A Linux/BSD app to add comments to files. The comments are stored in a database, and where possible, in the xattr field of the filesystem. There is a GUI, using Python3+Qt5. There is also a terminal (curses) version and a command-line (scriptable).
Pat Beirne a4a8209525 first readme | 2 years ago | |
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README.md | 2 years ago | |
dirnotes | 2 years ago | |
dirnotes-cli | 2 years ago | |
dirnotes-cli.md | 2 years ago | |
dirnotes-tui | 2 years ago |
title: title-meta: Dirnotes README
The dirnotes family of apps allows you to add a descriptive comment to a file. The descriptions are stored in two places:
[The MacOS stores its comments in a similar way.]
The dirnotes
app is a GUI app, using the Qt5 framework. At startup, it displays the contents of the current directory, and the comments associated with any of the files or directories.
Simple mouse clicks allow you to tunnel down into directories, or rise up the file system.
You can create/edit comments and choose whether the xattr or database version of the comments take priority,
The dirnotes-tui
is a very similar app, but uses the curses framework to display its activity in a terminal window. This can be handy if you have to work across a network, or if terminal apps are you preference.
The dirnotes-cli
is a command line tool, which may be handy for scripting.
The dirnotes
program displays usage and keystoke info when you press F1. The dirnotes-tui
program display onscreen usage when you press the 'h' key, or F1.
The dirnotes-cli
program has a man page.
In short, you navigate dirnotes
and dirnotes-tui
by using the up/down arrow keys, to enter into a directory. The -tui version accepts e for edit,
s for sort, M to change between xattr/database priority.
The dirnotes-cli
has options for -l list and -c create a comment.
Instead of an API, here is how you can get directly at the underlying comment data. If you intend to use the dirnotes apps, try to keep the two versions of the comments in sync.
Use the commands
xattr -l [filename]
to display the comments/author/date on a file. For example:
$ xattr -l /etc/fstab
user.xdg.comment: controls the default mount bindings
user.xdg.comment.author: patb
user.xdg.comment.date: 2022-09-29 08:07:42
The other options on the xattr command line tool allow you to write (xattr -w) or delete (xattr -d) the comments.
The comments are stored in an Sqlite3 database, usually located at "~/.dirnotes.db". The database itself is contained within that file, and its schema is this:
CREATE TABLE dirnotes (name TEXT, date DATETIME, size INTEGER, comment TEXT, comment_date DATETIME, author TEXT)
field usage example
name the long filename, using python's os.path.abspath() /home/patb/projects/dirnotes/README.md |
date the file's modified date 2020-01-13 09:25:40
size the byte count of the file 145
comment a utf-8 string the readme for the GIT page
comment_date the date of the comment itself 2020-10-03 22:30:19
author the system name of the user who created the comment patb
The 'date' and 'size' fields reflect the file's modification date and size at the time of the last edit of the file comment, which is also 'comment_date'.
The MacOS inherently supports file comments. The Finder app manages most of the user activity. It handles file comments in a similar manner to Dirnotes. Comments are stored in two places:
The user can examine the file comments by opening the GetInfo dialog, and scrolling down to "Comment"
If the Finder is used to copy/move files, the comments are moved properly to both destinations. If you use the os to copy/move the files, you can ask that the xattr properties get moved, but the .DS-Store file will not be updated. That means the Finder will not see file comments on the destination file.
MacOS has AppleScript, by which you can ask the Finder to perform the file copy/move. In this case, the comments are moved properly.