1.5 KiB
Detect How Long A User Has Been Idle
The ioreg utility on MacOS dumps the I/O Kit registry tree. This lets us look
at the state of all hardware devices and drivers registered with I/O Kit.
Looking specifically at the Human Interface Device subsystem (IOHIDSystem), we
can find a handful of properties including the HIDIdleTime.
$ ioreg -c IOHIDSystem | awk '/HIDIdleTime/'
| | | "HIDIdleTime" = 91831000
That value is the number of nanoseconds since a human input device was last interacted with. That is the amount of time the user (me) has been idle.
I can convert this to seconds, which is the small amount of time between me hitting enter in the terminal and the command finding the idle time.
$ ioreg -c IOHIDSystem | awk '/HIDIdleTime/ {printf "%.2f seconds\n", $NF/1000000000}'
0.13 seconds
I can run this in watch to see the elapsed idle time increment.
watch -n 1 "echo -n 'Idle time: '; ioreg -c IOHIDSystem | awk '/HIDIdleTime/ {printf \"%.1f seconds\\n\", \$NF/1000000000}'"
After watching the idle time increment for a bit, I can move the mouse and
watch it reset on the next watch loop.
This could be used as part of a script that takes certain actions after the user has been idle for a while, like putting the display to sleep or stopping a time tracker app.
There is a lot going on in the ioreg output and it's hard to make sense of
hardly any of it. I found running ioreg -c IOHIDSystem | less, searching for
IdleTime, and browsing from there to be a good starting point.