agg is a command-line tool for generating animated GIF files from asciicast v2 files produced by asciinema terminal recorder.
It uses Kornel Lesiński's excellent gifski library to produce optimized, high quality GIF output with accurate frame timing.
agg is a successor to asciicast2gif.
Building from source requires Rust compiler (1.56.0 or later) and Cargo package manager. You can install both with rustup.
To download source code, build agg binary and install it in $HOME/.cargo/bin
run:
cargo install --git https://github.com/asciinema/agg
You need to ensure $HOME/.cargo/bin
is in your shell's $PATH
.
Alternatively, you can manually download source code and build agg binary with:
git clone https://github.com/asciinema/agg
cd agg
cargo build --release
This produces an executable file in release mode (--release
) at
target/release/agg
. There are no other build artifacts so you can copy the
binary to a directory in your $PATH
.
Alternatively, if you have Docker, Podman or another Docker-compatible tool installed you can use it to build agg container image. This doesn't require Rust toolchain installed on your machine.
Build the image with the following command:
docker build -t agg .
Then run agg like this:
docker run --rm -it -u $(id -u):$(id -g) -v $PWD:/data agg demo.cast demo.gif
If you use Podman in root-less mode:
podman run --rm -it -v $PWD:/data agg demo.cast demo.gif
Basic usage:
agg demo.cast demo.gif
The above command renders a GIF file with default theme (dracula), font size 14px.
You can also provide an asciinema.org URL as the first argument:
agg https://asciinema.org/a/569727 starwars.gif
Additional options are available for customization. For example, the following command selects Monokai theme, larger font size, 2x playback speed:
agg --theme monokai --font-size 20 --speed 2 demo.cast demo.gif
Run agg -h
to see all available options. Current options are:
--cols <COLS>
Override terminal width (number of columns)
--font-dir <FONT_DIR>
Use additional font directory
--font-family <FONT_FAMILY>
Specify font family [default: "JetBrains Mono,Fira Code,SF Mono,Menlo,Consolas,DejaVu
Sans Mono,Liberation Mono"]
--font-size <FONT_SIZE>
Specify font size (in pixels) [default: 14]
--fps-cap <FPS_CAP>
Set FPS cap [default: 30]
-h, --help
Print help information
--idle-time-limit <IDLE_TIME_LIMIT>
Limit idle time to max number of seconds [default: 5]
--line-height <LINE_HEIGHT>
Specify line height [default: 1.4]
--no-loop
Disable animation loop
--renderer <RENDERER>
Select frame rendering backend [default: fontdue] [possible values: fontdue, resvg]
--rows <ROWS>
Override terminal height (number of rows)
--speed <SPEED>
Adjust playback speed [default: 1]
--theme <THEME>
Select color theme [possible values: asciinema, dracula, monokai, solarized-dark,
solarized-light, custom]
-v, --verbose
Enable verbose logging
-V, --version
Print version information
By default agg uses common monospaced font for a given platform, that can be
found on its default font family list. The list includes DejaVu Sans Mono and
Liberation Mono (found on most Linux distros), SF Mono and Menlo (found on
macOS), Consolas (found on Windows), with addition of my personal favourites
like JetBrains Mono and Fira Code. The fonts are not included in agg and must be
present on the system. To see the default value run agg --help
and look for
--font-family
. In addition there's implicit fallback to DejaVu Sans (not Mono)
which helps with rendering symbols like ⣽ or ✔ amongst others.
If you want to use another font family then pass a comma-separated list like this:
agg --font-family "Source Code Pro,Fira Code" demo.cast demo.gif
As long as the fonts you want to use are installed in one of standard system
locations (e.g. /usr/share/fonts or ~/.local/share/fonts on Linux) agg will find
them. You can also use --font-dir=/path/to/fonts
option to include extra
fonts. --font-dir
can be specified multiple times.
To verify agg picks up your font run it with -v
(verbose) flag:
agg -v --font-family "Source Code Pro,Fira Code" demo.cast demo.gif
It should print something similar to:
[INFO agg] selected font families: ["Source Code Pro", "Fira Code", "DejaVu Sans", "Noto Emoji"]
This list may also include implicit addition of DejaVu Sans fallback (mentioned earlier), as well as Noto Emoji (see section below).
Here's how to use Nerd Fonts with agg:
- Download one of the patched font sets from https://github.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts/releases/latest , e.g. JetBrainsMono.zip
- Unzip them into
~/.local/share/fonts
(on Linux) or install with system font manager (macOS, Windows) - Specify font family like this:
agg --font-family "JetBrainsMono Nerd Font Mono" demo.cast demo.gif
Currently agg supports only monochrome emojis via Noto Emoji font.
Install Noto Emoji font on your system or, point agg to a folder containing
NotoEmoji-*.ttf
files with --font-dir
.
Note that Noto Color Emoji font is not supported. Be aware that some distros ship this color font by name like "noto-fonts-emoji". This is not what you need.
There are several built-in color themes you can use with --theme
option:
- asciinema
- dracula (default)
- monokai
- solarized-dark
- solarized-light
If your asciicast file includes theme
definition
then it's used automatically unless --theme
option is explicitly specified.
A custom, ad-hoc theme can be used with --theme
option by passing a series of
comma-separated hex triplets defining terminal background color, default text
color and a color palette:
--theme bbbbbb,ffffff,000000,111111,222222,333333,444444,555555,666666,777777
The above sets terminal background color to bbbbbb
, default text color to ffffff
,
and uses remaining 8 colors as SGR color
palette.
Additional bright color variants can be specified by adding 8 more hex triplets at the end. For example, the equivalent of the built-in Monokai theme is:
--theme 272822,f8f8f2,272822,f92672,a6e22e,f4bf75,66d9ef,ae81ff,a1efe4,f8f8f2,75715e,f92672,a6e22e,f4bf75,66d9ef,ae81ff,a1efe4,f9f8f5
GIF encoder used by agg, gifski, produces great looking GIF files, although this often comes at a cost - file size.
gifsicle can be used to shrink the produced GIF file:
gifsicle --lossy=80 -k 128 -O2 -Okeep-empty demo.gif -o demo-opt.gif
Every recording is different so you may need to tweak the lossiness level
(--lossy
), number of colors (-k
) and other options to suit your needs.
I offer consulting services for asciinema project. See https://asciinema.org/consulting for more information.
© 2022 Marcin Kulik.
All code is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE file for details.