Skip to content

Blazingly fast terminal recorder that generates animated gif images for the web written in rust

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

sassman/t-rec-rs

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

t-rec: Terminal Recorder

License: GPL v3 crates.io dependency status Build Status LOC

Blazingly fast terminal recorder that generates animated gif images for the web written in rust.

Demo

demo

Features

  • Screenshotting your terminal with 4 frames per second (every 250ms)
  • Generates high quality small sized animated gif images or mp4 videos
  • Build-In idle frames detection and optimization (for super fluid presentations)
  • Applies (can be disabled) border decor effects like drop shadow
  • Runs on MacOS, Linux and NetBSD
  • Uses native efficient APIs
  • Runs without any cloud service and entirely offline
  • No issues with terminal sizes larger than 80x24
  • No issues with fonts or colors
  • No issues with curses based programs
  • No issues with escape sequences
  • No record and replay - just one simple command to rule them all
  • Can record every arbitrary window you want (e.g. browser, ide)
  • Written in Rust 🦀

Installation on MacOS

with homebrew

brew install t-rec

with macports

sudo port selfupdate
sudo port install t-rec

with cargo

NOTE t-rec depends on imagemagick.

brew install imagemagick
cargo install -f t-rec 

NOTE -f just makes sure the latest version is installed

Installation on Linux

as .deb

sudo apt-get install imagemagick
wget https://github.com/sassman/t-rec-rs/releases/download/v0.5.0/t-rec_0.5.0_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i t-rec_0.5.0_amd64.deb

as snap

Get it from the Snap Store

TL;DR:

sudo snap install t-rec --classic
/snap/bin/t-rec --version
t-rec 0.4.3

from AUR

t-rec can be installed from available AUR packages using an AUR helper. For example,

paru -S t-rec

If you prefer, you can clone the AUR packages and then compile them with makepkg. For example,

git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/t-rec.git
cd t-rec
makepkg -si

Installation on NetBSD

pkgin install t-rec

Or, if you prefer to build from source,

cd /usr/pkgsrc/multimedia/t-rec
make install

with cargo

sudo apt-get install libx11-dev imagemagick
cargo install -f t-rec
tested on those distros
ubuntu 20.10 on GNOME
demo-ubuntu
ubuntu 20.10 on i3wm
demo-ubuntu-i3wm
linux mint 20 on cinnamon
demo-mint
ArcoLinux 5.4 on Xfwm4
demo-arco

Usage

t-rec

or with specifying a different program to launch

t-rec /bin/sh

Full Options

t-rec 0.7.6
Sven Assmann <[email protected]>
Blazingly fast terminal recorder that generates animated gif images for the web written in rust.

Usage: t-rec [OPTIONS] [shell or program to launch]

Arguments:
  [shell or program to launch]  If you want to start a different program than $SHELL you can
                                pass it here. For example '/bin/sh'

Options:
  -v, --verbose                   Enable verbose insights for the curious
  -q, --quiet                     Quiet mode, suppresses the banner:
                                  'Press Ctrl+D to end recording'
  -m, --video                     Generates additionally to the gif a mp4 video of the recording
  -M, --video-only                Generates only a mp4 video and not gif
  -d, --decor <decor>             Decorates the animation with certain, mostly border effects 
                                  [default: none] [possible values: shadow, none]
  -b, --bg <bg>                   Background color when decors are used [default: transparent]
                                  [possible values: white, black, transparent]
  -n, --natural                   If you want a very natural typing experience and disable the idle
                                  detection and sampling optimization
  -l, --ls-win                    If you want to see a list of windows available for recording by
                                  their id, you can set env var 'WINDOWID' or `--win-id` to record
                                  this specific window only
  -w, --win-id <win-id>           Window Id (see --ls-win) that should be captured, instead of
                                  the current terminal
  -e, --end-pause <s | ms | m>    to specify the pause time at the end of the animation, that time
                                  the gif will show the last frame
  -s, --start-pause <s | ms | m>  to specify the pause time at the start of the animation, that time
                                  the gif will show the first frame
  -o, --output <file>             to specify the output file (without extension) [default: t-rec]
  -h, --help                      Print help
  -V, --version                   Print version

Disable idle detection & optimization

If you are not happy with the idle detection and optimization, you can disable it with the -n or --natural parameter. By doing so, you would get the very natural timeline of typing and recording as you do it. In this case there will be no optimizations performed.

Enable shadow border decor

In order to enable the drop shadow border decor you have to pass -d shadow as an argument. If you only want to change the color of the background you can use -b black for example to have a black background.

Record Arbitrary windows

You can record not only the terminal but also every other window. There 3 ways to do so:

  1. use -w | --win-id argument to name the Window Id that should be recorded
t-rec --ls-win | grep -i calc
Calculator | 45007

t-rec -w 45007 
  1. use the env var TERM_PROGRAM like this:
  • for example lets record a window 'Google Chrome'
  • make sure chrome is running and visible on screen
TERM_PROGRAM="google chrome" t-rec

Frame cache dir: "/var/folders/m8/084p1v0x4770rpwpkrgl5b6h0000gn/T/trec-74728.rUxBx3ohGiQ2"
Recording window: "Google Chrome 2"
Press Ctrl+D to end recording

this is how it looks then: demo-chrome

  1. use the env var WINDOWID like this:
  • for example let's record a VSCode window
  • figure out the window id program, and make it
  • make sure the window is visible on screen
  • set the variable and run t-rec
t-rec --ls-win | grep -i code
Code | 27600

# set the WINDOWID variable and run t-rec
WINDOWID=27600 t-rec

Frame cache dir: "/var/folders/m8/084p1v0x4770rpwpkrgl5b6h0000gn/T/trec-77862.BMYiHNRWqv9Y"
Press Ctrl+D to end recording

this is how it looks then: demo-vscode

Contribute

To contribute to t-rec you can either checkout existing issues labeled with good first issue or open a new issue and describe your problem. Also every PR is welcome. Support for Linux and Windows needs to be done.

On the web & social media

License