/asciinema

Terminal session recorder 📹

Primary LanguagePythonGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

Note: This is README for development branch. See the version for latest stable release.

asciinema

Build Status PyPI license

Terminal session recorder and the best companion of asciinema.org.

demo

Quick intro

asciinema lets you easily record terminal sessions and replay them in a terminal as well as in a web browser.

Install latest version (other installation options):

sudo pip3 install asciinema

Record your first session:

asciinema rec first.cast

Now replay it with double speed:

asciinema play -s 2 first.cast

Or with normal speed but with idle time limited to 2 seconds:

asciinema play -i 2 first.cast

You can pass -i 2 to asciinema rec as well, to set it permanently on a recording. Idle time limiting makes the recordings much more interesting to watch, try it.

If you want to watch and share it on the web, upload it:

asciinema upload first.cast

The above uploads it to asciinema.org, which is a default asciinema-server instance, and prints a secret link you can use to watch your recording in a web browser.

You can record and upload in one step by omitting the filename:

asciinema rec

You'll be asked to confirm the upload when the recording is done, so nothing is sent anywhere without your consent.

These were the basics, but there's much more you can do. The following sections cover installation, usage and hosting of the recordings in more detail.

Installation

Python package

asciinema is available on PyPI and can be installed with pip (Python 3 with setuptools required):

sudo pip3 install asciinema

This is the recommended way of installation, which gives you the latest released version.

Native packages

asciinema is included in repositories of most popular package managers on Mac OS X, Linux and FreeBSD. Look for package named asciinema. See the list of available packages.

Snap supported Linux distros

If you run Ubuntu or other snap supported Linux distribution you can install asciinema with:

snap install asciinema --classic

The snap contains all necessary dependencies required to run asciinema, and will get automatically updated when a new version is pushed to the store.

Docker image

asciinema Docker image is based on Ubuntu 16.04 and has the latest version of asciinema recorder pre-installed.

docker pull asciinema/asciinema

When running it don't forget to allocate a pseudo-TTY (-t), keep STDIN open (-i) and mount config directory volume (-v):

docker run --rm -ti -v "$HOME/.config/asciinema":/root/.config/asciinema asciinema/asciinema

Default command run in a container is asciinema rec.

There's not much software installed in this image though. In most cases you may want to install extra programs before recording. One option is to derive new image from this one (start your custom Dockerfile with FROM asciinema/asciinema). Another option is to start the container with /bin/bash as the command, install extra packages and manually start asciinema rec:

docker run --rm -ti -v "$HOME/.config/asciinema":/root/.config/asciinema asciinema/asciinema /bin/bash
root@6689517d99a1:~# apt-get install foobar
root@6689517d99a1:~# asciinema rec

Running latest version from source code checkout

If none of the above works for you just clone the repo and run asciinema straight from the checkout.

Clone the repo:

git clone https://github.com/asciinema/asciinema.git
cd asciinema

If you want latest stable version:

git checkout master

If you want current development version:

git checkout develop

Then run it with:

python3 -m asciinema --version

Usage

asciinema is composed of multiple commands, similar to git, apt-get or brew.

When you run asciinema with no arguments help message is displayed, listing all available commands with their options.

rec [filename]

Record terminal session.

By running asciinema rec [filename] you start a new recording session. The command (process) that is recorded can be specified with -c option (see below), and defaults to $SHELL which is what you want in most cases.

Recording finishes when you exit the shell (hit Ctrl+D or type exit). If the recorded process is not a shell then recording finishes when the process exits.

If the filename argument is omitted then (after asking for confirmation) the resulting asciicast is uploaded to asciinema-server (by default to asciinema.org), where it can be watched and shared.

If the filename argument is given then the resulting recording (called asciicast) is saved to a local file. It can later be replayed with asciinema play <filename> and/or uploaded to asciinema server with asciinema upload <filename>.

ASCIINEMA_REC=1 is added to recorded process environment variables. This can be used by your shell's config file (.bashrc, .zshrc) to alter the prompt or play a sound when the shell is being recorded.

Available options:

  • --stdin - Enable stdin (keyboard) recording (see below)
  • --append - Append to existing recording
  • --raw - Save raw STDOUT output, without timing information or other metadata
  • --overwrite - Overwrite the recording if it already exists
  • -c, --command=<command> - Specify command to record, defaults to $SHELL
  • -e, --env=<var-names> - List of environment variables to capture, defaults to SHELL,TERM
  • -t, --title=<title> - Specify the title of the asciicast
  • -i, --idle-time-limit=<sec> - Limit recorded terminal inactivity to max <sec> seconds
  • -y, --yes - Answer "yes" to all prompts (e.g. upload confirmation)
  • -q, --quiet - Be quiet, suppress all notices/warnings (implies -y)

Stdin recording allows for capturing of all characters typed in by the user in the currently recorded shell. This may be used by a player (e.g. asciinema-player) to display pressed keys. Because it's basically a key-logging (scoped to a single shell instance), it's disabled by default, and has to be explicitly enabled via --stdin option.

play <filename>

Replay recorded asciicast in a terminal.

This command replays given asciicast (as recorded by rec command) directly in your terminal.

Following keyboard shortcuts are available:

  • Space - toggle pause,
  • . - step through a recording a frame at a time (when paused),
  • Ctrl+C - exit.

Playing from a local file:

asciinema play /path/to/asciicast.cast

Playing from HTTP(S) URL:

asciinema play https://asciinema.org/a/22124.cast
asciinema play http://example.com/demo.cast

Playing from asciicast page URL (requires <link rel="alternate" type="application/x-asciicast" href="/my/ascii.cast"> in page's HTML):

asciinema play https://asciinema.org/a/22124
asciinema play http://example.com/blog/post.html

Playing from stdin:

cat /path/to/asciicast.cast | asciinema play -
ssh user@host cat asciicast.cast | asciinema play -

Playing from IPFS:

asciinema play dweb:/ipfs/QmNe7FsYaHc9SaDEAEXbaagAzNw9cH7YbzN4xV7jV1MCzK/ascii.cast

Available options:

  • -i, --idle-time-limit=<sec> - Limit replayed terminal inactivity to max <sec> seconds
  • -s, --speed=<factor> - Playback speed (can be fractional)

For the best playback experience it is recommended to run asciinema play in a terminal of dimensions not smaller than the one used for recording, as there's no "transcoding" of control sequences for new terminal size.

cat <filename>

Print full output of recorded asciicast to a terminal.

While asciinema play <filename> replays the recorded session using timing information saved in the asciicast, asciinema cat <filename> dumps the full output (including all escape sequences) to a terminal immediately.

asciinema cat existing.cast >output.txt gives the same result as recording via asciinema rec --raw output.txt.

upload <filename>

Upload recorded asciicast to asciinema.org site.

This command uploads given asciicast (recorded by rec command) to asciinema.org, where it can be watched and shared.

asciinema rec demo.cast + asciinema play demo.cast + asciinema upload demo.cast is a nice combo if you want to review an asciicast before publishing it on asciinema.org.

auth

Link your install ID with your asciinema.org user account.

If you want to manage your recordings (change title/theme, delete) at asciinema.org you need to link your "install ID" with asciinema.org user account.

This command displays the URL to open in a web browser to do that. You may be asked to log in first.

Install ID is a random ID (UUID v4) generated locally when you run asciinema for the first time, and saved at $HOME/.config/asciinema/install-id. It's purpose is to connect local machine with uploaded recordings, so they can later be associated with asciinema.org account. This way we decouple uploading from account creation, allowing them to happen in any order.

A new install ID is generated on each machine and system user account you use asciinema on, so in order to keep all recordings under a single asciinema.org account you need to run asciinema auth on all of those machines.

asciinema versions prior to 2.0 confusingly referred to install ID as "API token".

Hosting the recordings on the web

As mentioned in the Usage > rec section above, if the filename argument to asciinema rec is omitted then the recorded asciicast is uploaded to asciinema.org. You can watch it there and share it via secret URL.

If you prefer to host the recordings yourself, you can do so by either:

Configuration file

You can configure asciinema by creating config file at $HOME/.config/asciinema/config.

Configuration is split into sections ([api], [record], [play]). Here's a list of all available options for each section:

[api]

; API server URL, default: https://asciinema.org
; If you run your own instance of asciinema-server then set its address here
; It can also be overriden by setting ASCIINEMA_API_URL environment variable
url = https://asciinema.example.com

[record]

; Command to record, default: $SHELL
command = /bin/bash -l

; Enable stdin (keyboard) recording, default: no
stdin = yes

; List of environment variables to capture, default: SHELL,TERM
env = SHELL,TERM,USER

; Limit recorded terminal inactivity to max n seconds, default: off
idle_time_limit = 2

; Answer "yes" to all interactive prompts, default: no
yes = true

; Be quiet, suppress all notices/warnings, default: no
quiet = true

[play]

; Playback speed (can be fractional), default: 1
speed = 2

; Limit replayed terminal inactivity to max n seconds, default: off
idle_time_limit = 1

A very minimal config file could look like that:

[record]
idle_time_limit = 2

Config directory location can be changed by setting $ASCIINEMA_CONFIG_HOME environment variable.

If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is set on Linux then asciinema uses $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/asciinema instead of $HOME/.config/asciinema.

asciinema versions prior to 1.1 used $HOME/.asciinema. If you have it there you should mv $HOME/.asciinema $HOME/.config/asciinema.

Contributing

If you want to contribute to this project check out Contributing page.

Authors

Developed with passion by Marcin Kulik and great open source contributors

License

Copyright © 2011-2017 Marcin Kulik.

All code is licensed under the GPL, v3 or later. See LICENSE file for details.