fix pod bug

This commit is contained in:
Thomas von Dein
2024-12-25 23:53:34 +01:00
parent 33d638aff0
commit 2a6a651b91
3 changed files with 79 additions and 54 deletions

45
anydb.1
View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man 4.14 (Pod::Simple 3.42)
.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man 4.14 (Pod::Simple 3.40)
.\"
.\" Standard preamble:
.\" ========================================================================
@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@
.\" ========================================================================
.\"
.IX Title "ANYDB 1"
.TH ANYDB 1 "2024-12-23" "1" "User Commands"
.TH ANYDB 1 "2024-12-25" "1" "User Commands"
.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes
.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents.
.if n .ad l
@@ -276,7 +276,7 @@ You might as well specify a file directly using the \f(CW\*(C`\-f\*(C'\fR option
.PP
Values can be encrypted using \fBChaCha20Poly1305\fR when you specify the
\&\f(CW\*(C`\-e\*(C'\fR option. Anydb will ask you interactively for a passphrase. You
might as well provide the passphrase using the environment variable
can also provide the passphrase using the environment variable
\&\f(CW\*(C`ANYDB_PASSWORD\*(C'\fR. To encrypt the value, a cryptographically secure
key will be derived from the passphrase using the ArgonID2
algorithm. Each value can be encrypted with another passphrase. So,
@@ -339,7 +339,7 @@ If the value is encrypted, you will be asked for the passphrase to
decrypt it. If the environment variable \f(CW\*(C`ANYDB_PASSWORD\*(C'\fR is set, its
value will be used instead.
.PP
There are different output modes you can choos from: simple, wide and
There are different output modes you can choose from: simple, wide and
json. The \*(L"simple\*(R" mode is the default one, it just prints the value
as is. The \*(L"wide\*(R" mode prints a tabular output similar to the \fBlist\fR
subcommand, see there for more details. The options \f(CW\*(C`\-n\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`\-N\*(C'\fR
@@ -356,14 +356,16 @@ Usage:
.PP
.Vb 2
\& Usage:
\& anydb list [<filter\-regex>] [\-t <tag>] [\-m <mode>] [\-n \-N] [\-T <tpl>] [flags]
\& anydb list [<filter\-regex>] [\-t <tag>] [\-m <mode>] [\-n \-N] [\-T <tpl>] [\-i] [flags]
\&
\& Aliases:
\& list, /, ls
\&
\& Flags:
\& \-i, \-\-case\-insensitive filter case insensitive
\& \-h, \-\-help help for list
\& \-m, \-\-mode string output format (table|wide|json|template), wide is a verbose table. (default \*(Aqtable\*(Aq)
\& \-m, \-\-mode string output format (table|wide|json|template),
\& wide is a verbose table. (default \*(Aqtable\*(Aq)
\& \-n, \-\-no\-headers omit headers in tables
\& \-N, \-\-no\-human do not translate to human readable values
\& \-t, \-\-tags stringArray tags, multiple allowed
@@ -405,6 +407,8 @@ about the syntax, refer to
regexp dialect is not \s-1PCRE\s0 compatible, but supports most of its
features.
.PP
If you want to search case insensitive, add the option \f(CW\*(C`\-i\*(C'\fR.
.PP
You can \- as with the \fBget\fR command \- use other output modes. The
default mode is \*(L"table\*(R". The \*(L"wide\*(R" mode is, as already mentioned, a
more detailed table. Also supported is \*(L"json\*(R" mode and \*(L"template\*(R"
@@ -465,7 +469,7 @@ behavior by setting the environment variable \f(CW\*(C`EDITOR\*(C'\fR appropriat
Please note, that this does not work with binary content!
.SS "export"
.IX Subsection "export"
Since the bbold database file is not portable across platforms (it is
Since the bbolt database file is not portable across platforms (it is
bound to the endianess of the \s-1CPU\s0 it was being created on), you might
want to create a backup file of your database. You can do this with
the \fBexport\fR subcommand.
@@ -599,8 +603,20 @@ required, the template provided applies to every matching entry
separatley.
.PP
The following template variables can be used:
.IP "\fBKey\fR \- string =item \fBValue\fR \- string =item \fBBin\fR \- []byte =item \fBCreated\fR \- time.Time =item \fBTags\fR \- []string =item \fBEncrypted\fR bool" 4
.IX Item "Key - string =item Value - string =item Bin - []byte =item Created - time.Time =item Tags - []string =item Encrypted bool"
.IP "\fBKey\fR \- string" 4
.IX Item "Key - string"
.PD 0
.IP "\fBValue\fR \- string" 4
.IX Item "Value - string"
.IP "\fBBin\fR \- []byte" 4
.IX Item "Bin - []byte"
.IP "\fBCreated\fR \- time.Time" 4
.IX Item "Created - time.Time"
.IP "\fBTags\fR \- []string" 4
.IX Item "Tags - []string"
.IP "\fBEncrypted\fR bool" 4
.IX Item "Encrypted bool"
.PD
.PP
Prepend a single dot (\*(L".\*(R") before each variable name.
.PP
@@ -627,7 +643,7 @@ Print the values in \s-1CSV\s0 format \s-1ONLY\s0 if they have some tag:
.Ve
.SH "CONFIGURATION"
.IX Header "CONFIGURATION"
Anydb looks at the following location for a configuration file, in
Anydb looks at the following locations for a configuration file, in
that order:
.ie n .IP """$HOME/.config/anydb/anydb.toml""" 4
.el .IP "\f(CW$HOME/.config/anydb/anydb.toml\fR" 4
@@ -643,17 +659,18 @@ that order:
.el .IP "or specify one using \f(CW\-c\fR" 4
.IX Item "or specify one using -c"
.PD
.PP
The configuration format uses the \s-1TOML\s0 language, refer to
<https://toml.io/en/> for more details. The key names correspond to
the commandline options in most cases.
.Sp
.PP
Configuration follows a certain precedence: the files are tried to be
read in the given order, followed by commandline options. That is, the
last configuration file wins, unless the user provides a commandline
option, then this setting will be taken.
.Sp
.PP
A complete configuration file might look like this:
.Sp
.PP
.Vb 7
\& # defaults
\& dbfile = "~/.config/anydb/default.db"
@@ -670,7 +687,7 @@ A complete configuration file might look like this:
\& [buckets.test]
\& encrypt = false
.Ve
.Sp
.PP
Under normal circumstances you don't need a configuration
file. However, if you want to use different buckets, then this might
be a handy option. Buckets are being configured in ini-style with the

View File

@@ -526,7 +526,6 @@ term "bucket." followed by the bucket name. In the example above we
enable encryption for the default bucket "data" and disable it for a
bucket "test". To use different buckets, use the C<-b> option.
=back
=head1 REST API

View File

@@ -116,12 +116,12 @@ SUBCOMMANDS
anydb set key -f file
Values can be encrypted using ChaCha20Poly1305 when you specify the "-e"
option. Anydb will ask you interactively for a passphrase. You might as
well provide the passphrase using the environment variable
"ANYDB_PASSWORD". To encrypt the value, a cryptographically secure key
will be derived from the passphrase using the ArgonID2 algorithm. Each
value can be encrypted with another passphrase. So, the database itself
is not encrypted, just the values.
option. Anydb will ask you interactively for a passphrase. You can also
provide the passphrase using the environment variable "ANYDB_PASSWORD".
To encrypt the value, a cryptographically secure key will be derived
from the passphrase using the ArgonID2 algorithm. Each value can be
encrypted with another passphrase. So, the database itself is not
encrypted, just the values.
You can supply tags by using the option "-t". Multiple tags can be
provided either by separating them with a comma or by using multiple
@@ -172,7 +172,7 @@ SUBCOMMANDS
decrypt it. If the environment variable "ANYDB_PASSWORD" is set, its
value will be used instead.
There are different output modes you can choos from: simple, wide and
There are different output modes you can choose from: simple, wide and
json. The "simple" mode is the default one, it just prints the value as
is. The "wide" mode prints a tabular output similar to the list
subcommand, see there for more details. The options "-n" and "-N" have
@@ -187,14 +187,16 @@ SUBCOMMANDS
Usage:
Usage:
anydb list [<filter-regex>] [-t <tag>] [-m <mode>] [-n -N] [-T <tpl>] [flags]
anydb list [<filter-regex>] [-t <tag>] [-m <mode>] [-n -N] [-T <tpl>] [-i] [flags]
Aliases:
list, /, ls
Flags:
-i, --case-insensitive filter case insensitive
-h, --help help for list
-m, --mode string output format (table|wide|json|template), wide is a verbose table. (default 'table')
-m, --mode string output format (table|wide|json|template),
wide is a verbose table. (default 'table')
-n, --no-headers omit headers in tables
-N, --no-human do not translate to human readable values
-t, --tags stringArray tags, multiple allowed
@@ -230,6 +232,8 @@ SUBCOMMANDS
note, that this regexp dialect is not PCRE compatible, but supports most
of its features.
If you want to search case insensitive, add the option "-i".
You can - as with the get command - use other output modes. The default
mode is "table". The "wide" mode is, as already mentioned, a more
detailed table. Also supported is "json" mode and "template" mode. For
@@ -281,7 +285,7 @@ SUBCOMMANDS
Please note, that this does not work with binary content!
export
Since the bbold database file is not portable across platforms (it is
Since the bbolt database file is not portable across platforms (it is
bound to the endianess of the CPU it was being created on), you might
want to create a backup file of your database. You can do this with the
export subcommand.
@@ -402,8 +406,12 @@ TEMPLATES
The following template variables can be used:
Key - string =item Value - string =item Bin - []byte =item Created -
time.Time =item Tags - []string =item Encrypted bool
Key - string
Value - string
Bin - []byte
Created - time.Time
Tags - []string
Encrypted bool
Prepend a single dot (".") before each variable name.
@@ -423,21 +431,22 @@ TEMPLATES
anydb list -m template -T "{{ if .Tags }}{{ .Key }},{{ .Value }},{{ .Created}}{{ end }}"
CONFIGURATION
Anydb looks at the following location for a configuration file, in that
Anydb looks at the following locations for a configuration file, in that
order:
"$HOME/.config/anydb/anydb.toml"
"$HOME/.anydb.toml"
"anydb.toml" in the current directory
or specify one using "-c"
The configuration format uses the TOML language, refer to
<https://toml.io/en/> for more details. The key names correspond to
the commandline options in most cases.
Configuration follows a certain precedence: the files are tried to
be read in the given order, followed by commandline options. That
is, the last configuration file wins, unless the user provides a
commandline option, then this setting will be taken.
The configuration format uses the TOML language, refer to
<https://toml.io/en/> for more details. The key names correspond to the
commandline options in most cases.
Configuration follows a certain precedence: the files are tried to be
read in the given order, followed by commandline options. That is, the
last configuration file wins, unless the user provides a commandline
option, then this setting will be taken.
A complete configuration file might look like this:
@@ -456,12 +465,12 @@ CONFIGURATION
[buckets.test]
encrypt = false
Under normal circumstances you don't need a configuration file.
However, if you want to use different buckets, then this might be a
handy option. Buckets are being configured in ini-style with the
term "bucket." followed by the bucket name. In the example above we
enable encryption for the default bucket "data" and disable it for a
bucket "test". To use different buckets, use the "-b" option.
Under normal circumstances you don't need a configuration file. However,
if you want to use different buckets, then this might be a handy option.
Buckets are being configured in ini-style with the term "bucket."
followed by the bucket name. In the example above we enable encryption
for the default bucket "data" and disable it for a bucket "test". To use
different buckets, use the "-b" option.
REST API
The subcommand serve starts a simple HTTP service, which responds to