Trops is a command-line tool designed for tracking system operations on destributed Linux systems. It keeps a log of executed commands and modified files, being helpful for developing Ansible roles, Dockerfiles, and similar tasks. It is portable and easy to use, and it can be used in a variety of environments, such as local, remote, and containerized environments. You can store your log on a private, internal Git repository (not public) and link it to issues in tools such as GitLab and Redmine.
It aims for solving these challenges:
- Keeping track of when and what has been done on which host (for which issue)
- Note-taking for solo system administrators of destributed systems
- "Potentially" bridging the gap between Dev and Ops
- OS: Linux, MacOS
- Shell: Bash, Zsh
- Python: 3.8 or higher
- Git: 2.28 or higher
Ubuntu:
sudo apt install pipx git pipx install trops
Rocky:
sudo dnf install epel-release git sudo dnf install python3.12-pip pip3.12 install --user pipx pipx install trops
MacOS:
brew install pipx git pipx install trops
Conda-forge:
wget https://github.com/conda-forge/miniforge/releases/latest/download/Miniforge3-Linux-x86_64.sh bash Miniforge3-Linux-x86_64.sh -b -p $HOME/miniforge3 $HOME/miniforge3/bin/conda install git $HOME/miniforge3/bin/pip install trops mkdir $HOME/bin cd $HOME/bin ln -s ../miniforge3/bin/git git ln -s ../miniforge3/bin/trops trops export PATH=$HOME/bin:$PATH # Add this line in your .bashrc
Activate trops:
export TROPS_DIR="/path/to/your/trops" test -d $TROPS_DIR || mkdir -p $TROPS_DIR # for Bash eval "$(trops init bash)" # for Zsh eval "$(trops init zsh)"
Create a trops environment(e.g. myenv):
trops env create myenv
Activate or deactivate background tracking:
# Activate ontrops myenv # Deactivate offtrops
When activated, every command is logged in a log file located at $TROPS_DIR/log/trops.log, and any modified file is committed to its designated Git repository ($TROPS_DIR/repo/<env>.git). To see this in action, perform tasks such as installing or compiling an application, and then use the trops log command to review the log:
# Get your work done, and then check log trops log # You can also pass the output to Trops KouMyo(km), # which unclutters and shows log in a table trops log | trops km
If you use tools such as GitLab and Redmine as an internal, remote, private repository for your Trops, you can set it by --git-remote option like this:
# At creation trops env create [email protected]:username/repository_name.git myenv # or update ontrops myenv trops env update [email protected]:username/repository_name.git
Trops now transforms your system operations into an issue-driven project. Create an issue on your private repository, for example, "Install foobar #1," and then set the issue number as a tag in Trops like this:
# '#<issue number>' ttags '#1' # repo_name#<number> ttags repo_name#1
Once your work is done, you can save and push the log:
# Save the log as a markdown table trops log | trops km --save # And then, push your trops' commits to the remote repository trops repo push
On the issue page, you can find the log in a markdown table format, which is useful for reviewing and sharing your work with your team members.
Now, you can update the tasks and recipes in your Ansible roles, Dockerfiles, and so on, based on the log. You can also use the log as a reference for troubleshooting.
Trops helps you easily try new things, and you don't have to worry about forgetting what you've done. And then, once you've got used to it, it will actually help you organize your day-to-day multitasking, which is probably something that a lot of system admins cannot avoid.
If you have a problem, please create an issue or a pull request.
- Fork it ( https://github.com/kojiwell/trops/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request