fitbit-backup retrieves weight data from fitbit. So, if you have a WiFi scale like the Fitbit Aria, you can make a backup of the weight data that Fitbit stores for you. Of course, this tool is not restricted to just the Fitbit Aria — the data of any product which uses Fitbit to store weight data will be retrieved.
To download and compile, use:
go get -u github.com/stapelberg/fitbit-backup
Afterwards, run $GOPATH/bin/fitbit-backup
to make sure it works (see below
for configuration). Once you get it to spit out weight data, install a cronjob:
0 19 * * * /home/michael/gocode/bin/fitbit-backup -access_token_token=replace_this -access_token_secret=replace_this > ~/weight/fitbit-backup-$(date +'\%Y-\%m-\%d')
This cronjob will download weight data from Fitbit once a day and store it in a separate file. That way, even if one download fails, you will not accidentally overwrite your old backups, and you can even notice when Fitbit loses some data for whichever reason (hasn’t happened yet for me, but who knows…).
In order to talk to fitbit, you first need to create an application. Go to https://dev.fitbit.com/apps/new and fill in the form like in this example:
Afterwards, fitbit will present you the “Client (Consumer) Secret” for the
newly created application. Specify that using the flag -oauth2_client_secret
.
When running fitbit-backup
, it will prompt you to visit a URL in your browser
in order to authorize the application to access your personal Fitbit account.
Point the flag -oauth2_cache_path
to a writable file and fitbit-backup
will
store the OAuth2 token in there. If you run fitbit-backup
before the token
expires, it will be automatically renewed. Ideally, you only have to visit the
authorization URL in your browser once.
That’s it — now, when running fitbit-backup
with all required flags, you
should get an output like this:
2013-07-30 18:00 65.9
2013-07-30 23:59 65.3
…