Recording desktop activity
Recording your desktop can serve many purposes: It can be a way of permanently recording a complicated procedure; it can prove that a student has completed an assignment, as the man page for the script
command suggests; or it can enhance documentation, provide animated how-tos, and even assist with automatic testing, depending on the tools you choose.
The tools described in this article operate on several levels. At the simplest level, commands like script
, ttyrec
, and shelr
serve as more permanent alternatives to a shell's history. By contrast, scrot
takes stills, cnee
records not so much visual events as the technical information behind them, and recordmydesktop
produces movies made from desktop events. You could accurately say that recording tools are available for every purpose and level of users.
script
The script
command writes a record of all actions within a shell (Figure 1). It is not much different from viewing a shell's history, except that it writes to file and is stored permanently. Script is one of several dozen commands installed in distributions as part of the linux-utils package.
[...]
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