This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Mr Vi
The Problem Every Developer Faces
You know that feeling when you’re debugging a server issue at 3 AM, and you realize you changed a config file last week but can’t remember what you changed? Or when your colleague asks “what did you modify in the nginx config?” and you’re staring at a file that looks completely different from what you remember?
I’ve been there. We’ve all been there.
Enter ConfWatch
ConfWatch is a simple, powerful tool that solves this exact problem. It’s like having a time machine for your configuration files.
What It Does (In Plain English)
- Tracks every change to your config files automatically
- Shows you exactly what changed with beautiful diffs
- Lets you go back in time to any previous version
- Works in the background without you thinking about it
- Has a web interface so you can see everything in a browser
Why I Built This
I was tired of:
- Manually copying config files before making changes
- Forgetting what I changed and when
- Spending hours debugging issues caused by config changes
- Not having a proper history of my server configurations
So I built ConfWatch to solve these problems once and for all.
How It Works (The Simple Version)
- Install it – One command, done
- Tell it which files to watch – Point it at your configs
- Make changes normally – It watches in the background
- See what changed – Check the web interface or CLI
- Rollback if needed – One command to go back
Real-World Example
Let’s say you’re managing a web server:
# Install ConfWatch
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mrvi0/conf-watch/main/install.sh | bash
# Start monitoring your nginx config
confwatch snapshot /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
# Make some changes to nginx.conf
# ... edit the file ...
# See what changed
confwatch diff /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
# If something breaks, rollback
confwatch rollback /etc/nginx/nginx.conf abc1234
That’s it. No complex setup, no learning curve.
Features That Actually Matter
Automatic Monitoring
- Watches files for changes automatically
- Creates snapshots when files are modified
- No need to remember to backup before changes
Beautiful Web Interface
- See all your files and their history
- Click to see diffs between versions
- One-click rollbacks
- Works on any device with a browser
Command Line Power
- Full CLI for automation and scripting
- Integrates with your existing workflow
- Works great in CI/CD pipelines
Smart Features
- Only tracks actual changes (not just file touches)
- Compresses old versions to save space
- Handles multiple files simultaneously
- Secure authentication for web interface
Why This Matters
For Developers
- Never lose track of config changes again
- Debug issues faster with complete change history
- Collaborate better with team members
- Reduce downtime from configuration mistakes
For DevOps
- Maintain audit trails for compliance
- Quickly rollback problematic changes
- Monitor configuration drift across servers
- Integrate with existing monitoring tools
For System Administrators
- Keep track of server configuration changes
- Quickly identify what changed before an outage
- Maintain configuration backups automatically
- Reduce human error in configuration management
The Technical Stuff (If You Care)
- Built in Python with a clean, simple architecture
- Uses Git under the hood for version control
- Web interface built with Flask
- Supports both manual and automatic snapshots
- Works on Linux, macOS, and Windows
- Lightweight and fast
Getting Started
The installation is literally one command:
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mrvi0/conf-watch/main/install.sh | bash
Then start monitoring your files:
confwatch snapshot /path/to/your/config
Open the web interface and you’re done.
The Bottom Line
ConfWatch solves a real problem that every developer and system administrator faces. It’s not another complex tool that requires a PhD to use. It’s simple, it works, and it saves you time and headaches.
If you’ve ever spent hours debugging a configuration issue, or if you’ve ever wished you could could see what changed in a config file last week, give ConfWatch a try.
Your future self will thank you.
GitHub: https://github.com/mrvi0/conf-watch
Installation: curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mrvi0/conf-watch/main/install.sh | bash
Have you tried ConfWatch? Let me know what you think in the comments below!
This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Mr Vi