buku
(formerly markit
) is a cmdline bookmark management utility written in Python3 and SQLite3. buku
exists because of my monumental dependency on historious. I wanted the same database on my local system. However, I couldn't find an equally flexible cmdline solution. Hence, Buku
(after my son's nickname).
You can add bookmarks to buku
with title and tags, optionally fetch page title from web, search by keywords for matching tags or title or URL, update and remove bookmarks. You can open the URLs from search results directly in the browser. You can encrypt or decrypt the database file manually, optionally with custom number of hash passes for key generation.
The SQLite3 database file is stored in $HOME/.cache/buku/bookmarks.db
for each user.
buku
is GPLv3 licensed. Copyright (C) 2015 Arun Prakash Jana.
If you find buku
useful, please consider donating via PayPal.
- Add, update or remove a bookmark
- Add tags to bookmarks
- Manual password protection using AES256 encryption algorithm
- Optionally fetch page title data from the web (default: disabled)
- Add or update page title offline manually
- Use (partial) tags or keywords to search bookmarks
- Any or all search keyword match options
- Unique URLs to avoid duplicates, show index if URL already exists
- Open bookmark in browser using index
- Open search results in browser
- Browser (Chromium and Firefox based) errors and warnings suppression
- Show single bookmark by ID or all bookmarks in a go
- Refresh all bookmarks online
- Delete all bookmarks
- Add a bookmark at Nth index, to fill deleted bookmark indices
- Secure parameterized SQLite3 queries to access database
- Handle first level of redirections (reports IP blocking)
- Unicode in URL works
- UTF-8 request and response, page character set detection
- Works with Python 3.x
- Coloured output for clarity
- Easily create compatible batch add or update scripts
- Unformatted selective output (for creating batch update scripts)
- Manpage for quick reference
- Optional debug information
- Fast and clean (no ads or clutter)
- Minimal dependencies
- Open source and free
buku
requires Python 3.x to work.
For optional encryption support, install PyCrypto module. Run:
$ sudo pip3 install pycrypto
or on Ubuntu:
$ sudo apt-get install python3-crypto
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:
$ sudo make install
or, a custom location (PREFIX):
$ PREFIX=/path/to/prefix make install
To remove, run:
$ sudo make uninstall
or, if you have installed to a custom location (PREFIX):
$ PREFIX=/path/to/prefix make uninstall
You may need to use sudo
with PREFIX
depending on your permissions on destination directory.
buku
is a standalone utility. From the containing directory, run:
$ ./buku
buku
is also available on
- AUR for Arch Linux;
- Void Linux repos. Run:
$ sudo xbps-install -S buku
- It's advisable to copy URLs directly from the browser address bar, i.e., along with the leading
http://
orhttps://
token.buku
looks up title data (found within <title></title> 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. - The same URL cannot be added twice. You can update tags and re-fetch title data. You can also delete it and insert at the same index.
- You can either add or update or delete record(s) in one instance. A combination of these operations is not supported in a single run.
- Search works in mysterious ways:
- Substrings match (
match
matchesrematched
) for URL, tags and title. - All the keywords are treated together as a
single
tag in thesame order
. Bookmarks with partial or complete tag matches are shown in results. -s
: match any of the keywords in URL or title. Order is irrelevant.-S
: match all the keywords in URL or title. Order is irrelevant.- Search results are indexed serially. This index is different from actual database index of a bookmark reord which is shown within
()
after the URL.
- Substrings match (
- Encryption support is manual. Database file should be unlocked (
-k
) before using buku and locked (-l
) afterwards. Note that the database file is unecrypted on creation. AES256 is used for encryption. Optionally specify (-t
) the number of hash iterations to use to generate key. Default is 8 iterations.
Usage: buku [OPTIONS] KEYWORDS...
Bookmark manager. Your private Google.
Options
-a URL tag 1, tag 2, ... add URL as bookmark with comma separated tags
-d N delete entry at DB index N (from -P output)
-D delete ALL bookmarks
-i N insert entry at DB index N, useful to fill deleted index
-k decrypt (unlock) database file
-l encrypt (lock) database file
-m manually add or update the title offline
-o N open URL at DB index N in browser
-p N show details of bookmark record at DB index N
-P show all bookmarks along with index from DB
-R refresh all bookmarks, tags retained
-s keyword(s) search all bookmarks for a (partial) tag or any keyword
-S keyword(s) search all bookmarks for a (partial) tag or all keywords
-t N use N (> 0) hash iterations to generate key, works with -k, -l
-u N update entry at DB index N
-w fetch title info from web, works with -a, -i, -u
-x N works with -P, N=1: show only URL, N=2: show URL and tag
-z show debug information
any other option shows help and exits buku
Keys
1-N open Nth search result in browser. Enter exits buku.
-
Add a new bookmark with title
Linux magazine
& tagslinux news
andopen source
:$ buku -a -m 'Linux magazine' http://tuxdiary.com linux news, open source Added at index 15012014
Note that URL must precede tags. Multiple words in title must be within quotes. The assigned automatic index 15012014 is unique, one greater than highest index already in use in database. 2. Add a bookmark, fetch page title information from web:
$ buku -a -w http://tuxdiary.com linux news, open source
Title: [TuxDiary | Linux, open source and a pinch of leisure.]
Added at index 15012014
-
Update existing bookmark at index 15012014 with a new tag:
$ buku -u 15012014 -w http://tuxdiary.com linux news, open source, magazine Title: [TuxDiary | Linux, open source and a pinch of leisure.] Updated
-
Update or refresh full DB:
$ buku -R
-
Delete bookmark at index 15012014:
$ buku -d 15012014
-
Delete all bookmarks:
$ buku -D
-
Insert a bookmark at index 15012014 (fails if index or URL exists in database):
$ buku -i 15012014 -w http://tuxdiary.com/about linux news, open source Title: [A journey with WordPress | TuxDiary] Added at index 15012014
This option is useful in filling deleted indices from database manually. 8. Show info on bookmark at index 15012014:
$ buku -p 15012014
-
Show all bookmarks with real index from database:
$ buku -P
-
Open URL at index 15012014 in browser:
$ buku -o 15012014
-
Search bookmarks for a tag matching
*kernel debugging*
or any of the keywords*kernel*
and*debugging*
in URL or title (separately):$ buku -s kernel debugging
-
Search bookmarks for a tag matching
*kernel debugging*
or all the keywords*kernel*
and*debugging*
in URL or title (separately):$ buku -S kernel debugging
-
Encrypt/decrypt DB with custom number of iterations to generate key:
$ buku -l -t 15 $ buku -k -t 15
The same number of iterations must be used for one lock & unlock instance. 14. Show debug info:
$ buku -z ...
-
Show help:
$ buku
-
Check manpage:
$ man buku
-
buku
doesn't have any import feature of its own. To import URLs in bulk, create a script with URLs and tags like the following (check TIP below):#!/bin/bash buku -aw https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/ networking, device drivers buku -aw https://courses.engr.illinois.edu/ece390/books/artofasm/ArtofAsm.html assembly buku -aw http://www.tittbit.in/ buku -aw http://www.mikroe.com/chapters/view/65/ electronics buku -aw "http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb470206(v=vs.85).aspx" file systems buku -aw http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-linuxboot/index.html boot process
Make the script executable and run to batch add bookmarks. 18. To update selected URLs (refresh) along with your tags, first get the unformatted selective output with URL and tags:
$ buku -P -x 2 | tee myurls
Remove the lines you don't need. Add buku -wu
in front of all the other lines (check TIP below). Should look like:
#!/bin/bash
buku -wu 50 https://wireless.wiki.kernel.org/ networking, device drivers
buku -wu 51 https://courses.engr.illinois.edu/ece390/books/artofasm/ArtofAsm.html assembly
buku -wu 52 http://www.tittbit.in/
buku -wu 53 http://www.mikroe.com/chapters/view/65/ electronics
buku -wu 54 "http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb470206(v=vs.85).aspx" file systems
buku -wu 55 http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-linuxboot/index.html boot process
Run the script:
$ chmod +x myurls
$ ./myurls
TIP:
To add the same text at the beginning of multiple lines using vim editor:
- Press
Ctrl-v
to select the first column of text in the lines you want to change (visual mode). - Press
Shift-i
and type the text you want to insert. - Hit
Esc
, wait 1 second and the inserted text will appear on every line.
Using sed:
$ sed -i 's/^/buku -wu /' filename
I would love to see pull requests with the following features:
- Exact word match (against substring in a word as it works currently. Hint: REGEXP)
- Parse full page data??? Might end up writing a search engine like Google. ;)
Special thanks to the community for valuable suggestions and ideas.