track_status.py =============== Track when people go online/offline. Usage ----- Run from the top-level directory using `python -m`. For example: > python -m bin.track_status -h usage: track_status.py [-h] [-t TIMEOUT] [-l LOG] [--output-format {csv,log,null}] [-o OUTPUT] UID [UID ...] ... For example (using made up user IDs/"screen names"), > track_status.py john.doe jane.smith [2016-06-18 01:43:34] John Doe is ONLINE. [2016-06-18 01:43:34] John Doe was last seen at 2016-06-18 01:33:58+03:00 using the official iPhone app. [2016-06-18 01:43:34] Jane Smith is OFFLINE. [2016-06-18 01:43:34] Jane Smith was last seen at 2016-06-18 01:15:47+03:00 using the web version (or an unrecognized app). [2016-06-18 01:59:09] Jane Smith went ONLINE. [2016-06-18 01:59:09] Jane Smith was last seen at 2016-06-18 01:59:07+03:00 using the official Android app. [2016-06-18 02:10:00] John Doe went OFFLINE. [2016-06-18 02:10:00] John Doe was last seen at 2016-06-18 01:54:58+03:00 using the official iPhone app. ... By default, the script produces a human-readable log. Use the `--log` parameter to write the log to a file. If you want to record when people go online/offline for [further analysis], specify the path to a database using the `--output` parameter. Be careful: if the file already exists, it will be overwritten! See also -------- * [License] [License]: ../README.md#license