Monitor a process and trigger a notification.
Never sit and wait for some long-running process to finish. Noti can alert you when it's done. You can receive messages on your computer or phone.
Noti can send notifications on a number of services.
| macOS | Linux | Windows
--------------------------------------
Banner | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
Speech | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
BearyChat | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
HipChat | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
Pushbullet | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
Pushover | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
Pushsafer | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
Simplepush | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
Slack | ✔ | ✔ | ✔
Checkout the screenshots directory to see what the notifications look like on different platforms.
The master
branch always contains the latest tagged release.
# Install the latest version on any platform.
go get -u github.com/variadico/noti/cmd/noti
# Install the latest version on macOS.
brew install noti
If you don't want to build from source or install anything extra, just download the latest binary.
# macOS
curl -L $(curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/variadico/noti/releases/latest | awk '/browser_download_url/ { print $2 }' | grep 'darwin-amd64' | sed 's/"//g') | tar -xz
# Linux
curl -L $(curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/variadico/noti/releases/latest | awk '/browser_download_url/ { print $2 }' | grep 'linux-amd64' | sed 's/"//g') | tar -xz
Or download with your browser from the latest release page.
Just put noti
at the beginning or end of your regular commands. For more
details, checkout the docs.
Display a notification when tar
finishes compressing files.
noti tar -cjf music.tar.bz2 Music/
Add noti
after a command, in case you forgot at the beginning.
clang foo.c -Wall -lm -L/usr/X11R6/lib -lX11 -o bizz; noti
If you already started a command, but forgot to use noti
, then you can do
this to get notified when that process' PID disappears.
noti --pwatch $(pgrep docker-machine)
You can also press ctrl+z
after you started a process. This will temporarily
suspend the process, but you can resume it with noti
.
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=foo bs=1M count=2000
^Z
zsh: suspended dd if=/dev/zero of=foo bs=1M count=2000
$ fg; noti
[1] + continued dd if=/dev/zero of=foo bs=1M count=2000
2000+0 records in
2000+0 records out
2097152000 bytes (2.1 GB, 2.0 GiB) copied, 12 s, 175 MB/s