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<p align="center"> <img align="center" src="etc/icon.png" alt="icon" height="64" /> </p> <h1 align="center">dstask</h1> <p align="center"> <i>Single binary terminal-based TODO manager with git-based sync + markdown notes per task</i> </p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://cloud.drone.io/naggie/dstask"><img src="https://cloud.drone.io/api/badges/naggie/dstask/status.svg" /></a> <a href="https://goreportcard.com/report/github.com/naggie/dstask"><img src="https://goreportcard.com/badge/github.com/naggie/dstask" /></a> <a href="https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/license-MIT-blue.svg" /></a> <a href="http://godoc.org/github.com/naggie/dstask"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/godoc-reference-blue.svg"/></a> <a href="https://gophers.slack.com/archives/C01ED7UKLBH"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Gophers/dstask-yellow.svg?logo=slack"/></a> </p> <br> <br> <br>

Dstask is a personal task tracker designed to help you focus. It is similar to Taskwarrior but uses git to synchronise instead of a special protocol.

Features:

<a href="https://repology.org/project/dstask/versions"> <img src="https://repology.org/badge/vertical-allrepos/dstask.svg" alt="Packaging status" align="right"> </a>

Non-features:

Requirements:

Screenshots

<table> <tbody> <tr> <td> <p align="center"> <img src="https://github.com/naggie/dstask/raw/master/etc/dstask.png"> <em>Next command (default when no command is specified)</em> </p> </td> <td> <p align="center"> <img src="https://github.com/naggie/dstask/raw/master/etc/show-resolved.png"> <em>Show-resolved command to review completed tasks by week. Useful for meetings.</em> </p> </td> <td> <p align="center"> <img src="https://github.com/naggie/dstask/raw/master/etc/edit.png"> <em>Editing a task with $EDITOR (which happens to be vim)</em> </p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <p align="center"> <img src="https://github.com/naggie/dstask/raw/master/etc/add.png"> <em>Adding a task</em> </p> </td> <td> <p align="center"> <img src="https://github.com/naggie/dstask/raw/master/etc/sync.png"> <em>Sync command (which uses git)</em> </p> </td> <td>&nbsp;</td> </tr> </tbody> </table>

Installation

  1. Copy the executable (from the releases page) to somewhere in your path, named dstask and mark it executable. /usr/local/bin/ is suggested.
  2. Enable bash completions by copying source <(dstask bash-completion) into your .bashrc. There's also a zsh-completion subcommand.
  3. Set up an alias in your .bashrc: alias task=dstask or alias t=dstask to make task management slightly faster.
  4. Create or clone a ~/.dstask git repository for the data, if you haven't already: mkdir ~/.dstask && git -C ~/.dstask init.

There are also unofficial packages for:

Moving from Taskwarrior

We have a migration guide to make the transition from taskwarrior to dstask a simple process.

Future of dstask

See etc/FUTURE.md

Usage

Usage: dstask [id...] <cmd> [task summary/filter]

Where [task summary] is text with tags/project/priority specified. Tags are
specified with + (or - for filtering) eg: +work. The project is specified with
a project:g prefix eg: project:dstask -- no quotes. Priorities run from P3
(low), P2 (default) to P1 (high) and P0 (critical). Text can also be specified
for a substring search of description and notes.

Cmd and IDs can be swapped, multiple IDs can be specified for batch
operations.

run "dstask help <cmd>" for command specific help.

Add -- to ignore the current context. / can be used when adding tasks to note
any words after.

Available commands:

next              : Show most important tasks (priority, creation date -- truncated and default)
add               : Add a task
template          : Add a task template
log               : Log a task (already resolved)
start             : Change task status to active
note              : Append to or edit note for a task
stop              : Change task status to pending
done              : Resolve a task
context           : Set global context for task list and new tasks (use "none" to set no context)
modify            : Set attributes for a task
edit              : Edit task with text editor
undo              : Undo last action with git revert
sync              : Pull then push to git repository, automatic merge commit.
open              : Open all URLs found in summary/annotations
git               : Pass a command to git in the repository. Used for push/pull.
remove            : Remove a task (use to remove tasks added by mistake)
show-projects     : List projects with completion status
show-tags         : List tags in use
show-active       : Show tasks that have been started
show-paused       : Show tasks that have been started then stopped
show-open         : Show all non-resolved tasks (without truncation)
show-resolved     : Show resolved tasks
show-templates    : Show task templates
show-unorganised  : Show untagged tasks with no projects (global context)
bash-completion   : Print bash completion script to stdout
zsh-completion    : Print zsh completion script to stdout
help              : Get help on any command or show this message
version           : Show dstask version information

Syntax

Priority

SymbolNameNote
P0CriticalMust be resolved immediately. May appear in all contexts in future.
P1High
P2NormalDefault priority
P3LowShown at bottom and faded.

Operators

SymbolSyntaxDescriptionExample
++<tag>Include tag. Filter/context, or when adding task.dstask add fix server +work
--<tag>Exclude tag. Filter/context only.dstask next -feature
----Ignore context. When listing or adding tasks.dstask --, task add -- +home do guttering
//When adding a task, everything after will be a note.dstask add check out ipfs / https://ipfs.io
project:project:<project>Set project. Filter/context, or when adding task.dstask context project:dstask
-project:-project:<project>Exclude project, filter/context only.dstask next -project:dstask -work
template:template:<id>Base new task on a template.dstask add template:24

State

StateDescription
PendingTasks that have never been started
ActiveTasks that have been started
PausedTasks that have been started but then stopped
ResolvedTasks that have been done/close/completed

Contexts

When dstask runs, a context can be set to filter the task output. Run dstask help context for more examples. There are two ways to set a context.

  1. The context command, which sets a global context on disk.
  2. The DSTASK_CONTEXT environment variable. Contexts set by this environment variable override the global context on disk.

Use the context to set a context that will apply by default, no matter what terminal window you're using.

Use the DSTASK_CONTEXT environment variable to override context in specific uses. For instance, a direnv config can set a context for particular directories.

Context is not synchronised between machines.

Dealing with merge conflicts

Dstask is written in such a way that merge conflicts should not happen, unless a task is edited independently on 2 or more machines without synchronising. In practice this happens rarely; however when it does happen dstask will fail to commit and warn you. You'll then need to go to the underlying ~/.dstask git repository and resolve manually before committing and running dstask sync. In some rare cases the ID can conflict. This is something dstask will soon be equipped to handle automatically when the sync command runs.

Performance

See etc/PERFORMANCE.md

General tips

Database

See etc/DATABASE_FORMAT.md

The default database location is ~/.dstask/, but can be configured by the environment variable DSTASK_GIT_REPO.

Alternatives

Alternatives listed must be capable of running in the terminal.

FAQ

Does dstask encrypt tasks?

Encryption is not a design goal of dstask. If you want to have your remote repository encrypted, you may consider git-remote-gcrypt or git-crypt. Note that dstask has not been tested with these tools, nor can any claims be made about the security of the tools themselves.

Is it possible to modify more than one task at once with a filter?

Yes.

  1. Set a context:
  2. Run a modify command without and ID
  3. Hit y to confirm to modify all tasks in context

This means it's natural to review the tasks that would be modified before modifying by listing all tasks in the current context first, instead of potentially operating blindly by matching tags or numbers.

You can also specify multiple task numbers at one time, as with any other command.

Is there a GUI or web interface?

Not as part of dstask itself. However, dstask can be used as a library -- @botto has started developing a web GUI, specifically to allow task management on-the-go via a smartphone: https://github.com/botto/dstask-gui . It's in early stages but is meaningful as having no smartphone-based control is a blocker for a lot of people.

Has dstask been featured in a magazine?

Yes! https://www.linux-magazine.com/Issues/2021/246/dstask :-)