Focus.py helps you keep focused by applying schedulable firewall rules to distracting websites. An example firewall rule looks like this:
def domain_reddit_com(dt):
return dt.hour == 21 # allow from 9-10pm
Starting
Linux
Add the following line to the top of your /etc/resolv.conf
, before any
other nameservers:
nameserver 127.0.0.1
Mac OS X
Go to System Preferences -> Network -> Advanced -> DNS
and add 127.0.0.1
as your DNS server.
Now start Focus:
sudo python focus.py &
Filtering Domains
Firewall rules involving schedules and timeframes can get complicated fast. For this reason, the scheduling specification is pure Python, so you can make your filtering rules as simple or as complex as you want.
The default filter rules is created on first startup in /etc/focus_blacklist.py
:
import re
def domain_ycombinator_com(dt):
# return dt.hour % 2 # every other hour
return False
def domain_reddit_com(dt):
# return dt.hour in (12, 21) # at noon-1pm, or from 9-10pm
return False
def domain_facebook_com(dt):
return False
def default(domain, dt):
# do something with regular expressions here?
return True
The format is simple; Just define a function named like the domain you want to block, preceeded by "domain_". Have it take a single datetime object and have it return True or False. In the body, you can write whatever logic makes the most sense for you. Maybe you want to write your own Pomodoro routine, or maybe you want to scrape your google calendar for exam dates, and block certain websites on those dates.
For sites without their own scheduler function, the default() function is called.
There's no need to restart Focus if you redefine your schedules.
Configuration
Focus.py tries to start with a sensible configuration, but if you need to change
it, edit /etc/focus.json.conf
How it works
Focus.py is, at its core, a DNS server. By making it your primary nameserver, it receives all DNS lookup requests. Based on the domain name being requested, it either responds with a "fail ip" address (blocked), or passes the request on to your other nameservers (not blocked). In both cases, Focus adjusts the TTL of each DNS response so that the service requesting the DNS lookup will do minimal caching on the IP, allowing Focus's filtering rules to be more immediate.
FAQ
-
Q: I started Focus, but it's not blacklisting the site I picked.
-
A: Your browser may be caching that site's ip. Give it a few minutes.
-
Q: Why do I need to start Focus with sudo?
-
A: Focus needs to listen on a privileged port as a DNS server.
-
Q: How do I stop Focus?
-
A: Focus writes its process id to /var/run/focus.py.pid. Kill the process using this process id.