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aw-tauri

Experimenting with implementing ActivityWatch using Tauri.

Holds great promise as a much simpler way to build a cross-platform version of ActivityWatch.

Features:

  • Tray icon
  • Module manager for watchers
  • WebView serving the web UI
  • Uses aw-server-rust by default
  • Replaces aw-qt
  • Builds like a dream, minimal custom build & release config

Benefits of Tauri:

  • Builds cross-platform nicely (see their docs)
    • Generates deb and AppImage with a simple npx tauri build
    • Uses Gtk on Linux, and tao on Windows and macOS
    • No more messy PyInstaller for the main entrypoint (aw-qt)
    • Good docs for code-signing on all platforms
    • Includes an updater for MSI, .AppImage, .app bundle.
  • Contains a webview with an easy interface to Rust code
  • Trayicon support
  • Mobile support is WIP, and will support iOS.

Usage

To run:

npm install
npm run tauri dev

Repo stucture

  • The frontend is in the root folder (NOTE: not yet the actual aw-webui code)
  • All rust code is in src-tauri/ (will likely be moved)

Roadmap

Primary goal is feature-parity with aw-qt. Secondary goal is to add extras supported by Tauri (updater, autostart).

  • Run aw-server-rust as part of main executable
  • Run ActivityWatch web app within WebView (wry)
  • Get basic module manager working
    • Start watchers
  • Tray icon
    • Basic version (open, exit)
    • Menu for module manager
    • Responsive running/stopped state for watchers (no "update" button)
    • Start/stop via modules menu
    • Detect bundled & system modules
  • Polish

This project was initialized with:

sh <(curl https://create.tauri.app/sh)
Click to expand original README

Tauri + Vue 3 + TypeScript

This template should help get you started developing with Vue 3 and TypeScript in Vite. The template uses Vue 3 <script setup> SFCs, check out the script setup docs to learn more.

Recommended IDE Setup

Type Support For .vue Imports in TS

Since TypeScript cannot handle type information for .vue imports, they are shimmed to be a generic Vue component type by default. In most cases this is fine if you don't really care about component prop types outside of templates. However, if you wish to get actual prop types in .vue imports (for example to get props validation when using manual h(...) calls), you can enable Volar's Take Over mode by following these steps:

  1. Run Extensions: Show Built-in Extensions from VS Code's command palette, look for TypeScript and JavaScript Language Features, then right click and select Disable (Workspace). By default, Take Over mode will enable itself if the default TypeScript extension is disabled.
  2. Reload the VS Code window by running Developer: Reload Window from the command palette.

You can learn more about Take Over mode here.