Anydb is a simple to use commandline tool to store anything you'd like, even binary files etc. It is a re-implementation of skate for the following reasons:
- it's just fun to do
- anydb uses bbolt instead of badger. bbolt has a stable file format, which doesn't change anymore. The badger file format on the other hand changes very often, which is not good for a tool intended to be used for many years.
- more features:
- output table in list mode uses TAB separator
- better STDIN + pipe support
- supports JSON output
- supports more verbose tabular output
- filtering using regular expressions
- tagging
- filtering using tags
- encryption of entries
- templates for custom output for maximum flexibility
anydb can do all the things you can do with skate:
# Store something (and sync it to the network)
anydb set kitty meow
# Fetch something (from the local cache)
anydb get kitty
# What’s in the store?
anydb list
# Spaces are fine
anydb set "kitty litter" "smells great"
# You can store binary data, too
anydb set profile-pic < my-cute-pic.jpg
anydb get profile-pic > here-it-is.jpg
# Unicode also works, of course
anydb set 猫咪 喵
anydb get 猫咪
# For more info
anydb --help
# Do creative things with anydb list
anydb set penelope marmalade
anydb set christian tacos
anydb set muesli muesli
anydb list | xargs -n 2 printf '%s loves %s.\n'
However, there are more features than just that!
# you can assign tags
anydb set foo bar -t note,important
# and filter for them
anydb list -t important
# beside tags filtering you can also use regexps for searching
anydb list '[a-z]+\d'
# anydb also supports a wide output
anydb list -o wide
KEY TAGS SIZE AGE VALUE
blah important 4 B 7 seconds ago haha
foo 3 B 15 seconds ago bar
猫咪 3 B 3 seconds ago 喵
# there are shortcuts as well
anydb ls -l
anydb /
# other outputs are possible as well
anydb list -o json
# you can backup your database
anydb export -o backup.json
# and import it somewhere else
anydb import -r backup.json
# you can encrypt entries. anydb asks for a passphrase
# and will do the same when you retrieve the key using the
# get command.
anydb set mypassword -e
# using template output mode you can freely design how to print stuff
# here, we print the values in CSV format ONLY if they have some tag
anydb ls -m template -T "{{ if .Tags }}{{ .Key }},{{ .Value }},{{ .Created}}{{ end }}"
# or, to simulate skate's -k or -v
anydb ls -m template -T "{{ .Key }}"
anydb ls -m template -T "{{ .Value }}"
# maybe you want to digest the item in a shell script? also
# note, that both the list and get commands support templates
eval $(anydb get foo -m template -T "key='{{ .Key }}' value='{{ .Value }}' ts='{{ .Created}}'")
echo "$key: $value"
# it comes with a manpage builtin
anydb man
There are multiple ways to install anydb:
-
Go to the latest release page, locate the binary for your operating system and platform.
Download it and put it into some directory within your
$PATH
variable. -
The release page also contains a tarball for every supported platform. Unpack it to some temporary directory, extract it and execute the following command inside:
sudo make install
-
You can also install from source. Issue the following commands in your shell:
git clone https://github.com/TLINDEN/anydb.git cd anydb make sudo make install
-
Or, if you have the GO toolkit installed, just install it like this:
go install github.com/tlinden/anydb@latest
If you do not find a binary release for your platform, please don't hesitate to ask me about it, I'll add it.
A pre-built docker image is available, which you can use to test the app without installing it. To download:
docker pull ghcr.io/tlinden/anydb:latest
To execute anydb inside the image do something like this:
mkdir mydb
docker run -ti -v mydb:/db -u `id -u $USER` -e HOME=/db ghcr.io/tlinden/anydb:latest set foo bar
docker run -ti -v mydb:/db -u `id -u $USER` -e HOME=/db ghcr.io/tlinden/anydb:latest list -o wide
Here, we operate in a local directory mydb
, which we'll use as HOME
inside the docker container. anydb will store its database in
mydb/.config/anydb/default.db
.
A list of available images is here
The documentation is provided as a unix man-page. It will be automatically installed if you install from source. However, you can read the man-page online
Or if you cloned the repository you can read it this way (perl needs
to be installed though): perldoc anydb.pod
.
If you have the binary installed, you can also read the man page with this command:
anydb man
Although I'm happy to hear from anydb users in private email, that's the best way for me to forget to do something.
In order to report a bug, unexpected behavior, feature requests or to submit a patch, please open an issue on github: https://github.com/TLINDEN/anydb/issues.
This software is licensed under the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE version 3.
T.v.Dein
https://github.com/TLINDEN/anydb
Licensed under the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE version 3.
T.v.Dein