Rsstail is a command-line syndication feed monitor with behaviour
similar to tail -f
. Rsstail (Python/feedparser) is inspired by
rsstail (C/libmrss), but provides more customizable output
formatting and additional features.
You probably shouldn't use this version but instead use it as a reference since I've modified it to fit my specific use case
$ rsstail --help Usage: rsstail [options] <url> [<url> ...] General Options: -v --verbose increase verbosity -V --version show version and exit -h --help show this help message and exit -x --help-format show formatting help and exit Feed Options: -i --interval <arg> poll every <arg> seconds -e --iterations <arg> poll <arg> times and quit -n --initial <arg> initially show <arg> items -w --newer <arg> show items newer than <arg> -b --bytes <arg> show only <arg> description/comment bytes -r --reverse show in reverse order -s --striphtml strip html tags -o --nofail do not exit on error -q --unique skip duplicate items Format Options: -t --timestamp show local timestamp -T --utc-timestamp show utc timestamp -l --title show title -u --url show url -d --desc show description -p --pubdate show publication date -U --updated show last update date -a --author show author -c --comments show comments -g --no-heading do not show headings -m --time-format <arg> date/time format -f --format <arg> output format (overrides other format options) Examples: rsstail --timestamp --pubdate --title --author <url1> <url2> <url3> rsstail --reverse --title <url> <username:password@url> rsstail --interval 60|60s|5m|1h --newer "2011/12/20 23:50:12" <url> rsstail --format '%(timestamp)-30s %(title)s %(author)s\n' <url> rsstail --format '{timestamp:<30} {title} {author}\n' <url>
$ rsstail --help-format Format specifiers must have one the following forms: %(placeholder)[flags]s {placeholder:flags} Examples: --format '%(timestamp)s %(pubdate)-30s %(author)s\n' --format '%(title)s was written by %(author)s on %(pubdate)s\n' --format '{timestamp:<20} {pubdate:^30} {author:>30}\n' Time format takes standard 'sprftime' specifiers: --time-format '%Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S' --time-format 'Day of the year: %j Month: %b' Useful flags in this context are: %(placeholder)-10s - left align and pad %(placeholder)10s - right align and pad {placeholder:<10} - left align and pad {placeholder:>10} - right align and pad {placeholder:^10} - center align and pad Available placeholders: author comments created desc expired id link pubdate timestamp title updated utc-timestamp
Please note that {placeholder:flags}
style placeholders are
available only with Python >= 2.7.
The latest stable version of rsstail can be installed from pypi:
$ pip install rsstail
Or simply put the standalone rsstail script in your $PATH
and make
it executable:
https://github.com/gvalkov/rsstail.py/releases/download/v0.5.0/rsstail.pyz.zip
Rsstail's' output can be piped to one of the many console colorizers. Consider using one of the following tools: clide, multitail, ccze, colorize, colorex or colout.
Example with clide:
$ rsstail <options> \ | clide -e '/(Title|Pubdate|Author|Link|Description):/g,fg=yellow,bold' \ -e '/^.*FAILURE.*$/,fg=red,bold \
Example with multitail:
# add to /etc/multitail.conf colorscheme:rsstail.py:console syndication feed monitor cs_re:red,,bold:^.*FAILURE.*$ cs_re:cyan:(:|/) cs_re:yellow:^.......... ..:..:.. cs_re:green:(Title|Author|Link|Pubdate): $ multitail -cS "rsstail.py" -l "rsstail <options>"
These two examples are barely touching the surface of what clide and multitail can do. Refer to the documentation of these excellent projects for more information.
Rsstail comes with shell completion scripts for bash and zsh.
- bash: copy rsstail.sh to
/etc/bash_completion.d/
.- zsh: copy rsstail.zsh anywhere in
$fpath
.
If you are installing system-wide, the setup script will attempt to place these files in the right place.
Rsstail is released under the terms of the Revised BSD License.