Hourly is a command-line time tracking tool for git projects. Hourly parses your commit messages for clock-in
and clock-out
keywords to precisely estimate work hours. Designed for developers and project managers, hourly makes it easy to see how and where you spend your time. When configured with Stripe or BTCPay, hourly can generate invoices for your specified wage.
To clock in:
hourly-in
The above command updates the header of your work log (WorkLog.md
by default) and commits it with the message "clock-in".
Stage any changes to your code base. When you are ready to commit:
hourly commit.message="my commit message"
Hourly updates the work log with your commit message. Feel free to use the work log to provide additional context. When you are finished committing other work for this session, you may clock out:
hourly-out
Again, hourly updates the work log and commits it with the message "clock-out" along with any other staged files. Read more about configuring your work log.
When you are ready to generate a timesheet for your repo, run hourly from your git directory:
hourly-report
Hourly parses all the commit messages for clock in/out keywords and uses git's timestamps to determine how long each session lasted.
For example, here's what happens when you run hourly on the hourly repo itself:
hourly-report repo.start_date="2018-10-21" repo.end_date="2019-3-10" repo.ignore="pro bono"
pay period: 2018-10-28 13:44:48-04:00 -> 2019-02-25 12:49:51-05:00
ignoring pro bono
TimeIn LogIn TimeOut LogOut TimeDelta Hours
0 2018-10-28 13:44:48-04:00 clock in 2018-10-28 13:56:35-04:00 clock out 00:11:47 0.196389
1 2019-02-25 10:19:10-05:00 clock in T-1hr 2019-02-25 12:49:51-05:00 clock out T-5m 02:30:41 2.511389
0 days 02:42:28, 2.71 hours worked
To save the timesheet as a csv file, include an ouput prefix:
hourly-report repo.start_date="2018-10-21" repo.end_date="2019-3-10" repo.ignore="pro bono" report.filename=Pembroke
pay period: 2018-10-28 13:44:48-04:00 -> 2019-02-25 12:49:51-05:00
ignoring pro bono
TimeIn LogIn TimeOut LogOut TimeDelta Hours
0 2018-10-28 13:44:48-04:00 clock in 2018-10-28 13:56:35-04:00 clock out 00:11:47 0.196389
1 2019-02-25 10:19:10-05:00 clock in T-1hr 2019-02-25 12:49:51-05:00 clock out T-5m 02:30:41 2.511389
0 days 02:42:28, 2.71 hours worked
writing to file Pembroke-20181028-134448_to_20190225-124951.csv
Visit the Tutorial for a detailed walk-through of how hourly generates timesheets.
To generate an invoice using stripe:
hourly-report invoice=stripe repo.start_date="Jan 1, 2020" [email protected]
The above command generates a time sheet for this repo, calculates earnings, prepares a stripe invoice, and asks you to confirm details. After confirmation, an email will be sent from your Stripe account to [email protected].
The btcpay invoicing is similar:
hourly-report invoice=btcpay repo.start_date="Jan 1, 2020"
After confirmation, hourly tells your btcpay server to generate an invoice and displays the corresponding payment url. Note that BTCPay can be configured for lightning, so streaming payments are possible!
Visit the Payments section for more info.
Hourly is hosted on github under the Apache 2.0 license
https://github.com/asherp/hourly
pip install hourly --upgrade
- pandas
- gitpython
- plotly
- hydra
- stripe (optional)
- btcpay-python (optional)
You can get these dependencies like this:
pip install pandas gitpython plotly
pip install hydra-core --upgrade
For invoicing:
pip install btcpay-python
pip install stripe
For hourly's docs:
pip install mkdocs mkdocs-material markdown-include mknotebooks
For integration tests, hourly may be tested against the hourly repo.
Unit tests are based on pytest suite with pytest-cov
pip install pytest pytest-cov
To run the tests, navigate to the base of this repo, then
py.test tests.py --cov=hourly
Hourly
uses Hydra
for customized configuration. The full options are given by hourly's
help command:
hourly --help
A simple hour tracker for git projects
This application helps users clock in and out of git repos,
as well as generate timesheets for invoicing.
Configure hourly to ignore commits by keyword or hashes
== Configuration groups ==
Compose your configuration from those groups (group=option)
== Config ==
Override anything in the config (foo.bar=value)
commit:
clock: null
identity:
- name
- email
message: ''
tminus: null
compensation: []
config_override: hourly.yaml
invoice: null
payment: null
repo:
case_sensitive: false
end_date: null
errant_clocks: []
gitdir: .
ignore: null
match_logs: false
start_date: null
report:
currency: ''
filename: null
pandas:
display:
max_columns: 10
max_colwidth: 45
max_rows: null
width: 600
timesheet: true
wage: null
work: false
vis:
frequency: 1 d
plotly:
figure:
margin:
pad: 0
plot:
animation_opts: null
auto_open: true
auto_play: true
config: null
filename: hourly-work.html
image: null
image_filename: plot_image
include_mathjax: cdn
include_plotlyjs: cdn
link_text: Export to plot.ly
output_type: file
show_link: false
validate: true
work_log:
bullet: '*'
filename: WorkLog.md
header_depth: 1
Powered by Hydra (https://hydra.cc)
Use --hydra-help to view Hydra specific help
Hourly's default configuration including comments can be seen here.
{! hourly/cli/conf/hourly.yaml !}
Each of these can be overridden at runtime. For example,
hourly commit.clock=in vis=null report.timesheet=False
This will update the WorkLog.md file and commit a clock-in message without visualizing or printing the timesheet.
!!! note
hourly-in
is just syntactic sugar for hourly commit.clock=in vis=null report.timesheet=False
.
But if we want to override hourly's defaults without typing them in each time,
we can specify an hourly.yaml file in our git repo. Hourly will look
for this file (via the config_override
option) and override its default configuration.
!!! note
Settings in your project's config_override
can still be overriden by command line arguments.
An example of a custom override file is found in the top-level of the hourly repo:
{! hourly.yaml !}
A common use case would be permanently overriding the filename of the work_log you are committing against, to avoid merge conflicts if multiple developers are working on the same project.