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Buku

Latest release AUR Homebrew License Build Status

Asciicast

buku is a powerful bookmark management utility written in Python3 and SQLite3. When I started writing it, I couldn't find a flexible cmdline solution with a private, portable, merge-able database along with browser integration. Hence, buku (after my son's nickname).

With tagging and multiple options to search through your bookmarks, including a deep scan mode (particularly for URLs), buku makes finding a bookmark very easy. You can open multiple bookmarks in the browser at once. It also has an Easter egg to open random bookmarks so you can revisit forgotten ones.

Though a terminal utility, it's possible to add bookmarks to buku without touching the terminal! Refer to the section on GUI integration. If you prefer the terminal, thanks to the shell completion scripts, you don't need to memorize any of the options.

Upcoming

  • Export specific tags as HTML
  • Open a random bookmark

Donate   gitter chat

Table of Contents

Features

  • Add, open, tag, comment on, search, update, remove URLs
  • Merge-able portable database, to sync between systems
  • Import/export bookmarks HTML (Firefox, Google Chrome, IE compatible)
  • Fetch page title from web, refresh all titles in a go
  • Open (multiple) search results directly in default browser
  • Manual password protection using AES256 encryption
  • Tab-completion scripts (Bash, Fish, Zsh), man page with examples
  • Several options for power users (see help or man page)
  • Fast and clean interface, distinct symbols for record fields
  • Minimal dependencies

Installation

Dependencies

buku requires Python 3.3 or later.

To install package dependencies, run:

$ sudo pip3 install cryptography beautifulsoup4

or on Ubuntu:

$ sudo apt-get install python3-cryptography python3-bs4

Installing from this repository

If you have git installed, run:

$ git clone https://github.com/jarun/Buku/

or download the latest stable release or development version.

Install to default location (/usr/local):

$ sudo make install

To remove, run:

$ sudo make uninstall

PREFIX is supported. You may need to use sudo with PREFIX depending on your permissions on destination directory.

Running as a standalone utility

buku is a standalone utility. From the containing directory, run:

$ ./buku

Installing with a package manager

buku is also available on

Debian package

If you are on a Debian (including Ubuntu) based system visit the latest stable release and download the.debpackage. To install, run:

$ sudo dpkg -i buku-$version-all.deb

Please substitute $version with the appropriate package version.

Shell completion

Shell completion scripts for Bash, Fish and Zsh can be found in respective subdirectories of auto-completion/. Please refer to your shell's manual for installation instructions.

buku has a rofi frontend written by Rasmus Steinke.

Usage

Cmdline options

usage: buku [OPTIONS] [KEYWORD [KEYWORD ...]]

A powerful command-line bookmark manager. Your mini web!

general options:
  -a, --add URL [tags ...]
                       bookmark URL with comma-separated tags
  -u, --update [...]   update fields of bookmark at DB indices
                       refresh all titles, if no arguments
                       refresh titles of bookmarks at indices,
                       if no edit options are specified
                       accepts indices and ranges
  -d, --delete [...]   delete bookmarks. Valid inputs: either
                       a hyphenated single range (100-200),
                       OR space-separated indices (100 15 200)
                       delete search results with search options
                       delete all bookmarks, if no arguments
  -h, --help           show this information and exit

edit options:
  --url keyword        specify url, works with -u only
  --tag [+|-] [...]    set comma-separated tags, works with -a, -u
                       clear tags, if no arguments
                       append specified tags, if preceded by '+'
                       remove specified tags, if preceded by '-'
  -t, --title [...]    manually set title, works with -a, -u
                       if no arguments:
                       -a: do not set title, -u: clear title
  -c, --comment [...]  description of the bookmark, works with
                       -a, -u; clears comment, if no arguments

search options:
  -s, --sany keyword [...]
                       search bookmarks for ANY matching keyword
  -S, --sall keyword [...]
                       search bookmarks with ALL keywords
                       special keyword -
                       "blank": list entries with empty title/tag
  --deep               match substrings ('pen' matches 'opened')
  --st, --stag [...]   search bookmarks by tag
                       list tags alphabetically, if no arguments

encryption options:
  -l, --lock [N]       encrypt DB file with N (> 0, default 8)
                       hash iterations to generate key
  -k, --unlock [N]     decrypt DB file with N (> 0, default 8)
                       hash iterations to generate key

power toys:
  -e, --export file    export bookmarks to Firefox format html
                       use --tag to export only specific tags
  -i, --import file    import bookmarks from html file; Firefox,
                       Google Chrome and IE formats supported
  -m, --merge file     merge bookmarks from another buku database
  -p, --print [N]      show details of bookmark at DB index N
                       show all bookmarks, if no arguments
  -f, --format N       modify -p output. N=1: show only URL,
                       N=2: show URL and tag, N=3: show only title
  -r, --replace oldtag [newtag ...]
                       replace oldtag with newtag everywhere
                       delete oldtag, if no newtag
  -j, --json           Json formatted output for -p, -s, -S, --st
  --noprompt           do not show the prompt, run and exit
  -o, --open [N]       open bookmark at DB index N in web browser
                       open a random index if N is omitted
  -z, --debug          show debug information and additional logs

prompt keys:
  1-N                  open the Nth search result in web browser
                       ranges, space-separated result indices work
  double Enter         exit buku

symbols:
  >                    title
  +                    comment
  #                    tags

Operational notes

  • The SQLite3 database file is stored in:
    • $XDG_DATA_HOME/buku/bookmarks.db, if XDG_DATA_HOME is defined (first preference) or
    • $HOME/.local/share/buku/bookmarks.db, if HOME is defined (second preference) or
    • the current directory.
  • It's advisable to copy URLs directly from the browser address bar, i.e., along with the leading http:// or https:// token. buku looks up title data (found within tags of HTML) from the web ONLY for fully-formed HTTP(S) URLs.
  • If the URL contains characters like ;, & or brackets they may be interpreted specially by the shell. To avoid it, add the URL within single or double quotes ('/").
  • URLs are unique in DB. The same URL cannot be added twice. You can update tags and re-fetch title data.
  • Tags:
    • Comma (,) is the tag delimiter in DB. Any tag cannot have comma(s) in it. Tags are filtered (for unique tags) and sorted.
  • Update operation:
    • If --title, --tag or --comment is passed without argument, clear the corresponding field from DB.
    • If --url is passed (and --title is omitted), update the title from web using the URL.
    • If indices are passed without any other options (--url, --title, --tag and --comment), read the URLs from DB and update titles from web.
  • Delete operation:
    • When a record is deleted, the last record is moved to the index.
    • Delete doesn't work with range and indices provided together as arguments. It's an intentional decision to avoid extra sorting, in-range checks and to keep the auto-DB compaction functionality intact. On the same lines, indices are deleted in descending order.
    • Can delete bookmarks matching a search, when combined with any of the search options.
  • Search works in mysterious ways:
    • Case-insensitive.
    • Matches exact words in URL, title and tags.
    • -s : match any of the keywords in URL, title or tags.
    • -S : match all the keywords in URL, title or tags.
    • --deep : match substrings (match matches rematched) in URL, title and tags.
    • --st : search bookmarks by tag, or show all tags alphabetically.
    • Search results are indexed serially. This index is different from actual database index of a bookmark record which is shown in bold within [] after the URL.
  • Encryption is optional and manual. AES256 algorithm is used. If you choose to use encryption, the database file should be unlocked (-k) before using buku and locked (-l) afterwards. Between these 2 operations, the database file lies unencrypted on the disk, and NOT in memory. Also, note that the database file is unencrypted on creation.

GUI integration

buku

buku can integrate in a GUI environment with simple tweaks.

Add bookmarks to buku

With support for piped input, it's possible to add bookmarks to buku using keyboard shortcuts on Linux and OS X. CLIPBOARD (plus PRIMARY on Linux) text selections can be added directly this way. The additional utility required is xsel (on Linux) or pbpaste (on OS X).

The following steps explore the procedure on Linux with Ubuntu as the reference platform.

  1. To install xsel on Ubuntu, run:

     $ sudo apt install xsel
    
  2. Create a new script bukuadd with the following content:

     #!/bin/bash
    
     xsel | buku -a
    

-a is the option to add a bookmark. 3. Make the script executable:

    $ chmod +x bukuadd
  1. Copy it somewhere in your PATH.
  2. Add a new keyboard shortcut to run the script. I use <Alt-b>.

Test drive

Select a URL anywhere or copy a link and press the keyboard shortcut to add it to the buku database. The addition might take a few seconds to reflect depending on your internet speed and the time buku needs to fetch the title from the URL. To avoid title fetch from the web, add the -t option to the script.

To verify that the bookmark has indeed been added, run:

$ buku -p | tail -3

and check the entry.

Tips

  • To add the last visited URL in Firefox to buku, use the following script:

      #!/bin/bash
    
      sqlite3 $HOME/.mozilla/firefox/*.default/places.sqlite "select url from moz_places where last_visit_date=(select max(last_visit_date) from moz_places)" | buku -a
    
  • If you want to tag these bookmarks, look them up later using:

      $ buku -S blank
    

Use option -u to tag these bookmarks.

Import bookmarks to browser

buku can export (or import) bookmarks in HTML format recognized by Firefox, Google Chrome and Internet Explorer.

To export all bookmarks, run:

$ buku --export path_to_bookmarks.html

To export specific tags, run:

$ buku --export path_to_bookmarks.html --tag tag 1, tag 2

Once exported, import the html file in your browser.

Examples

  1. Add a bookmark with tags linux news and open source, comment Informative website on Linux and open source, fetch page title from the web:

     $ buku -a https://tuxdiary.com linux news, open source -c Informative website on Linux and open source
     Title: [TuxDiary  Linux, open source, command-line, leisure.]
     Added at index 336
    
     336. https://tuxdiary.com
     > TuxDiary  Linux, open source, command-line, leisure.
     + Informative website on Linux and open source
     # linux news,open source
    

where, >: title, +: comment, #: tags 2. Add a bookmark with tags linux news and open source & custom title Linux magazine:

    $ buku -a http://tuxdiary.com linux news, open source -t 'Linux magazine'
    Added at index 15012014

Note that URL must precede tags. 3. Add a bookmark without a title (works for update too):

    $ buku -a http://tuxdiary.com linux news, open source -t
  1. Update existing bookmark at index 15012014 with new URL, tags and comments, fetch title from the web:

     $ buku -u 15012014 --url http://tuxdiary.com/ --tag linux news, open source, magazine -c site for Linux utilities
    
  2. Fetch and update only title for bookmark at 15012014:

     $ buku -u 15012014
    
  3. Update only comment for bookmark at 15012014:

     $ buku -u 15012014 -c this is a new comment
    

Applies to --url, --title and --tag too. 7. Export bookmarks tagged tag 1 or tag 2:

    $ buku -e bookmarks.html tag 1, tag 2

All bookmarks are exported if --tag is not specified. 8. Import bookmarks:

    $ buku -i bookmarks.html

HTML exports from Firefox, Google Chrome and IE are supported. 9. Delete only comment for bookmark at 15012014:

    $ buku -u 15012014 -c

Applies to --title and --tag too. URL cannot be deleted without deleting the bookmark. 10. Update or refresh full DB with page titles from the web:

    $ buku -u

This operation does not modify the indexes, URLs, tags or comments. Only title is refreshed if fetched title is non-empty. 11. Delete bookmark at index 15012014:

    $ buku -d 15012014
    Index 15012020 moved to 15012014

The last index is moved to the deleted index to keep the DB compact. 12. Delete all bookmarks:

    $ buku -d
  1. Delete a range or list of bookmarks:

    $ buku -d 100-200     // delete bookmarks from index 100 to 200
    $ buku 100 15 200     // delete bookmarks at indices 100, 15 and 200
    
  2. Search bookmarks for ANY of the keywords kernel and debugging in URL, title or tags:

    $ buku -s kernel debugging
    
  3. Search bookmarks with ALL the keywords kernel and debugging in URL, title or tags:

    $ buku -S kernel debugging
    
  4. Search bookmarks tagged general kernel concepts:

    $ buku --st general kernel concepts
    
  5. List all unique tags alphabetically:

    $ buku --st
    
  6. Encrypt or decrypt DB with custom number of iterations (15) to generate key:

    $ buku -l 15
    $ buku -k 15
    

The same number of iterations must be specified for one lock & unlock instance. Default is 8, if omitted. 19. Show details of bookmark at index 15012014:

    $ buku -p 15012014
  1. Show all bookmarks with real index from database:

    $ buku -p
    $ buku -p | more
    
  2. Replace tag 'old tag' with 'new tag':

    $ buku -r 'old tag' new tag
    
  3. Delete tag 'old tag' from DB:

    $ buku -r 'old tag'
    
  4. Append (or delete) tags 'tag 1', 'tag 2' to (or from) existing tags of bookmark at index 15012014:

    $ buku -u 15012014 --tag + tag 1, tag 2
    $ buku -u 15012014 --tag - tag 1, tag 2
    
  5. Open URL at index 15012014 in browser:

    $ buku -o 15012014
    
  6. To list bookmarks with no title or tags for bookkeeping:

    $ buku -S blank
    
  7. More help:

    $ buku
    $ man buku
    

Contributions

Pull requests are welcome. Please visit #39 for a list of TODOs.

Mentions

Copyright (C) 2015-2016 Arun Prakash Jana