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anydb/anydb.pod
2025-11-03 09:15:27 +01:00

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=head1 anydb
anydb - a personal key value store
=head1 SYNOPSIS
Usage:
anydb <command> [options] [flags]
anydb [command]
Available Commands:
completion Generate the autocompletion script for the specified shell
del Delete key
edit Edit a key
export Export database to json
get Retrieve value for a key
help Help about any command
import Import database dump
info info
list List database contents
man show manual page
serve run REST API listener
set Insert key/value pair
Flags:
-b, --bucket string use other bucket (default: data) (default "data")
-c, --config string toml config file
-f, --dbfile string DB file to use (default "/home/scip/.config/anydb/default.db")
-d, --debug Enable debugging
-h, --help help for anydb
-v, --version Print program version
Use "anydb [command] --help" for more information about a command.
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Anydb is a commandline personal key value store, it is simple to use
and can be used to store anything you'd like, even binary files
etc. It uses a key/value store (bbolt) in your home directory.
The tool provides a number of subcommands to use it, there are global
options and each subcommand has its own set of options.
=head1 GLOBAL OPTIONS
=over
=item C<-f, --dbfile filename>
The default location of your databas is
C<$HOME/.config/anydb/default.db>. You can change this with the C<-f>
option.
=item C<-b, --bucket name>
Data in a bbolt key-value-store are managed in so called
buckets. These are kind of namespaces, where each key must be
unique. However, a database may contain more than one bucket.
By default anydb uses a bucket named "data", but you can change this
using the option C<-b>.
Buckets can be configured to always encrypt values, see L<ENCRYTPTION>.
=item C<-c, --config filename>
Under normal circumstances you don't need a configuration file. But if
you want, you can provide one using the option C<-c>.
Anydb looks for a couple of default locations for a config file. You
only need this option if you want to supply a configuration on a
non-standard location. See L<CONFIGURATION> for more details.
=item C<-d, --debug>
Enable debug output.
=item C<-h, --help>
Show the usage of anydb.
=item C<-v, --version>
Show the program version.
=back
All of these options can be used with subcommands as well.
=head1 SUBCOMMANDS
=head2 completion
The B<completion> command can be used to setup completion for
anydb. Just put something like this into your shell's configuration
file:
source <(anydb completion bash)
If you use another shell, specify it instead of bash, of course.
=head2 set
The B<set> command is being used to insert or update a key-value pair.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb set <key> [<value> | -r <file>] [-t <tag>] [flags]
Aliases:
set, add, s, +
Flags:
-e, --encrypt encrypt value
-r, --file string Filename or - for STDIN
-h, --help help for set
-t, --tags tag,tag,... tags, multiple allowed
The standard way to insert a new entry is really simple:
anydb set key value
If you don't specify a value, anydb expects you to feed it some data
via STDIN. For example:
anydb set key < file
You might as well specify a file directly using the C<-f> option:
anydb set key -f file
Values can be encrypted using B<ChaCha20Poly1305> when you specify the
C<-e> option. Anydb will ask you interactively for a passphrase. You
can also provide the passphrase using the environment variable
C<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 C<-t>. Multiple tags can be
provided either by separating them with a comma or by using multiple
C<-t> parameters:
anydb set key value -t tag1,tag2
anydb set key value -t tag1 -t tag2
You can later filter entries by tag or by a combination of tags.
To edit or modify an entry, just use the B<set> command with the same
key, the value in the database will be overwritten with the new
value. An alternative option is the B<edit> command, see below.
=head2 get
To retrieve the value of a key, use the B<get> subcommand.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb get <key> [-o <file>] [-m <mode>] [-n -N] [-T <tpl>] [flags]
Aliases:
get, show, g, .
Flags:
-h, --help help for get
-m, --mode string output format (simple|wide|json|template) (default 'simple')
-n, --no-headers omit headers in tables
-N, --no-human do not translate to human readable values
-o, --output string output value to file (ignores -m)
-T, --template string go template for '-m template'
In its simplest form you just call the B<get> subcommand with the key
you want to have the value for. The value is being printed to STDOUT
by default:
anydb get key
If the value is binary content, it will not just being printed. In
those cases you need to either redirect output into a file or use the
option C<-o> to write to a file:
anydb get key > file
anydb get key -o file
If the value is encrypted, you will be asked for the passphrase to
decrypt it. If the environment variable C<ANYDB_PASSWORD> is set, its
value will be used instead.
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 B<list>
subcommand, see there for more details. The options C<-n> and C<-N>
have the same meaning as in the list command. The "json" mode prints
the raw JSON representation of the whole database entry. Decryption
will only take place in "simple" and "json" mode. The "template" mode
provides the most flexibily, it is detailed in the section
L<TEMPLATES>.
=head2 list
The B<list> subcommand displays a list of all database entries.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb list [<filter-regex> | -t <tag> ] [-m <mode>] [-nNif] [-T <tpl>] [flags]
Aliases:
list, ls, /, find, search
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')
-n, --no-headers omit headers in tables
-N, --no-human do not translate to human readable values
-s, --search-fulltext perform a full text search
-t, --tags stringArray tags, multiple allowed
-T, --template string go template for '-m template'
-l, --wide-output output mode: wide
In its simplest form - without any options - , the B<list> command
just prints all keys with their values to STDOUT. Values are being
truncated to maximum of 60 characters, that is, multiline values are
not completely shown in order to keep the tabular view readable.
To get more informations about each entry, use the C<-o wide> or C<-l>
option. In addition to the key and value also the size, update
timestamp and tags will be printed. Time and size values are converted
into a human readable form, you can suppress this behavior with the
C<-N> option. You may omit the headers using the option C<-n>
Sometimes you might want to filter the list of entries. Either because
your database grew too large or because you're searching for
something. In that case you have two options: You may supply one or
more tags or provide a filter regexp. To filter by tag, do:
anydb list -t tag1
anydb list -t tag1,tag2
anydb list -t tag1 -t tag2
To filter using a regular expression, do:
anydb list "foo.*bar"
Regular expressions follow the golang B<re2> syntax. For more details
about the syntax, refer to
L<https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax>. Please 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 C<-i>.
By default anydb only searches through the keys. If you want to search
through the values as well, then use the C<-s> option, which enables
full-text search.
You can - as with the B<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 details about using templates see L<TEMPLATES>.
=head2 del
Use the B<del> command to delete database entries.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb del <key> [flags]
Aliases:
del, d, rm
Flags:
-h, --help help for del
The subcommand B<del> does not provide any further options, it just
deletes the entry referred to by the given key. No questions are being
asked.
=head2 edit
The B<edit> command makes it easier to modify larger entries.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb edit <key> [flags]
Aliases:
edit, modify, mod, ed, vi
Flags:
-h, --help help for edit
The subcommand B<edit> does not provide any further options. It
works like this:
=over
=item 1. Write the value info a temporary file.
=item 2. Execute the editor (which one, see below!) with that file.
=item 3. Now you can edit the file and save+close it when done.
=item 4. Anydb picks up the file and if the content has changed, puts its value into the DB.
=back
By default anydb executes the C<vi> command. You can modify this
behavior by setting the environment variable C<EDITOR> appropriately.
Please note, that this does not work with binary content!
=head2 export
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 B<export> subcommand.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb export -o <json filename> [flags]
Aliases:
export, dump, backup
Flags:
-h, --help help for export
-o, --output string output to file
The database dump is a JSON representation of the whole database and
will be printed to the file specified with the C<-o> option. If you
specify "-" as the filename, it will be written to STDIN.
anydb export -o dump.json
anydb export -o - > dump.json
Please note, that encrypted values will not be decrypted. This might
change in a future version of anydb.
=head2 import
The B<import> subcommand can be used to restore a database from a JSON
dump.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb import -i <json file> [flags]
Aliases:
import, restore
Flags:
-r, --file string Filename or - for STDIN
-h, --help help for import
-t, --tags stringArray tags, multiple allowed
The C<import> subcommand reads the JSON contents from
the file specified with the C<-i> option. If you specify "-" as the
filename, it will be read from STDIN.
anydb import -i - < dump.json
anydb import -i dump.json
cat dump.json | anydb import -i -
If there is already a database, it will be saved by appending a
timestamp and a new database with the contents of the dump will be
created.
=head2 serve
Anydb provides a RESTful API, which you can use to manage the database
from somewhere else. The API does not provide any authentication or
any other security measures, so better only use it on localhost.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb serve [-l host:port] [flags]
Flags:
-h, --help help for serve
-l, --listen string host:port (default "localhost:8787")
To start the listener, just execute the B<serve> subcommand. You can
tweak the ip address and tcp port using the C<-l> option. The listener
will not fork and run in the foreground. Logs are being printed to
STDOUT as long as the listener runs.
For more details about the API, please see the L<REST API> section.
=head2 info
The B<info> subcommand shows you some information about your current
database.
Usage:
Usage:
anydb info [flags]
Flags:
-h, --help help for info
-N, --no-human do not translate to human readable values
Data being shown are: filename and size, number of keys per bucket. If
you supply the C<-d> option (debug), some bbolt internals are being
displayed as well.
=head2 man
The B<man> subcommand shows an unformatted text variant of the manual
page (which are currently reading).
Usage:
Usage:
anydb man [flags]
Flags:
-h, --help help for man
The manual is being piped into the C<more> command, which is being
expected to exist according to the POSIX standard on all supported
unix platforms. It might not work on Windows.
=head1 TEMPLATES
The B<get> and B<list> commands support a template feature, which is
very handy to create you own kind of formatting. The template syntax
being used is the GO template language, refer to
L<https://pkg.go.dev/text/template> for details.
Each template operates on one or more entries, no loop construct is
required, the template provided applies to every matching entry
separatley.
The following template variables can be used:
=over
=item B<.Key> - string
=item B<.Value> - string
=item B<.Bin> - []byte
=item B<.Created> - timestamp.Time
To retrieve a string representation of the timestamp, use C<.Created.AsTime>.
If you need a unix timestamp since epoch, use C<.Created.Unix>.
=item B<.Tags> - []string
=item B<.Encrypted> bool
=back
Prepend a single dot (".") before each variable name.
Here are some examples how to use the feature:
Only show the keys of all entries:
anydb list -m template -T "{{ .Key }}"
Format the list in a way so that is possible to evaluate it in a
shell:
eval $(anydb get foo -m template -T "key='{{ .Key }}' value='{{ .Value }}' ts='{{ .Created.AsTime}}'")
echo "Key: $key, Value: $value, When: $ts"
Print the values in CSV format ONLY if they have some tag:
anydb list -m template -T "{{ if .Tags }}{{ .Key }},{{ .Value }},{{ .Created.AsTime}}{{ end }}"
=head1 CONFIGURATION
Anydb looks at the following locations for a configuration file, in
that order:
=over
=item C<$HOME/.config/anydb/anydb.toml>
=item C<$HOME/.anydb.toml>
=item C<anydb.toml> in the current directory
=item or specify one using C<-c>
=back
The configuration format uses the TOML language, refer to
L<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:
# defaults
dbfile = "~/.config/anydb/default.db"
dbbucket = "data"
noheaders = false
nohumanize = false
encrypt = false
listen = "localhost:8787"
# different setups for different buckets
[buckets.data]
encrypt = true
[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 C<-b> option.
=head1 REST API
The subcommand B<serve> starts a simple HTTP service, which responds
to RESTful HTTP requests. The listener responds to all requests with a
JSON encoded response. The response contains the status and the
content - if any - of the requested resource.
The following requests are supported:
=over
=item B<GET /anydb/v1/>
Returns a JSON encoded list of all entries.
=item B<GET /anydb/v1/key>
Returns the JSON encoded entry, if found.
=item B<PUT /anydb/v1/>
Create an entry. Expects a JSON encoded request object in POST data.
=item B<DELETE /anydb/v1/key>
Delete an entry.
=back
Some curl example calls to the API:
Post a new key:
curl -X PUT localhost:8787/anydb/v1/ \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d '{"key":"foo","val":"bar"}'
Retrieve the value:
curl localhost:8787/anydb/v1/foo
List all keys:
curl localhost:8787/anydb/v1/
=head1 BUGS
In order to report a bug, unexpected behavior, feature requests
or to submit a patch, please open an issue on github:
L<https://codeberg.org/scip/anydb/issues>.
Please repeat the failing command with debugging enabled C<-d> and
include the output in the issue.
=head1 LIMITATIONS
The REST API list request doesn't provide any filtering capabilities yet.
=head1 LICENSE
This software is licensed under the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE version 3.
Copyright (c) 2024 by Thomas von Dein
=head1 AUTHORS
Thomas von Dein B<tom AT vondein DOT org>
=cut