Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Dec 23, 2020. It is now read-only.

TheSLinux/wohstatus

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

46 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Table of contents

Description

Generate almost beautiful and professional static status pages from YAML data.

Getting started

Make you have Bash and Ruby on your system. You also need the popular tools: find, grep, awk.

There are already sample input data and sample output pages.

$ export WOHSTATUS_TITLE="My services"
$ ./compile.sh

The output will be written to output directory. Open status.html from that directory to see.

You can see for an example http://icy.theslinux.org/wohstatus/status.html.

Adding new event

Try the script add.sh. For example

$ ./add.sh data/Testing/ down "Something went wrong"

New data will be appended to the file data/Testing/2015.yaml (2015 or the current year.) If you don't want to use current year as output file, use WOHSTATUS_OUTPUT, as below

$ WOHSTATUS_OUTPUT=testing ./add data/Testing/ down "Testing"

New data will be written to data/Testing/testing.yaml.

Sorting

To have a specific order in the status dashboard for all services, it's quite tricky. You can do this by updating ./data/sort as below

$ find data/ -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -type d > data/sort

Now you edit the file data/sort and change the order as you want. You can remove any service from the file; those services will be shown at the end of the dashboard, below any service listed in data/sort.

Data format

It's easy. Please take a look at the sample data under data/.

Each service has its own directory under data/ directory. If there is a file ignore under the service directory, that service will be ignored.

Each service directory contains a bunch of .yaml file. All of them will be read and processed, so their names are not important.

Each YAML file may contain settings or events attribute, as below

---
settings:
  name: Display name
  url: Link to service
events:
  "timestamp 1": "A message"
  "timestamp 2":
    status: up|down|limited|info|...
    message: Your input message

A timestamp should be in RFC-2822 format. You can get this with date -R command.

A status is valid if there is an image of the same found under output/images. For example, lock is valid status, because there is a file output/images/lock.png. (The program doesn't check if the image does exist, though.)

Though you can provide settings many times, the last one wins. All you need is to put all settings under a private settings.yaml file.

Author. License

The author is Anh K. Huynh.

This work is released under terms of a MIT license.

The icons (except external.png) come from StashBoard project and you may read this ticket regarding license issue.

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published