| test | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| nag | ||
| README.md | ||
nag, a bash script for setting one-off or repeating alarms with natural language
nag typically requires a cron daemon or systemd-timer to be available. On the first alarm set, nag will prompt to install whichever is relevant for your system. The timer will then invoke nag check on an interval, which checks for alarms that are due to go off, and triggers them as appropritate. By default notify-send is used, but the command triggered can be overriden with NAG_CMD to anything you like.
nag attempts to use something close to natural language. You can nag [at] 2pm for a one-off alarm at 2pm, or nag every 2pm for an alarm every 2pm. To delete an alarm, nag stop it, or to just skip one instance nag skip. If it's a one-off alarm being skipped, that's the same as just stopping it. If you want to keep an alarm from triggering for a duration, like during a week off, you can nag snooze it; that'll stop it triggering entirely. For just silencing the sound, nag mute instead.
Alarms can be tagged with nag tag <id> <tags...>, and all alarms of a tag can be listed with nag tag <tag>. When you stop, skip, snooze, or mute an alarm, you can either operate on all alarms, a specific id, or a specific tag. For example, nag snooze work "until next Tuesday", or nag mute all.
un- commands work with all of the above. You can nag unskip a skipped alarm to bring it back to the next date. For example, if you skip your Friday alarm by mistake, nag unskip will find the next Friday and set the next expiration to whenever that is.
Time parsing is done with date -d, so it supports a decent array of formats:
- Times of day (15:30, 3:30pm, 3pm, noon, teatime)
- Calendar dates (2025-12-25, 25 Dec 2025, Dec 25)
- Combined (tomorrow 9am, next monday 15:30)
- Relative days (now, today, tomorrow, next week)
- Relative times (+1 hour, 30 minutes, +1 day)
- Ordinal dates (first monday, third friday of next month)
- Time zones (15:30 UTC, 3pm PST)
- ISO 8601 (2025-12-25T15:30:00)
- Epoch (@1735138200)
Rules for nag every are:
- hourly (h, hr, hours, hourly)
- daily (d, days, daily)
- weekly (week, weekly)
- monthly (month, months, monthly)
- yearly (year, years, yearly)
- weekday (weekday, weekdays)
- weekend (weekend, weekends)
- specific weekdays (mon, monday, mondays, etc.)
e.g. nag every weekday midday "Take a break for dinner."
Usage:
nag list all alarms
nag <time> <message...> one-shot alarm
nag every <rules> <time> <message...> repeating alarm
nag stop <all|id|tag> delete alarm(s)
nag skip <all|id|tag> skip next occurrence(s)
nag unskip <all|id|tag> reset to next occurrence
nag tag <id> <tags...> add tags to an alarm
nag tag <tag> list alarms with a tag
nag untag <id> <tags...> remove tags from an alarm
nag snooze <all|id|tag> [<duration>] snooze alarms
nag unsnooze <all|id|tag> unsnooze alarms
nag check check and fire due alarms
nag mute <all|tag> mute alarm sounds
nag unmute <all|tag> unmute alarm sounds
nag edit edit alarms file directly
nag help [<subcommand>] show help
nag version show version
Options:
-e Edit alarms file directly.
-f Skip all prompts.
--iso Show times as YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.
--epoch Show times as unix timestamps.
-v Show version.
Environment:
NAG_DIR Alarm storage directory (default: ~/.local/share/nag)
NAG_CMD Notification command (default: notify-send)
NAG_SOUND Sound file to play (default: freedesktop bell sound)
Help
nag list
Usage:
nag list
Description:
List all alarms. This is the default when no subcommand is given.
nag at
Usage:
nag [at] <time> <message...>
Description:
Create a one-shot alarm. The "at" is optional. If the first argument
doesn't match any other subcommand of nag, it'll fallback to "at".
Examples:
nag 3pm take a break
nag at 3pm take a break
nag "tomorrow 9am" dentist appointment
nag every
Usage:
nag every <rules> <time> <message...>
Description:
Create a repeating alarm. Rules are comma-separated and case-insensitive.
Rules (and aliases):
hour (h, hourly) monday (mon, mondays)
day (d, daily) tuesday (tue, tuesdays)
week (weekly) wednesday (wed, wednesdays)
month (monthly) thursday (thurs, thursdays)
year (yearly) friday (fri, fridays)
weekday (weekdays) saturday (sat, saturdays)
weekend (weekends) sunday (sun, sundays)
Examples:
nag every weekday 9am standup meeting
nag every tue,thu 3pm team sync
nag every year "December 25" Christmas
nag stop
Usage:
nag stop <id|tag>
Description:
Stop an alarm by ID, or stop all alarms with a tag.
nag skip
Usage:
nag skip <id|tag>
Description:
Skip the next occurrence of a repeating alarm (reschedule without firing).
For one-shot alarms, this deletes them. With a tag, applies to all
matching alarms.
nag tag
Usage:
nag tag <id> <tags...> add tags to an alarm
nag tag <tag> list alarms with a tag
Description:
Add tags to an alarm by ID, or list all alarms matching a tag.
Tags must not be pure integers.
nag untag
Usage:
nag untag <id> <tags...>
Description:
Remove one or more tags from an alarm.
nag check
Usage:
nag check
Description:
Check for due alarms and fire them. Run automatically by a systemd
timer (every 15s) or cron (every 60s). Repeating alarms are
rescheduled. One-shot alarms are removed. Stale alarms older than
15 minutes are silently dropped or rescheduled without firing.
nag mute
Usage:
nag mute [<tag>]
Description:
Mute alarm sounds. With no argument, mutes all alarms globally.
With a tag, mutes only alarms with that tag.
nag unmute
Usage:
nag unmute [<tag>]
Description:
Unmute alarm sounds. With no argument, unmutes everything.
With a tag, unmutes only that tag.
nag edit
Usage:
nag ( edit | -e )
Description:
Open the alarms file in $EDITOR (falls back to $VISUAL, then vi).
nag help
Usage:
nag help [<subcommand>]
Description:
Display help information for nag or a specified subcommand.
nag version
Usage:
nag ( version | -v )
Description:
Display the current program version.
License
MIT - see LICENSE.