$results" 157 | } 158 | 159 | ############################ 160 | # Start of active script 161 | ############################ 162 | 163 | # defaults if not yet defined 164 | dir=$HOME 165 | 166 | #set the log path to the environment variable if it is set 167 | if [ ! -z $LOGGERTXT_PATH ]; then 168 | LOG_PATH=$LOGGERTXT_PATH 169 | else 170 | LOG_PATH=$dir"/log.txt" 171 | fi 172 | 173 | OUTPUT='' 174 | LOG_TYPE=${LOG_TYPE:-''} 175 | LOG_DISPLAY_COUNT=${LOG_DISPLAY_COUNT:-10} 176 | LOG_PROJ=${LOG_PROJ:-''} 177 | 178 | now=`date '+%d/%m/%y %H:%M %z'` 179 | app="Logger-TXT" 180 | SCRIPT_NAME=$(basename "$0") 181 | 182 | 183 | # process options 184 | while getopts xt:c:p:s:S:f:Vvh o 185 | do case "$o" in 186 | x) confirmDeleteLast;; 187 | s) SEARCH=$OPTARG;; 188 | S) SEARCH_CASE=$OPTARG;; 189 | t) LOG_TYPE=`echo "$OPTARG" | tr "[:lower:]" "[:upper:]"`;; 190 | c) LOG_DISPLAY_COUNT=$OPTARG;; 191 | p) LOG_PROJ=`echo "$OPTARG" | tr "[:lower:]" "[:upper:]"`;; 192 | f) LOG_PATH=$OPTARG;; 193 | h) help;; 194 | V|v) version;; 195 | [?]) usage;; 196 | esac 197 | done 198 | # shift the option values out 199 | shift $(($OPTIND - 1)) 200 | 201 | #The remaining text is the log text. 202 | 203 | #take the input and add to file 204 | if [ ! -z "$1" ]; then 205 | #add to log file 206 | check_log_file 207 | 208 | if [ ! -z $LOG_TYPE ]; then 209 | sep=" - " 210 | ltype=" under the type $LOG_TYPE" 211 | LOG_TYPE="$LOG_TYPE" 212 | fi 213 | 214 | if [ ! -z $LOG_PROJ ]; then 215 | sep=" - " 216 | proj=" in the project $LOG_PROJ" 217 | LOG_PROJ="($LOG_PROJ)" 218 | fi 219 | 220 | #there is a proj but no type 221 | if [ -z $LOG_TYPE ] && [ ! -z $LOG_PROJ ]; then 222 | category="$LOG_PROJ$sep" 223 | fi 224 | 225 | #there is a type but no proj 226 | if [ ! -z $LOG_TYPE ] && [ -z $LOG_PROJ ]; then 227 | category="$LOG_TYPE$sep" 228 | fi 229 | 230 | #there is both 231 | if [ ! -z $LOG_TYPE ] && [ ! -z $LOG_PROJ ]; then 232 | category="$LOG_TYPE $LOG_PROJ$sep" 233 | fi 234 | 235 | #add text to file 236 | echo "$now - $category$*" >> "$LOG_PATH" 237 | 238 | #output that the event was logged 239 | OUTPUT="$OUTPUT\"$*\" logged$ltype$proj" 240 | else 241 | check_log_file 242 | 243 | if [ ! -z $SEARCH ]; then 244 | search_log "$LOG_PATH" "$SEARCH" "$LOG_DISPLAY_COUNT" 245 | elif [ ! -z $SEARCH_CASE ]; then 246 | search_log_sensitive "$LOG_PATH" "$SEARCH_CASE" "$LOG_DISPLAY_COUNT" 247 | else 248 | # Print limited amount of log from the end 249 | OUTPUT=`tail -n $LOG_DISPLAY_COUNT $LOG_PATH` 250 | fi 251 | fi 252 | 253 | # Print the output 254 | echo -e "$OUTPUT" 255 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------