Logseq is A privacy-first, open-source platform for knowledge sharing and management.
If you’re on Windows, use the Windows setup.
Follow this step: https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/developers/apps/creating-a-github-app.
The User authorization callback URL
should be:
http://localhost:3000/auth/github
Remember to download the private-key.pem
which will be used for the next step.
export ENVIRONMENT="dev"
export JWT_SECRET="4fa183cf1d28460498b13330835e80ab"
export COOKIE_SECRET="10a42ca724e34f4db6086a772d787030"
export DATABASE_URL="postgres://localhost:5432/logseq"
export GITHUB_APP2_ID="78728"
export GITHUB_APP2_KEY="xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
export GITHUB_APP2_SECRET="xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
# Replace your-code-directory with yours
export GITHUB_APP_PEM="/your-code-directory/your-app.private-key.pem"
export LOG_PATH="/tmp/logseq"
cd web
yarn
yarn watch
cd resources
# 1. Download jar
Go to https://github.com/logseq/logseq-internal/releases, download the logseq.jar and move it to the "resources" directory.
# 2. run jar
java -Duser.timezone=UTC -jar logseq.jar
Open http://localhost:3000.
Install clojure through scoop-clojure: https://github.com/littleli/scoop-clojure. You can also install Node.js, Yarn and PostgreSQL through scoop if you want to.
Follow #2-creating-a-github-app above if you want Logseq to connect to GitHub. If not, skip this section.
The GITHUB_APP_PEM
variable in the run-windows.bat
needs to be set with the correct directory for your system.
Make sure you have PostgreSQL running. You can check if it’s running with pg_ctl status
and use pg_ctl start
to start it up.
You’ll also need to make a logseq DB in PostgreSQL. Do that with createdb logseq
.
Go to https://github.com/logseq/logseq-internal/releases, download the logseq.jar and move into the root directory of repo.
Run start-windows.bat
which is located in the repo. This will open a second terminal that runs Logseq’s backend server.
To completely stop Logseq, you’ll need to also close that second terminal that was opened.
start-windows.bat
will try to start PostgreSQL for you if it’s not already started.