wttr.in — the right way to check the weather.
wttr.in is a console oriented weather forecast service, that supports various information representation methods like terminal oriented ANSI-sequences for console HTTP clients (curl, httpie, or wget), HTML for web browsers, or PNG for graphical viewers. wttr.in uses wego for visualization and various data sources for weather forecast information.
You can check it at wttr.in.
You can access the service from a shell or from a Web browser:
$ curl wttr.in
Weather for City: Paris, France
\ / Clear
.-. 10 – 11 °C
― ( ) ― ↑ 11 km/h
`-’ 10 km
/ \ 0.0 mm
That is how the actual weather report for your location looks like (it is live!):
(it's not your location actually. GitHub's CDN hides your real IP address with its own IP address, but it is still a live weather report in your language).
You can specify the location that you want to get the weather information for. If you omit the location name, you will get the report for your current location, based on your IP address.
$ curl wttr.in/London
$ curl wttr.in/Moscow
Use 3-letters airport codes in order to get the weather information at a certain airport:
$ curl wttr.in/muc # Weather for IATA: muc, Munich International Airport, Germany
$ curl wttr.in/ham # Weather for IATA: ham, Hamburg Airport, Germany
If you want to use some geographical location (not just a town or a city)
(e.g. it can be a site in a city, a mountain name, a special location, etc.) you should place ~
before its name.
That means the location name should be looked up before:
$ curl wttr.in/~Vostok+Station
$ curl wttr.in/~Eiffel+Tower
$ curl wttr.in/~Kilimanjaro
In this case there is a line below the weather forecast output describing the founded precise position:
Location: Vostok Station, станция Восток, AAT, Antarctica [-78.4642714,106.8364678]
Location: Tour Eiffel, 5, Avenue Anatole France, Gros-Caillou, 7e, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France [48.8582602,2.29449905432]
Location: Kilimanjaro, Northern, Tanzania [-3.4762789,37.3872648]
You can also use IP-addresses (direct) or domain names (prefixed with @) as a location specificator:
$ curl wttr.in/@github.com
$ curl wttr.in/@msu.ru
To get detailed information online, you can access the /:help page:
$ curl wttr.in/:help
By default the USCS units are used for the queries from the USA and the metric system for the rest of the world. You can override this behavior with the following options:
$ curl wttr.in/Amsterdam?u
$ curl wttr.in/Amsterdam?m
wttr.in supports three output formats at the moment:
- ANSI for the terminal;
- HTML for the browser;
- PNG for the graphical viewers.
The ANSI and HTML formats are selected basing on the User-Agent string.
The PNG format can be forced by adding .png
to the end of the query:
$ wget wttr.in/Paris.png
You can use all of the options with the PNG-format like in an URL, but you have
to separate them with _
instead of ?
and &
:
$ wget wttr.in/Paris_0tqp_lang=fr.png
Useful options for the PNG format:
t
for transparency (transparency=150
);- transparency=0..255 for a custom transparency level.
Transparency is a useful feature when the weather PNGs are used to add weather data to the pictures:
$ convert 1.jpg <( curl wttr.in/Oymyakon_tqp0.png ) -geometry +50+50 -composite 2.jpg
Here:
1.jpg
- source file;2.jpg
- target file;- Oymyakon - name of the location;
- tqp0 - options (recommended).
wttr.in can be used not only to check the weather:
$ curl wttr.in/Moon
To see the current Moon phase (uses pyphoon as its backend).
$ curl wttr.in/Moon@2016-12-25
To see the Moon phase for the specified date (2016-12-25).
wttr.in supports multilingual locations names: they can be specified in any language in the world (it may be surprising, but many locations in the world do not have any English name at all).
The query string should be specified in Unicode (hex encoded or not). If it contains spaces they must be replaced with +:
$ curl wttr.in/станция+Восток
Weather report: станция Восток
Overcast
.--. -65 – -47 °C
.-( ). ↑ 23 km/h
(___.__)__) 15 km
0.0 mm
The language used for the output (except the location name) does not depend on the input language
and it is either English (by default) or the preferred language of the browser (if the query
was issued from a browser) that is specified in the query headers (Accept-Language
).
It can be set explicitly when using console clients by means of the appropriate command line options
(for example: curl -H "Accept-Language: fr" wttr.in
or http GET wttr.in Accept-Language:ru
).
The preferred language can be forced using the lang
option:
$ curl wttr.in/Berlin?lang=de
The third option is to choose the language using DNS name used in the query:
$ curl de.wttr.in/Berlin
wttr.in is currently translated into 54 languages and the number of supported languages is constantly growing.
See /:translation to learn more about the translation process, to see the list of supported languages and contributors, or to know how you can help to translate wttr.in in your language.
To install the program:
- Install external dependencies
- Install python dependencies used by the service
- Get WorldWeatherOnline API Key
- Configure wego
- Configure wttr.in
- Configure HTTP-frontend service
External requirements:
- wego, weather client for terminal
To install wego
you must have golang installed. After that:
$ go get -u github.com/schachmat/wego
$ go install github.com/schachmat/wego
Python requirements:
- Flask
- geoip2
- geopy
- requests
- gevent
If you want to get weather reports as PNG files, install also:
- PIL
- pyte (>=0.6)
- necessary fonts
You can install most of them using pip
.
If virtualenv
is used:
$ virtualenv ve
$ ve/bin/pip install -r requirements.txt
$ ve/bin/pip bin/srv.py
Also, you need to install the geoip2 database. You can use a free database GeoLite2, that can be downloaded from http://dev.maxmind.com/geoip/geoip2/geolite2/
To get the WorldWeatherOnline API key, you must register here:
https://developer.worldweatheronline.com/auth/register
After you have the key, configure wego
:
$ cat ~/.wegorc
{
"APIKey": "00XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX",
"City": "London",
"Numdays": 3,
"Imperial": false,
"Lang": "en"
}
The City
parameter in ~/.wegorc
is ignored.
Configure the following environment variables specifing the path to the local wttr.in
installation, to the GeoLite database and to the wego
installation. For example:
export WTTR_MYDIR="/home/igor/wttr.in"
export WTTR_GEOLITE="/home/igor/wttr.in/GeoLite2-City.mmdb"
export WTTR_WEGO="/home/igor/go/bin/wego"
export WTTR_LISTEN_HOST="0.0.0.0"
export WTTR_LISTEN_PORT="8002"
Configure the web server, that will be used to access the service (if you want to use a web frontend; it's recommended):
server {
listen [::]:80;
server_name wttr.in *.wttr.in;
access_log /var/log/nginx/wttr.in-access.log main;
error_log /var/log/nginx/wttr.in-error.log;
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8002;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
client_max_body_size 10m;
client_body_buffer_size 128k;
proxy_connect_timeout 90;
proxy_send_timeout 90;
proxy_read_timeout 90;
proxy_buffer_size 4k;
proxy_buffers 4 32k;
proxy_busy_buffers_size 64k;
proxy_temp_file_write_size 64k;
expires off;
}
}