~amolith/willow

Forge-agnostic software release tracker (WIP)
Fix spacing in dashboard
Migrate to popover element and use two columns
Add prettier recipe and missing license info

refs

main
browse  log 
v0.0.1-alpha1
release notes 

clone

read-only
https://git.sr.ht/~amolith/willow
read/write
git@git.sr.ht:~amolith/willow

You can also use your local clone with git send-email.

#Willow

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Forge-agnostic software release tracker

screenshot of willow's current web UI

This UI is Amolith's attempt at a balance between simple, pleasant, and functional. Amolith is not a UX professional and would very much welcome input from someone more knowledgeable!

#What is it?

If you'd rather watch a short video, Amolith gave a 5-minute lightning talk on Willow at the 2023 Ubuntu Summit.

Willow helps developers, sysadmins, and homelabbers keep up with software releases across arbitrary forge platforms, including full-featured forges like GitHub, GitLab, or Forgejo as well as more minimal options like cgit or stagit.

It exists because decentralisation, as wonderful as it is, does have some pain points. One piece of software is on GitHub, another piece is on GitLab, one on Bitbucket, a fourth on SourceHut, a fifth on the developer's self-hosted Forgejo instance.

The capabilities of each platform can also differ, further complicating the space. For example, Forgejo and GitHub have APIs and RSS release feeds, SourceHut has an API and RSS feeds that notify you of all activity in the repo, GitLab only has an API, and there's no standard for discovering the capabilities of arbitrary git frontends like legit.

And then you have different pieces of information in different places; some developers might publish release announcements on their personal blog and some projects might release security advisories on an external platform prior to publishing a release.

All this important info is scattered all over the internet. Willow brings some order to that chaos by supporting both RSS and one of the very few things all the forges and frontends have in common: their Version Control System. At the moment, Git is the only supported VCS, but we're definitely interested in adding support for Pijul, Fossil, Mercurial, and potentially others.

Amolith (the creator) has recorded some of his other ideas, thoughts, and plans in his wiki.

#Installation and use

Disclaimers:

  • Docker image coming soon™
  • We consider the project alpha-quality. There will be bugs.
  • Amolith has tried to make the web UI accessible, but is unsure of its current usability.
  • The app is not localised yet and English is the only available language.
  • Help with any/all of the above is most welcome!

#Installation

This assumes Willow will run on an always-on server, like a VPS.

  • Obtain the binary appropriate for your system from one of the release pages (they're all the same)
  • Make sure you're in the same folder as the binary when running the following commands
  • Mark the binary as executable with chmod +x willow
  • Execute the binary with ./willow
  • Edit the config with nano config.toml
  • Daemonise Willow using systemd, OpenRC, etc.
  • Reverse-proxy the web UI (defaults to localhost:1313) with Caddy, NGINX, etc.

#Use

  • Create a user with ./willow -a <username>
  • Open the web UI (defaults to localhost:1313, but installation had you put a proxy in front)
  • Click Track new project
  • Fill out the form and press Next
  • Indicate which version you're currently on and press Track releases
  • You're now tracking that project's releases!

If you no longer use that project, click the Delete? link to remove it, and, if applicable, Willow's copy of its repo.

If you're no longer running the version Willow says you've selected, click the Modify? link to select a different version.

If there are projects where your selected version does not match what Willow thinks is latest, they'll show up at the top under the Outdated projects heading and have a link at the bottom of the card to View release notes. Clicking that link populates the right column with those release notes.

If there are projects where your selected version does match what Willow thinks is latest, they'll show up at the bottom under the Up-to-date projects heading.

#Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md.