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Atomic Tracker

GitHub CI

A self-hosted habit tracking web application with a personal dashboard and optional integrations to external data providers.

Why?

I personally find it useful to have a graphical overview of the things I'm working on, the progress I've made, my agenda for the upcoming days and so on.

Why Atomic? the term comes from the #1 New York Times bestseller Atomic Habits by James Clear. The dashboard makes the habits and their consistency visible, helps you break them into small actions that are easy to do. There is also a gamification aspect, small and easy actions yield less points than big actions. These points are tracked against your weekly (or any other periodical) targets.

Installation

Pull the container from GitHub Packages:

docker pull ghcr.io/majorpeter/atomic-tracker:latest

Or clone the repository and build the container locally:

docker build -t atomic-tracker .

Run locally:

# for GitHub build
docker run --rm --name my-atomic-tracker -p 8080:8080 -v ./config:/config ghcr.io/majorpeter/atomic-tracker:latest

# for local build
docker run --rm --name my-atomic-tracker -p 8080:8080 -v ./config:/config atomic-tracker:latest

Open http://localhost:8080/ in a browser and create your user account. (Only one supported for now.)

Integrations

Authentication

Google OAuth2

This requires OAuth 2.0 credentials from Google, which can be obtained by setting up a project in Google API console.

The redirect URI of the OAuth client should be set to <app-base-url>/oauth2/redirect/google, e.g. https://example.com/oauth2/redirect/google.

Once credentials have been obtained, pass the following environment variables, by e.g. creating a .env file:

GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID=__INSERT_CLIENT_ID_HERE__
GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET=__INSERT_CLIENT_SECRET_HERE__
GOOGLE_OAUTH_CALLBACK_URL=https://<app-base-url>/oauth2/redirect/google

The last one is required if the application is running behind a proxy (which should be the case since HTTPS should be used).

Dashboard content

  • Nextcloud Tasks: Todos block can read from a Nextcloud instance
  • Google Calendar: Agenda block can fetch events from Google Calendar
  • Redmine: Projects block can read issues in progress from a Redmine instance

Environment Variables

  • CONFIG_DIR: where to put database file (SQLite)
  • LISTENING_PORT: web server listens on this port (8080 by default)
  • BYPASS_LOGIN: debug option to treat client as user #1 without logging in (useful when backend is restarted on each code change)
  • USE_DUMMY_DATA: debug option to output dummy data instead of fetching from integrations (useful for screenshots)

Development

Both the backend and the frontend have development server setups. Run the following commands in 2 separate shells:

(cd backend/ && BYPASS_LOGIN=1 npm run dev)
(cd frontend/ && npm run dev)

DB seeding

Once the database is created, it can be populated via the seeders:

(cd backend/ && npm run seed)

This creates an admin account with empty password.

Adding migrations

Migrations are in backend/migrations/, use the following command and follow the naming scheme used before:

npx sequelize-cli migration:create --migrations-path src/migrations/ --name <name>

Or just copy from an existing file. Make sure to shut down backend development server before editing migrations since they are applied automatically.

Adding translations (i18n)

Use new keys in <Trans> and useTranslation. Then call the following to add missing keys to translation files:

(cd frontend/ && npm run i18n)

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A self-hosted habit tracking web application.

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