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Bitbucket widget
The widget shows the number of pull requests assigned to the user and when clicked shows them in the list with some additional information. When item in the list is clicked - it opens the pull request in the browser.
How it works
Widget uses cURL to query Bitbucket's REST API. In order to be authenticated, widget uses a netrc feature of the cURL, which is basically to store basic auth credentials in a .netrc file in home folder.
Bitbucket allows using App Passwords (available in the account settings) - simply generate one for the widget and use it as password in .netrc file.
Customization
It is possible to customize widget by providing a table with all or some of the following config parameters:
Name | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
icon |
~/.config/awesome/awesome-wm-widgets/bitbucket-widget/bitbucket-icon-gradient-blue.svg |
Path to the icon |
host |
Required | Ex: http://api.bitbucket.org |
account_id |
Required | Account ID |
workspace |
Required | Workspace ID |
repo_slug |
Required | Repository slug |
Installation
Create a .netrc file in you home directory with following content:
machine api.bitbucket.org
login mikey@tmnt.com
password cowabunga
Then change file's permissions to 600 (so only you can read/write it):
chmod 600 ~/.netrc
And test if it works by calling the API:
curl -s -n 'https://api.bitbucket.org/2.0/repositories/'
Also to properly setup required parameters you can use test_bitbucket_api.sh
script - it uses the same curl call as widget.
Then clone/download repo and use widget in rc.lua:
local bitbucket_widget = require("awesome-wm-widgets.bitbucket-widget.bitbucket")
...
s.mytasklist, -- Middle widget
{ -- Right widgets
layout = wibox.layout.fixed.horizontal,
...
-- default
bitbucket_widget({
host = 'https://api.bitbucket.org',
account_id = 'your-account-id',
workspace = 'workspace',
repo_slug = 'slug'
}}),
...