--- /dev/null
+Idea grab bag
+-------------
+
+- track devices:
+ - alert when never before seen device is plugged-in
+ - report history and trends on when and how-often each
+ device/category is plugged-in, how-long it stays plaugged-in, etc.
+- daemonize `khatus`, so we don't have to re-launch `X11` to re-launch `khatus`
+- interoperate with other khatus nodes
+ - prefix machine ID to each data source
+ (What should that ID be? Hostname? Pub key?)
+ - fetch remote data and process locally
+ - what transport to use?
+ - ssh + rsync + cache dumps per some interval?
+ - `A` can setup self penetration testing, by setting up probe of `A` on `B`
+ and fetching results from `B` to `A`
+- offline mode - quick disable all network-using subsystems (sensors, monitors, etc)
+- classify each sensor as either "local" or "remote" (what about `iwconfig`, et al?)
+- store data with rrdtool
+- some kind of personal calendar thing integration
+- monitor tracking numbers (17track should be easiest to get started with)
+- monitor password digests against known leaked password databases
+- monitor stock prices
+- monitor some item price(s) at some store(s) (Amazon, etc.)
+ - https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/latest/DG/EX_RetrievingPriceInformation.html
+ - https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/latest/DG/ReturningPrices.html
+ - https://developer.amazonservices.com/
+- monitor Amazon order status
+ - https://developer.amazonservices.com/gp/mws/api.html?group=orders§ion=orders
+- monitor eBay order status
+ - http://developer.ebay.com/DevZone/XML/docs/Reference/eBay/GetOrders.html
+- monitor eBay auctions (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBay_API)
+- monitor PayPal (https://www.programmableweb.com/api/paypal)
+- monitor bank account balance and transactions
+ - https://communities.usaa.com/t5/Banking/Banking-via-API-Root/m-p/180789/highlight/true#M50758
+ - https://plaid.com/
+ - https://plaid.com/docs/api/
+ - https://plaid.com/docs/api/#institution-overview
+ - https://github.com/plaid
+ - https://www.bignerdranch.com/blog/online-banking-apis/
+- monitor/log road/traffic conditions
+ - travel times for some route over a course of time
+ - https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh441725
+ - https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/
+ - https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/routes/
+ - https://developer.mapquest.com/documentation/traffic-api/
+ - https://developer.here.com/api-explorer/rest/traffic/traffic-flow-bounding-box
+- monitor news sources for patterns/substrings
+ - http://developer.nytimes.com/
+ - https://news.ycombinator.com/
+ - https://lobste.rs/
+ - https://www.undeadly.org/
+ - http://openbsdnow.org/
+ - https://lwn.net/
+- monitor a git repository
+ - General
+ - total branches
+ - age of last change per branch
+ - change set sizes
+ - GitHub
+ - pull requests
+ - issues
+- monitor CI
+ - Travis
+ - Jenkins
+- pull/push data from/to other monitoring systems (Nagios, Graphite, etc.)
+- monitor file/directory age (can be used for email and other messaging systems)
+- monitor mailboxes for particular patterns/substrings
+- monitor IRC server(s)/channel(s) for particular patterns/substrings (use `ii`)
+- monitor iptables log
+ - auto-(un)block upon some threshold of violations
+- monitor changes in an arbitrary web resource
+ - deletions
+ - insertions
+ - delta = insertions - deletions
+- monitor/log LAN/WAN configurations (address, router, subnet)
+- monitor/log geolocation based on WAN IP address
+- correlate iptables violations with network/geolocation
+- monitor vulnerability databases
+ - https://nvd.nist.gov/
+ - https://vuldb.com/
+ - http://cve.mitre.org/
+- vacation planning optimization
+ - I want to visit a set of places within some time period. Given the
+ current set of prices, a set of constraints (I need to stay some amount
+ of days at each, I must be in X at Y date, etc), which visiting dates for
+ each are cheapest?
+- browse https://www.programmableweb.com/ for some more ideas
+- GC trick: instead of actually doing GC, do a dummy run of building a status
+ bar at `BEGIN`, to fill-in the atimes for keys we need, then use the atimes
+ keys to build a regular expression to accept messages only from keys we
+ actually use
+
+Many of the above will undoubtedly need non-standard-system dependencies
+(languages, libraries, etc.), in which case - would they be better off as
+separate projects/repos?
+
+With all these ideas, it is starting to sound very noisy, but no worries - to
+quickly and temporarily shut everything up - just kill `dunst` and or toggle
+the status bar (`Alt` + `B` in `dwm`). For a permanent change - just don't
+turn-on the unwanted monitors/sensors.
![screenshot](screenshot.jpg)
-Usage
------
+### v1
+A single, synchronous script, saving state in text files (Bash and AWK).
-### Build
+### v2
+Parallel processes: collectors, cacher and reporters; passing messages over pipes
+(Bash and AWK).
-`make build`
-
-### Install
-
-To copy everything from `./bin` to `$HOME/bin`:
-
-`make install`
-
-### Use
-
-In my `~/.xinitrc` I have something like the following:
-
-```sh
-( $BIN/khatus \
- --wifi_interface 'wlp3s0' \
- --interval_bluetooth 5 \
- --interval_net_wifi 5 \
- --interval_disk_space 5 \
-| stdbuf -o L tee \
- >(stdbuf -o L "$BIN"/khatus_bar \
- -v Opt_Mpd_Song_Max_Chars=10 \
- -v Opt_Pulseaudio_Sink=0 \
- -v GC_Interval=1800 \
- -f <("$BIN"/khatus_gen_bar_make_status \
- -v Status_Fmt=' E=%s%% M=%d%% P=[%s %sr %sd %st %si %sz] C=[%s %s°C %srpm] D=[%s%% %s▲ %s▼] W=[%s %s▲ %s▼] B=%s *=%s%% (%s) [%s] %s°F %s ' \
- -v Status_Args='@energy_percent,@memory_percent,@processes_count_all,@processes_count_r,@processes_count_d,@processes_count_t,@processes_count_i,@processes_count_z,@cpu_loadavg,@cpu_temp,@cpu_fan_speed,@disk_space,@disk_io_w,@disk_io_r,@net_wifi:wlp3s0,@net_io_w:wlp3s0,@net_io_r:wlp3s0,@bluetooth_power,@backlight_percent,@volume_pa_device:0,@mpd,@weather_temp_f,@datetime' \
- ) \
- | "$BIN"/khatus_actuate_status_bar_to_xsetroot_name \
- ) \
- >(stdbuf -o L "$BIN"/khatus_monitor_energy \
- | "$BIN"/khatus_actuate_alert_to_notify_send \
- ) \
- >(stdbuf -o L "$BIN"/khatus_monitor_errors \
- | "$BIN"/khatus_actuate_alert_to_notify_send \
- ) \
- >(stdbuf -o L "$BIN"/khatus_monitor_devices \
- | "$BIN"/khatus_actuate_alert_to_notify_send \
- ) \
- >(stdbuf -o L "$BIN"/khatus_actuate_device_add_to_automount \
- | "$BIN"/khatus_actuate_alert_to_notify_send \
- ) \
-) \
-2> >($BIN/twrap >> $KHATUS_LOGS_DIR/main.log) \
-1> /dev/null \
-&
-```
-(where `twrap` is a simple script which prefixes a timestamp to each line)
-
-The idea is to support appending any number of ad-hoc, experimental monitors by
-giving maximum flexibility for what to do with the sensor outputs, while
-maintaining some uniformity of msg formats (again, to ease ad-hoc combinations
-(e.g. Does the CPU get hotter when MPD is playing Wu-Tang?)). `khatus_bar`,
-`khatus_monitor_energy` and `khatus_monitor_errors` are just some initial
-examples.
-
-Design
-------
-
-### 2.0
-
-In an effort to simplify the components and their interfaces, I removed the
-concept of a global controller from the previous design (which, at least for
-now, is superfluous), so now it is essentially a pub-sub - parallel publishers
-(sensors) write to a pipe, which is then copied to any number of interested
-subscribers that can filter-out what they need and then do whatever they want
-with the data. Status bar is one such subscriber:
-
-`P1 > pipe&; P2 > pipe&; ... PN > pipe&; tail -f pipe | tee >(S1) >(S2) ... >(SN) > /dev/null`
-
-The cool thing is that, because the pipe is always read (`tail -f ... > /dev/null`),
-the publishers are never blocked, so we get a live stream of events to which we
-can attach any number of interested subscribers (` ... tee ... `) and, because
-the pipe is named, if a subscriber needs to - it too can publish something to
-the pipe without being blocked.
-
-```
-parallel +----------+ +----------+ +----------+
-stateless | sensor_1 | | sensor_2 | ... | sensor_n |
-collectors +----------+ +----------+ +----------+
- | | | |
- data data data data
- | | | |
- V V V V
-multiplexing +-------------+-----------+---------+
-to a pipe |
- |
- V
-copying to +-------------+-+---------+---------+
-subscribers | | | |
- V V V V
- +------------+ ... +----------------+
-any number of | status bar | | energy monitor |
-parallel +------------+ +----------------+
-subscribers | |
- V V
- +----------------+ +-------------+
- | xsetroot -name | | notify-send |
- +----------------+ +-------------+
-```
-
-### 1.0
-
-This was an improvement of having everything in one script, but the controller
-was still way too complicated for no good reason.
-
-```
-parallel +----------+ +----------+ +----------+
-stateless | sensor_1 | | sensor_2 | ... | sensor_n |
-collectors +----------+ +----------+ +----------+
- | | | |
- data data data data
- | | | |
- V V V V
-serial +----------------------------------------------+
-stateful | controller |
-observer +----------------------------------------------+
- |
- decision messages
-decision |
-messages |
-copied to |
-any number |
-of interested |
-filter/actuator |
-combinations |
- |
- V
- +-------------+-+---------+---------+
- | | | |
- V V V V
-parallel +------------+ +------------+ +------------+
-stateless | filter_1 | | filter_2 | ... | filter_n |
-filters +------------+ +------------+ +------------+
- | | | |
- V V V V
-parallel +------------+ +------------+ +------------+
-stateless | actuator_1 | | actuator_2 | ... | actuator_n |
-executors +------------+ +------------+ +------------+
- | | | |
- commands commands commands commands
- | | | |
- V V V V
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ operating system ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-```
-
-### 0.x
-
-A single script, re-executed in a loop at some intervals, serially grabbing all
-the needed data and outputting a status bar string, then passed to `xsetroot -name`,
-while saving state in files (e.g. previous totals, to be converted to deltas).
-
-This actually worked surprisingly-OK, but had limitations:
-
-- I use an SSD and want to minimize disk writes
-- not flexible-enough to support my main goal - easy experimentation with
- various ad-hoc monitors:
- - I want to set different update intervals for different data sources
- - I don't want long-running data collectors to block the main loop
-
-### Actuator
-Actuator is anything that takes action upon controller messages. A few generic
-ones are included:
-
-- `khatus_actuate_alert_to_notify_send`
-- `khatus_actuate_status_bar_to_xsetroot_name`
-
-and, by default, are left disconnected from the data feed, so if desired - need
-to be manually attached when starting `khatus`. See usage section.
-
-### Errors
-Any errors encountered by any sensor are propagated as alerts by the
-controller, which are in turn actualized as desktop notifications by the
-`khatus_actuate_alert_to_notify_send` actuator:
-
-![screenshot-self-error-propagation](screenshot-self-error-propagation.jpg)
-
-TODO
-----
-- track energy usage rate
-- formalize message format and protocol
-- tests (design is starting to take shape, so it is time)
-- show how many Debian package updates are available
-- show how many Debian package security-updates are available
-- monitor disk usage rate of change and alert if suspiciously fast
-- bring back CPU usage monitor
-- actual METAR parser, to replace the flaky `metar` program
-- status bar templating language
-- retry/cache for sensors fetching flaky remote resources (such as weather)
-- throttling of broken sensors (constantly returns errors)
-- alert specification language
- - trigger threshold
- - above/bellow/equal to threshold value
- - priority
- - snooze time (if already alerted, when to re-alert?)
- - text: subject/body
-- monitor processes
- - totals (grand and per state)
- - zombies
- - threads
- - CPU hogs
- - memory hogs
- - memory leaks (if some process consistently grows)
- - is select process up?
- - log resource usage of select processes
-- monitor arbitrary HTTP endpoint availability
- - is status within expected range?
- - response time
- - is responce time within acceptable range?
-- report detailed status upon request (to a terminal)
- - use color to indicate age of data
-- monitor logins
- - totals (per time period)
- - failures
- - successes
- - most recent
- - success
- - failure
-- monitor battery time remaining
- - monitor accuracy (is percentage change rate on track to meet estimate?)
- - adjust estimate based on observed inaccuracies in past estimates (Kalman?)
-
-Redesign notes
---------------
-
-- controller should not do formatting
-- need in-memory db for diskless feedback/throttling and cache
-- decouple sensor execution from sleep, i.e. a sensor is blocked not by sleep
- process directly, but by reading of a pipe, to where a sleep process will
- write a message announcing interval completion and thus signaling execution.
- This will allow us to manually signal a sensor to update (concretely - I just
- openned my laptop from sleep and want to force the weather to update
- immediately); likewise, the sleep process should be blocked on pipe-read
- until sensor execution is complete - this will allow us to reconfigure
- intervals at runtime (which seems like a better idea than the above in-memory
- DB one).
-
-Idea grab bag
--------------
-
-- track devices:
- - alert when never before seen device is plugged-in
- - report history and trends on when and how-often each
- device/category is plugged-in, how-long it stays plaugged-in, etc.
-- daemonize `khatus`, so we don't have to re-launch `X11` to re-launch `khatus`
-- interoperate with other khatus nodes
- - prefix machine ID to each data source
- (What should that ID be? Hostname? Pub key?)
- - fetch remote data and process locally
- - what transport to use?
- - ssh + rsync + cache dumps per some interval?
- - `A` can setup self penetration testing, by setting up probe of `A` on `B`
- and fetching results from `B` to `A`
-- offline mode - quick disable all network-using subsystems (sensors, monitors, etc)
-- classify each sensor as either "local" or "remote" (what about `iwconfig`, et al?)
-- store data with rrdtool
-- some kind of personal calendar thing integration
-- monitor tracking numbers (17track should be easiest to get started with)
-- monitor password digests against known leaked password databases
-- monitor stock prices
-- monitor some item price(s) at some store(s) (Amazon, etc.)
- - https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/latest/DG/EX_RetrievingPriceInformation.html
- - https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/latest/DG/ReturningPrices.html
- - https://developer.amazonservices.com/
-- monitor Amazon order status
- - https://developer.amazonservices.com/gp/mws/api.html?group=orders§ion=orders
-- monitor eBay order status
- - http://developer.ebay.com/DevZone/XML/docs/Reference/eBay/GetOrders.html
-- monitor eBay auctions (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBay_API)
-- monitor PayPal (https://www.programmableweb.com/api/paypal)
-- monitor bank account balance and transactions
- - https://communities.usaa.com/t5/Banking/Banking-via-API-Root/m-p/180789/highlight/true#M50758
- - https://plaid.com/
- - https://plaid.com/docs/api/
- - https://plaid.com/docs/api/#institution-overview
- - https://github.com/plaid
- - https://www.bignerdranch.com/blog/online-banking-apis/
-- monitor/log road/traffic conditions
- - travel times for some route over a course of time
- - https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh441725
- - https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/
- - https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/routes/
- - https://developer.mapquest.com/documentation/traffic-api/
- - https://developer.here.com/api-explorer/rest/traffic/traffic-flow-bounding-box
-- monitor news sources for patterns/substrings
- - http://developer.nytimes.com/
- - https://news.ycombinator.com/
- - https://lobste.rs/
- - https://www.undeadly.org/
- - http://openbsdnow.org/
- - https://lwn.net/
-- monitor a git repository
- - General
- - total branches
- - age of last change per branch
- - change set sizes
- - GitHub
- - pull requests
- - issues
-- monitor CI
- - Travis
- - Jenkins
-- pull/push data from/to other monitoring systems (Nagios, Graphite, etc.)
-- monitor file/directory age (can be used for email and other messaging systems)
-- monitor mailboxes for particular patterns/substrings
-- monitor IRC server(s)/channel(s) for particular patterns/substrings (use `ii`)
-- monitor iptables log
- - auto-(un)block upon some threshold of violations
-- monitor changes in an arbitrary web resource
- - deletions
- - insertions
- - delta = insertions - deletions
-- monitor/log LAN/WAN configurations (address, router, subnet)
-- monitor/log geolocation based on WAN IP address
-- correlate iptables violations with network/geolocation
-- monitor vulnerability databases
- - https://nvd.nist.gov/
- - https://vuldb.com/
- - http://cve.mitre.org/
-- vacation planning optimization
- - I want to visit a set of places within some time period. Given the
- current set of prices, a set of constraints (I need to stay some amount
- of days at each, I must be in X at Y date, etc), which visiting dates for
- each are cheapest?
-- browse https://www.programmableweb.com/ for some more ideas
-- GC trick: instead of actually doing GC, do a dummy run of building a status
- bar at `BEGIN`, to fill-in the atimes for keys we need, then use the atimes
- keys to build a regular expression to accept messages only from keys we
- actually use
-
-Many of the above will undoubtedly need non-standard-system dependencies
-(languages, libraries, etc.), in which case - would they be better off as
-separate projects/repos?
-
-With all these ideas, it is starting to sound very noisy, but no worries - to
-quickly and temporarily shut everything up - just kill `dunst` and or toggle
-the status bar (`Alt` + `B` in `dwm`). For a permanent change - just don't
-turn-on the unwanted monitors/sensors.
+### v3
+Clean-up, polish and further development of main ideas learned in v2.
--- /dev/null
+TODO
+----
+- track energy usage rate
+- formalize message format and protocol
+- tests (design is starting to take shape, so it is time)
+- show how many Debian package updates are available
+- show how many Debian package security-updates are available
+- monitor disk usage rate of change and alert if suspiciously fast
+- bring back CPU usage monitor
+- actual METAR parser, to replace the flaky `metar` program
+- status bar templating language
+- retry/cache for sensors fetching flaky remote resources (such as weather)
+- throttling of broken sensors (constantly returns errors)
+- alert specification language
+ - trigger threshold
+ - above/bellow/equal to threshold value
+ - priority
+ - snooze time (if already alerted, when to re-alert?)
+ - text: subject/body
+- monitor processes
+ - totals (grand and per state)
+ - zombies
+ - threads
+ - CPU hogs
+ - memory hogs
+ - memory leaks (if some process consistently grows)
+ - is select process up?
+ - log resource usage of select processes
+- monitor arbitrary HTTP endpoint availability
+ - is status within expected range?
+ - response time
+ - is responce time within acceptable range?
+- report detailed status upon request (to a terminal)
+ - use color to indicate age of data
+- monitor logins
+ - totals (per time period)
+ - failures
+ - successes
+ - most recent
+ - success
+ - failure
+- monitor battery time remaining
+ - monitor accuracy (is percentage change rate on track to meet estimate?)
+ - adjust estimate based on observed inaccuracies in past estimates (Kalman?)
--- /dev/null
+A single script, re-executed in a loop at some intervals, serially grabbing all
+the needed data and outputting a status bar string, then passed to `xsetroot -name`,
+while saving state in files (e.g. previous totals, to be converted to deltas).
+
+This actually worked surprisingly-OK, but had limitations:
+
+- I use an SSD and want to minimize disk writes
+- not flexible-enough to support my main goal - easy experimentation with
+ various ad-hoc monitors:
+ - I want to set different update intervals for different data sources
+ - I don't want long-running data collectors to block the main loop
-khatus
-======
-![mascot](mascot.jpg)
-
-Experimental system-monitor and status (bar) reporter I use with
-[dwm](https://dwm.suckless.org/) on GNU/Linux.
-
-![screenshot](screenshot.jpg)
-
Usage
-----
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
-### 0.x
-
-A single script, re-executed in a loop at some intervals, serially grabbing all
-the needed data and outputting a status bar string, then passed to `xsetroot -name`,
-while saving state in files (e.g. previous totals, to be converted to deltas).
-
-This actually worked surprisingly-OK, but had limitations:
-
-- I use an SSD and want to minimize disk writes
-- not flexible-enough to support my main goal - easy experimentation with
- various ad-hoc monitors:
- - I want to set different update intervals for different data sources
- - I don't want long-running data collectors to block the main loop
-
### Actuator
Actuator is anything that takes action upon controller messages. A few generic
ones are included:
![screenshot-self-error-propagation](screenshot-self-error-propagation.jpg)
-TODO
-----
-- track energy usage rate
-- formalize message format and protocol
-- tests (design is starting to take shape, so it is time)
-- show how many Debian package updates are available
-- show how many Debian package security-updates are available
-- monitor disk usage rate of change and alert if suspiciously fast
-- bring back CPU usage monitor
-- actual METAR parser, to replace the flaky `metar` program
-- status bar templating language
-- retry/cache for sensors fetching flaky remote resources (such as weather)
-- throttling of broken sensors (constantly returns errors)
-- alert specification language
- - trigger threshold
- - above/bellow/equal to threshold value
- - priority
- - snooze time (if already alerted, when to re-alert?)
- - text: subject/body
-- monitor processes
- - totals (grand and per state)
- - zombies
- - threads
- - CPU hogs
- - memory hogs
- - memory leaks (if some process consistently grows)
- - is select process up?
- - log resource usage of select processes
-- monitor arbitrary HTTP endpoint availability
- - is status within expected range?
- - response time
- - is responce time within acceptable range?
-- report detailed status upon request (to a terminal)
- - use color to indicate age of data
-- monitor logins
- - totals (per time period)
- - failures
- - successes
- - most recent
- - success
- - failure
-- monitor battery time remaining
- - monitor accuracy (is percentage change rate on track to meet estimate?)
- - adjust estimate based on observed inaccuracies in past estimates (Kalman?)
-
Redesign notes
--------------
until sensor execution is complete - this will allow us to reconfigure
intervals at runtime (which seems like a better idea than the above in-memory
DB one).
-
-Idea grab bag
--------------
-
-- track devices:
- - alert when never before seen device is plugged-in
- - report history and trends on when and how-often each
- device/category is plugged-in, how-long it stays plaugged-in, etc.
-- daemonize `khatus`, so we don't have to re-launch `X11` to re-launch `khatus`
-- interoperate with other khatus nodes
- - prefix machine ID to each data source
- (What should that ID be? Hostname? Pub key?)
- - fetch remote data and process locally
- - what transport to use?
- - ssh + rsync + cache dumps per some interval?
- - `A` can setup self penetration testing, by setting up probe of `A` on `B`
- and fetching results from `B` to `A`
-- offline mode - quick disable all network-using subsystems (sensors, monitors, etc)
-- classify each sensor as either "local" or "remote" (what about `iwconfig`, et al?)
-- store data with rrdtool
-- some kind of personal calendar thing integration
-- monitor tracking numbers (17track should be easiest to get started with)
-- monitor password digests against known leaked password databases
-- monitor stock prices
-- monitor some item price(s) at some store(s) (Amazon, etc.)
- - https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/latest/DG/EX_RetrievingPriceInformation.html
- - https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/latest/DG/ReturningPrices.html
- - https://developer.amazonservices.com/
-- monitor Amazon order status
- - https://developer.amazonservices.com/gp/mws/api.html?group=orders§ion=orders
-- monitor eBay order status
- - http://developer.ebay.com/DevZone/XML/docs/Reference/eBay/GetOrders.html
-- monitor eBay auctions (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EBay_API)
-- monitor PayPal (https://www.programmableweb.com/api/paypal)
-- monitor bank account balance and transactions
- - https://communities.usaa.com/t5/Banking/Banking-via-API-Root/m-p/180789/highlight/true#M50758
- - https://plaid.com/
- - https://plaid.com/docs/api/
- - https://plaid.com/docs/api/#institution-overview
- - https://github.com/plaid
- - https://www.bignerdranch.com/blog/online-banking-apis/
-- monitor/log road/traffic conditions
- - travel times for some route over a course of time
- - https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh441725
- - https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/
- - https://cloud.google.com/maps-platform/routes/
- - https://developer.mapquest.com/documentation/traffic-api/
- - https://developer.here.com/api-explorer/rest/traffic/traffic-flow-bounding-box
-- monitor news sources for patterns/substrings
- - http://developer.nytimes.com/
- - https://news.ycombinator.com/
- - https://lobste.rs/
- - https://www.undeadly.org/
- - http://openbsdnow.org/
- - https://lwn.net/
-- monitor a git repository
- - General
- - total branches
- - age of last change per branch
- - change set sizes
- - GitHub
- - pull requests
- - issues
-- monitor CI
- - Travis
- - Jenkins
-- pull/push data from/to other monitoring systems (Nagios, Graphite, etc.)
-- monitor file/directory age (can be used for email and other messaging systems)
-- monitor mailboxes for particular patterns/substrings
-- monitor IRC server(s)/channel(s) for particular patterns/substrings (use `ii`)
-- monitor iptables log
- - auto-(un)block upon some threshold of violations
-- monitor changes in an arbitrary web resource
- - deletions
- - insertions
- - delta = insertions - deletions
-- monitor/log LAN/WAN configurations (address, router, subnet)
-- monitor/log geolocation based on WAN IP address
-- correlate iptables violations with network/geolocation
-- monitor vulnerability databases
- - https://nvd.nist.gov/
- - https://vuldb.com/
- - http://cve.mitre.org/
-- vacation planning optimization
- - I want to visit a set of places within some time period. Given the
- current set of prices, a set of constraints (I need to stay some amount
- of days at each, I must be in X at Y date, etc), which visiting dates for
- each are cheapest?
-- browse https://www.programmableweb.com/ for some more ideas
-- GC trick: instead of actually doing GC, do a dummy run of building a status
- bar at `BEGIN`, to fill-in the atimes for keys we need, then use the atimes
- keys to build a regular expression to accept messages only from keys we
- actually use
-
-Many of the above will undoubtedly need non-standard-system dependencies
-(languages, libraries, etc.), in which case - would they be better off as
-separate projects/repos?
-
-With all these ideas, it is starting to sound very noisy, but no worries - to
-quickly and temporarily shut everything up - just kill `dunst` and or toggle
-the status bar (`Alt` + `B` in `dwm`). For a permanent change - just don't
-turn-on the unwanted monitors/sensors.