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Tuesday, 22 November 2022

wtf

 The personal information dashboard for your terminal.

wtfutil.com 

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WTF (aka 'wtfutil') is the personal information dashboard for your terminal, providing at-a-glance access to your very important but infrequently-needed stats and data.

Used by thousands of developers and tech people around the world, WTF is free and open-source. To support the continued use and development of WTF, please consider sponsoring WTF via GitHub Sponsors.

Are you a contributor or sponsor?

Awesome! See here for how you can change the exit message, the message WTF shows when quitting, to something special just for you.

Sponsored by

Airbrake


Installation

Installing via Homebrew

The simplest way from Homebrew:

brew install wtfutil

wtfutil

That version can sometimes lag a bit, as recipe updates take time to get accepted into homebrew-core. If you always want the bleeding edge of releases, you can tap it:

brew tap wtfutil/wtfutil
brew install wtfutil

wtfutil

Installing via MacPorts

You can also install via MacPorts:

sudo port selfupdate
sudo port install wtfutil

wtfutil

Installing a Binary

Download the latest binary from GitHub.

WTF is a stand-alone binary. Once downloaded, copy it to a location you can run executables from (ie: /usr/local/bin/), and set the permissions accordingly:

chmod a+x /usr/local/bin/wtfutil

and you should be good to go.

Installing from Source

If you want to run the build command from within your $GOPATH:

# Set the Go proxy
export GOPROXY="https://proxy.golang.org,direct"

# Disable the Go checksum database
export GOSUMDB=off

# Enable Go modules
export GO111MODULE=on

go get -u github.com/wtfutil/wtf
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/wtfutil/wtf
make install
make run

If you want to run the build command from a folder that is not in your $GOPATH:

# Set the Go proxy
export GOPROXY="https://proxy.golang.org,direct"

go get -u github.com/wtfutil/wtf
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/wtfutil/wtf
make install
make run

Installing from Source using Docker

All building is done inside a docker container. You can then copy the binary to your local machine.

curl -o Dockerfile.build https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wtfutil/wtf/master/Dockerfile.build
docker build -f Dockerfile.build -t wtfutil --build-arg=version=master .
docker create --name wtf_build wtfutil
docker cp wtf_build:/usr/local/bin/wtfutil ~/.local/bin
docker rm wtf_build

Note: WTF is only compatible with Go versions 1.16.0 or later (due to the use of Go modules and newer standard library functions). If you would like to use gccgo to compile, you must use gccgo-9 or later which introduces support for Go modules.

Installing via Arch User Repository

Arch Linux users can utilise the wtfutil package to build it from source, or wtfutil-bin to install pre-built binaries.

Running via Docker

You can run wtf inside a docker container:

# download or create the Dockerfile
curl -o Dockerfile https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wtfutil/wtf/master/Dockerfile

# build the docker container
docker build -t wtfutil .

# or for a particular tag or branch
docker build --build-arg=version=v0.25.0 -t wtfutil .

# run the container
docker run -it wtfutil

# run container with a local config file
docker run -it -v path/to/config.yml:/config/config.yml wtfutil --config=/config/config.yml

Communication

GitHub Discussions

Conversations, ideas, discussions are done on GitHub Discussions.

Formerly they were on Slack; that channel has been deprecated.

Twitter

Also, follow on Twitter for news and latest updates.

Documentation

See https://wtfutil.com for the definitive documentation. Here's some short-cuts:

Modules

Modules are the chunks of functionality that make WTF useful. Modules are added and configured by including their configuration values in your config.yml file. The documentation for each module describes how to configure them.

Some interesting modules you might consider adding to get you started:

Getting Bugs Fixed or Features Added

WTF is open-source software, informally maintained by a small collection of volunteers who come and go at their leisure. There are absolutely no guarantees that, even if an issue is opened for them, bugs will be fixed or features added.

If there is a bug that you really need to have fixed or a feature you really want to have implemented, you can greatly increase your chances of that happening by creating a bounty on BountySource to provide an incentive for someone to tackle it.

Contributing to the Source Code

First, kindly read Talk, then code by Dave Cheney. It's great advice and will often save a lot of time and effort.

Next, kindly read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests.

Then create your branch, write your code, submit your PR, and join the rest of the awesome people who've contributed their time and effort towards WTF. Without their contributors, WTF wouldn't be possible.

Don't worry if you've never written Go before, or never contributed to an open source project before, or that your code won't be good enough. For a surprising number of people WTF has been their first Go project, or first open source contribution. If you're here, and you've read this far, you're the right stuff.

Contributing to the Documentation

Documentation now lives in its own repository here: https://github.com/wtfutil/wtfdocs.

Please make all additions and updates to documentation in that repository.

Adding Dependencies

Dependency management in WTF is handled by Go modules. Please check out that page for more details on how Go modules work.

from  https://github.com/wtfutil/wtf

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