Keeps the computer awake by simulating a F15 keyboard press and release.
Default key press is currently 1 minute. There are arguments to change the frequency as well.
Currently tested on Windows 10 and Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla), but no reason it should not work on other operating systems that have Python 3.6+ installed.
To setup and start using Wakey, just download the Latest Release and then install the dependencies.
git clone https://github.com/cjerrington/wakey.git
cd wakey
pip install -r requirements.txt
You can install this in a virtual environment as well, which is what I'd prefer. To get started run...
pip install virtualenv
virtualenv .
scripts\activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
python wakey.py
Wakey has a few arguments you can use to adjust the settings.
Command | Explanation |
---|---|
-d, --duration | Used to set the duration to run Wakey |
-f, --frequency | Used for the frequency of the keypress in minutes. Default is 1 minute. |
-v, --verbose | To see the output of the keypress in the console. Default is false. |
-l, --log | Create a log of the application to see when the events happened. Default is false |
Wakey will run with no arguments given and use the default settings. On windows this is the F15 key and every 1 minute. On Linux we need to run wakey.py
as a root user. To avoid depending on X, the Linux parts reads raw device files (/dev/input/input*) but this requires root. Part of the known limitations for the keyboard module.
On Linux Wakey uses the shift key and on Windows Wakey uses the function 15 key (F15).
This will run Wakey with a keypress every 2 minutes showing the output to the screen and create log file
python wakey.py -f 2 -v -l
The log file will be created in the same directory as Wakey.
python wakey.py -d 5
Duration is in minutes.
You can compile Wakey to an executable (tested on Windows 10).
There is the built in build.bat
file which uses pyinstaller
pyinstaller --onefile --icon=sun.ico --version-file=version.txt wakey.py
This step has already been done for you and you can find the latest compiled version here. Currently only supporting Windows for the pre-compiled versions.
Things I'd like to add to Wakey
- Add support for logging
- Add support for changing the frequency
- Add support Linux
- Mouse support instead of keyboard
- Add duration for the script to run, example for 5 minutes, and hour. Currently Wakey runs until the program quits.