The Newsbeuter RSS Feedreader ============================= Andreas Krennmair Introduction ------------ Newsbeuter is an RSS feedreader. RSS is a number of widely-used XML formats to transmit, publish and syndicate articles, for example news or blog articles. Newsbeuter is designed to be used on text terminals on Unix or Unix-like systems such as Linux, FreeBSD or Mac OS X. Platforms ~~~~~~~~~ Newsbeuter has been tested on Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X, and is available in the form of pre-built packages for many popular Linux distributions. For a current list of distributions with newsbeuter packages, consult http://www.newsbeuter.org/download.html[this list on the newsbeuter website]. OpenBSD is currently unsupported, as it lacks even the most basic support for internationalization and localization. NetBSD is currently not supported, due to technical limitations in the iconv() implementation. Why "Newsbeuter"? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Newsbeuter" is a pun on the German word "Wildbeuter", which means "hunter-gatherer". During the stone age, people hunted and gathered their food, and these days, they hunt and gather news and information. Credits for this idea goes to Clifford Wolf, who submitted it to a little competiton that was started when I got aware that the original name would violate French and European registered trademarks. Installation ------------ This chapter describes how to compile and install newsbeuter from source. Downloading Newsbeuter ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Newsbeuter is available as source package. Simply go to http://www.newsbeuter.org/[] and download the latest source package, which is usually in the .tar.gz file format. Alternatively, you can check out the latest development source tree from the newsbeuter Git repository (hosted on GitHub) by running the following command on the commandline: git clone git://github.com/akrennmair/newsbeuter.git Dependencies ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Newsbeuter depends on a number of libraries to function correctly. This table lists these dependencies. Please be aware that the list libraries may themselves depend on other libraries. These dependencies are not listed here. Please also be aware that you need a recent C++ compiler. Currently, newsbeuter has only been tested with GCC. - STFL (version 0.21 or newer): http://www.clifford.at/stfl/[] - SQLite 3 (version 3.5 or newer): http://www.sqlite.org/[] - libcurl: http://curlm.haxx.se/download.html[] - GNU gettext (on systems that don't provide gettext in the libc): ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gettext/[] - pkg-config: http://pkg-config.freedesktop.org/wiki/[] - libxml2: http://xmlsoft.org/[] If you intend to modify and regenerate the filter language parser, you will also need Coco/R for C++, which you can download from http://www.ssw.uni-linz.ac.at/coco/[]. The Coco/R binary must be installed as "cococpp" in your PATH. Debian users only need to install the package "coco-cpp". Use the "regenerate-parser" make target to regenerate the necessary files. Compiling and Installing ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ After you've downloaded and installed the dependencies mentioned above, you can start compiling and installing newsbeuter. To compile newsbeuter, simply run "make" in the source tree. After a short time, this should complete successfully, and you can go on with installation by running "make install". By default, this will install the "newsbeuter" binary to the /usr/local/bin directory. You can provide an alternative installation path using the prefix parameter, e.g. running "make install prefix=/opt/newsbeuter" will install the binary to the directory /opt/newsbeuter/bin. First Steps ----------- include::chapter-firststeps.txt[] .Configuration Commands [frame="all", grid="all",format="dsv",separator="|"] `10`15`15`40`20~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Configuration Command|Argument(s)|Default|Description|Example ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ include::configcommands.dsv[] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .Available Operations [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv",separator=":"] `20`20`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Operation:Default key:Description ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ include::keycmds.dsv[] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Keys, as used in the bind-key configuration command, use a special syntax. Lowercase keys, uppercase keys and special characters are written literally. The Enter key is written as "ENTER", while the Esc key is written as "ESC". The function keys F1 to F12 are written as "F1" to "F12". The Space key is written as "SPACE". Key combinations with the Ctrl key, such as Ctrl-R, are written as ^R. Please be aware that all Ctrl-related key combinations need to be written in uppercase. The following identifiers for keys are supported: - ENTER (Enter key) - BACKSPACE (backspace key) - LEFT (left cursor) - RIGHT (right cursor) - UP (up cursor) - PPAGE (page up cursor) - NPAGE (page down cursor) - DOWN (down cursor) - ESC (Esc key) The "Tab" key can't be bound due to technical limitations of STFL. Example Configuration ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ # a comment max-items 100 # such comments are possible, too browser links show-read-feeds no unbind-key R bind-key ^R reload-all Configuring Colors ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It is possible to configure custom color settings in newsbeuter. The basic configuration syntax is: color [ ...] This means that if you configure colors for a certain element, you need to provide a foreground color and a background color as a minimum. The following colors are supported: - black - red - green - yellow - blue - magenta - cyan - white - default - color, e.g. color123 The "default" color means that the terminal's default color will be used. The "color" color name can be used if your terminal support 256 colors (e.g. gnome-terminal, xterm with $TERM set to xterm-256color). Newsbeuter contains support for 256 color terminals since version 2.1. For a complete chart of colors and their corresponding numbers, please see http://www.calmar.ws/vim/256-xterm-24bit-rgb-color-chart.html[]. Optionally, you can also add one or more attributes. The following attributes are supported: - standout - underline - reverse - blink - dim - bold - protect - invis Currently, the following elements are supported: - *listnormal*: a normal list item - *listfocus*: the currently selected list item - *info*: the info bars on top and bottom - *background*: the application background - *article*: the article text The default color configuration of newsbeuter looks like this: background white black listnormal white black listfocus yellow blue bold info yellow blue bold article white black Migrating from other RSS Feed Readers ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It is very likely that you have used other RSS feed readers before. In this case, it is practical to migrate the previous configuration to newsbeuter. The vast amount of RSS feed readers allows the export of subscriptions via OPML files. OPML is an XML file format that was designed to save outlines, and has found its primary use in the import and export of feed subscriptions between different RSS feed readers. The best thing to start with is to export your subscriptions from the old reader. Usually, RSS feed readers have appropriate menu items available to do so. Snownews provides a script to convert your current subscription file into an OPML file: snow2opml > ~/blogroll.opml This command creates from your Snownews configuration a file blogroll.opml in your home directory. To export the subscription list from raggle, the following command is necessary: raggle --export-opml ~/blogroll.opml When you have exported the subscriptions from your old RSS feed reader, you can import them into newsbeuter: newsbeuter -i ~/blogroll.opml Don't worry, newsbeuter won't destroy your existing configuration, or add subscriptions more than once: every URL that is added to the subscription list is checked before whether it is already in the list, and is only added if not. This makes it possible to merge several OPML files into your subscription list. If your old RSS feed reader was able to structure your subscriptions in hierarchies, and reflected this structure in the exported OPML file, newsbeuter doesn't throw away this information (although it doesn't support hierarchies), but generates tags from it. Tags are newsbeuter's way of organizing subscriptions in a non-hierarchical way. More information on the use of tags can be found below. Imagine the following folder hierarchy: |- News | |- Europe | `- International |- IT | |- Linux | |- Windows | `- Programming | |- C++ | |- Ruby | `- Erlang `- Private Subscriptions found in the folder "Private" will be tagged with "Private", subscriptions in the folder "International" will be tagged with "News" and "News/International", subscriptions in the folder "Erlang" will be tagged ith "IT", "IT/Programming" and "IT/Programming/Erlang", and so on. This means that when you select the tag "Programming" in newsbeuter, you will see all subscriptions that were in the "Programming" folder or one of its subfolders before. This means that you will lose virtually nothing of your previously configured structure. Advanced Features ----------------- Tagging ~~~~~~~ include::chapter-tagging.txt[] Scripts and Filters (Snownews Extensions) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ include::chapter-snownews.txt[] Bookmarking ~~~~~~~~~~~ Since version 0.7, newsbeuter contains a plugin-based bookmarking system. When a user bookmarks a link (possible in the article list, in the article view, and in the URL view), he is asked for the URL to bookmark (already preset with the URL of the current selection), the bookmark title (in most cases preset with the title of the current selection) and the bookmark description. After the question for the description, an external program, configured via the configuration command "bookmark-cmd", is executed with 3 commandline parameters. The plugin itself implements the actual bookmark saving (e.g. writing the bookmark to an external file, or storing it to a del.icio.us account). When everything went OK, the plugin simply exits. In case something goes wrong while saving the bookmark, it writes out an error message as a single line. This error message is then presented to the user from within newsbeuter. Newsbeuter comes with an example plugin, which implements a simple tab-separated bookmark file. This example can be found in the "doc" subdirectory. Command Line ~~~~~~~~~~~~ include::chapter-cmdline.txt[] .Available Commandline Commands [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `20`20`40`20~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Command:Syntax:Description:Example ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ quit:quit:Quit newsbeuter.:quit save:save :Save the currently select article to disk. This works in the article list and in the article view.:save ~/important.txt set:set [=|&|!]:Set configuration variable to . If no value is specified, the current value is printed out. Specifying a '!' after the name of boolean configuration variables toggles their values, a '&' directly after the name of a configuration variable of any type resets its value to the documented default value.:set reload-time=15 tag:tag :Only display feeds with the tag .:tag news goto:goto :Go to the next feed whose name contains the case-insensitive substring.:goto foo source:source [...]:Load the specified configuration files. This allows it to load alternative configuration files or reload already loaded configuration files on-the-fly from the filesystem.:source ~/.newsbeuter/colors dumpconfig:dumpconfig :Save current internal state of configuration to file, so that it can be instantly reused as configuration file.:dumpconfig ~/.newsbeuter/config.saved dumpform:dumpform:Dump current dialog to text file. This is meant for debugging purposes only.:dumpform n/a::Jump to the entry with the index (usually seen at the left side of the list). This currently works for the feed list and the article list.:30 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Filter Language ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Newsbeuter provides a powerful filter language that enables the user to filter the content of many dialogs, such as the feed list or the article list. The basic concept is that every feed and every article has a number of attributes which can then be compared with user-supplied values, and these comparisons and be logically AND'ed, OR'ed and grouped. Examples for simple filter expressions are: unread_count > 0 rssurl =~ "^https:" age between 0:10 Logically connecting and grouping such expressions looks like in the following examples: ( unread_count > 0 and unread_count < 10 ) or total_count > 100 ( author =~ "Frank" or author =~ "John" ) and ( title =~ "Linux" or title =~ "FreeBSD" ) The possibilities for combining such queries is endless, sky (actually: the available memory) is the limit. To filter your feeds, press "F" in the feed list, enter your filter expression, and press enter. To clear the filter, press Ctrl-F. To filter the articles in the article list, press "F", enter your expression, and press enter. Clearing the filter works the same as before. Be aware that only certain attributes work in both dialogs. The table below lists all available attributes and their context, i.e. an attribute that belongs to a feed can only be matched in the feed list, while an attribute that belongs to an article can only be matched in the article list. .Available Comparison Operators [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`70~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Operator:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ =:test for equality ("==" works, too) !=:test for inequality; logical negation of = operator =~:test whether regular expression matches !~:logical negation of the =~ operator <:less than >:greater than <=:less than or equal >=:greater than or equal between:within a range of integer values, where the two integer values are separated by a colon (see above for an example) #:contains; this operator matches if a word is contained in a list of space-separated words (useful for matching tags, see below) !#:contains not; the negation of the # operator ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .Available Attributes [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`30`40~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Attribute:Context:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ title:article:article title link:article:article link author:article:article author content:article:article body date:article:publication date of the article guid:article:a unique identifier of the article unread:article:indicates whether the article has been read enclosure_url:article:the URL of a possible enclosure (e.g. podcast file) enclosure_type:article:the MIME type of the enclosure URL flags:article:The set of flags of the article age:article:Age of an article (in days) articleindex:article:Index of an article in an article list feedtitle:feed, article:title of the feed description:feed, article:feed description feedlink:feed, article:link to the feed feeddate:feed, article:publication date of the feed rssurl:feed, article:RSS URL of the feed unread_count:feed, article:number of unread articles in the feed total_count:feed, article:total number of articles in the feed tags:feed, article:all tags that are associated with the feed feedindex:feed, article:Index of a feed in the feed list ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Note that it's also possible to filter for feed attributes when you query for article attributes. This is because every article is internally linked to the feed from which it was downloaded. Killfiles ~~~~~~~~~ Sometimes, a user is confronted with certain content he doesn't want to read, e.g. on topics the user is not interested in or articles from certain people he doesn't want to read. In Usenet, such functionality within software is traditionally called a "killfile", i.e. based on the content of this "killfile", articles that match certain conditions do not get displayed and are not presented to the user at all. In newsbeuter, such a "killfile" can be implemented on a per-article basis via the configuration file. The most important configuration command for this is "ignore-article": ignore-article "*" "title =~ \"Gentoo\"" ignore-article "http://synflood.at/blog/index.php?/feeds/index.rss2" "title =~ \"newsbeuter\"" The basic format is that the user specifies an RSS feed for which the ignore shall be applied ("*" matches all RSS feeds), and then a filter expression (see previous section). If newsbeuter hits an article in the specified RSS feed that matches the specified filter expression, then this article is ignored and never presented to the user. The configuration itself can contain as many ignore-article commands as desired. Since newsbeuter 2.2, you can specify the way an article is ignored. There are two ways available: - During download: articles are ignored when a feed is downloaded and parsed, and thus won't be written to the local cache. - During display: articles are downloaded and written to the local cache, but are ignored when a feed is displayed. Both modes have their advantages and disadvantages: while the download ignore mode saves some storage, you cannot simply "undo" the ignore by removing it from the configuration file: if an ignored article has already vanished from a feed, it won't reappear. On the other hand, the display ignore mode requires some more space, but has the advantage that an ignore can be "undone" by removing the ignore-article configuration command from the configuration. The default ignore mode is "download". You can set the ignore mode in the configuration file: ignore-mode "display" Query Feeds ~~~~~~~~~~~ Query feeds are a mechanism of newsbeuter to define custom "meta feeds" by using newsbeuter's built-in filter language. A query feed is a feed that is aggregated from all currently downloaded articles of all feeds. To narrow down the set of articles, the user has to specify a filter. Only articles that match this filter are added to the query feed. A query feed is updated whenever it is entered in the feed list. When you change the unread flag of an article, this is reflected in the feed where the article was originally fetched. To define a query feed, the user has to add a line to the file ~/.newsbeuter/urls in the following format: query:: [ ...] The "query:" in the beginning tells newsbeuter that it's a query feed, "" specifies the name under which the query feed shall be displayed in the feed list, and "" is the filter expression that shall be used. Like every other feed, a query feed can be tagged to organize it like a regular feed. A good example for the user of this feature is a query feed that contains all unread articles: "query:Unread Articles:unread = \"yes\"" Note the quotes that are necessary around the complete query "URL" and the backslashes that are necessary the escape the quotes in the filter expression. If you want to combine several feeds to one single feed, a good solution is to tag the feeds that you want to combine with one certain tag, and then create a query feed that only displays articles from feeds with that certain tag: http://domain1.tld/feed.xml fun news tag1 http://domain2.tld/?feed.rss private jokes tag1 http://domain3.tld/feeds.rss news "query:tag1 Articles:tags # \"tag1\"" In this example, the feeds http://domain1.tld/feed.xml and http://domain2.tld/?feed.rss are aggregated into the query feed named "tag1 Articles", but the feed http://domain3.tld/feeds.rss is not. Basically, the possibility of what can be realized with query feeds is only limited by what can be queried from articles and feeds with the filter language and by your creativity. Google Reader Support ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.google.com/reader/[Google Reader] is Google's web-based feed aggregator. Newsbeuter provides functionality to use Google Reader as its backend: people can use Google Reader to manage their subscriptions, and in addition, use newsbeuter to download and read articles. Newsbeuter will keep the information which articles have already been read synchronized with Google Reader, so that users usually won't see articles more than once. In addition, it will only ever download unread articles from Google Reader. In order to use Google Reader support, you first need to configure the proper URL source: urls-source "googlereader" In addition, newsbeuter needs to know your Google Reader username and password so that it can authenticate with Google Reader: googlereader-login "your-googlereader-account" googlereader-password "your-password" After setting these configuration values, you can start newsbeuter, it will authenticate with Google Reader and download your subscription list. If you use "folders" in Google Reader to organize your feeds, newsbeuter will regard them and make them available via its "tags" capability: each feed is tagged with the name of the folder in which it resides. When you mark single items or complete feeds as read, newsbeuter will synchronize this information directly to Google Reader. This, of course, includes opening articles. Toggling read articles back to "unread" is also communicated to Google Reader. In addition, Google Reader provides the ability to "star" and to "share" articles. Starred articles are basically bookmarks, while shared articles are shown to people that follow your Google Reader account. Newsbeuter allows the use of this feature by mapping its powerful "flags" to the "star"/"unstar" resp. "share"/"unshare" operations. In order to use this mapping, all you need to do is to configure the flags that shall be used: googlereader-flag-share "a" googlereader-flag-star "b" After that, use these flags when you edit flags for an article, and these articles will be starred resp. shared. By default, newsbeuter also shows Google Reader "special feeds": - People you follow: articles shared by people that you follow. - Starred items: articles that you starred. - Shared items: articles that you shared. - Popular items: articles that are considered to be popular by Google's algorithms. You can disable these feeds by setting the following configuration variable: googlereader-show-special-feeds no Bloglines Synchronization ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Up to and including version 2.3, newsbeuter contained support for synchronization with Bloglines. On October 1, 2010, Bloglines was discontinued, and newsbeuter's support for Bloglines was subsequently removed. OPML Online Subscription Mode ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The OPML online subscription mode works similar to the Google Reader synchronization mode, except that no information about read articles is synchronized back. When enabled, all feeds that are listed in the feed list will be taken from one or more OPML files that are downloaded from a freely configurable URL. To enable this mode, the following configuration needs to be done: urls-source "opml" opml-url "" ["" ...] "opml" must be specified as source for the feed URLs, and the URLs of the OPML file needs to be specified, too. As with Google Reader synchronization mode, the offline mode via "newsbeuter -o" also works with OPML online subscription mode. Flagging Articles ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To support custom categorization of articles by the user, it is possible to flag an article. A valid flag is any character from 'A' to 'Z' and from 'a' to 'z'. Every article can be flagged with up to 52 different flags, i.e. every letter from the Roman alphabet in upper and lower case. Flagging is easy: just select an article in the article list, or enter the article view, and press ^E. This will start the flag editor. By pressing enter, the new flags are saved. You can cancel by pressing the ESC key. The flags of an article can be used in every filter expression. The flags of an article are always ordered, and when new flags are added, ordering is immediately restored. This behaviour can also be relied upon when querying articles via the filter language. If an article contains one or more flags, it is marked with an "!" in the article list. In the article view, all flags (if available) are listed. Macro Support ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In newsbeuter, it's possible to define macros to execute more than one command at once. A macro is configured using the "macro" configuration command. The first parameter to "macro" is the key, all parameters afterwards are operations (as listed in the "Available Operations" table above), optionally with parameters on their own, separated by the ";" character. Here's a simple example: macro k open ; reload ; quit macro o open-in-browser ; toggle-article-read "read" When the user presses the macro prefix ("," by default) and then the "k" key, the three operations "open", "reload" and "quit" will be executed subsequently. It is also possible to modify configuration variables within macros, which can e.g. be used to temporarily modify the browser configuration variable to do something else, such as running an image viewer from the URLs view: macro i set browser "feh %u"; open ; set browser "elinks %u" You can even use this feature to enqueue any of the URLs from the URLs view to podbeuter's download queue: macro E set browser "echo %u >> ~/.newsbeuter/queue" ; open ; set browser "elinks %u" Commandline Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Newsbeuter comes with a -x option that indicates that commands added as arguments to the command line shall be executed. Currently, the following commands are available: - reload: this option reloads all feeds, and quits newsbeuter without printing any output. This is useful if a user wants to periodically reload all feeds without always having a running newsbeuter instance, e.g. from cron. - print-unread: this option prints the number of unread articles and quits newsbeuter. This is useful for users who want to integrate this number into some kind of monitoring system. Format Strings ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Newsbeuter contains a powerful format string system to make it possible for the user to configure the format of various aspects of the application, such as the format of entries in the feed list or in the article list. Format strings are similar to those that are found in the "printf" function in the C programming language. A format sequence begins with the '%' character, followed by optional alignment indication: positive numbers indicate that the text that is inserted for the sequence shall be padded right to a total width that is specified by the number, while negative number specify left padding. Followed by the padding indication comes the actual sequence identifier, which is usually a single letter. In addition, newsbeuter provides other, more powerful sequences, such as "%>[char]", which indicates that the text right to the sequence will be aligned right on the screen, and characters between the text on the left and the text on the right will be filled by "[char]". Another powerful format is the conditional sequence, "%?[char]?[format 1]&[format 2]?": if the text of the sequence identifier "[char]" is non-empty, then "[format 1]" will be evaluted and inserted, otherwise "[format 2]" will be evaluted and inserted. The "&" and "[format 2]" are optional, i.e. if the identifier's text is empty, then an empty string will be inserted. The following tables show what sequence identifiers are available for which format: .Available Identifiers for feedlist-format [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Identifier:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ d:Feed description i:Feed index l:Feed link L:Feed RSS URL n:"unread" flag field S:download status t:Feed title T:First tag of a feed in the URLs file u:"unread/total" field ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ While a reload-all operation is running, the download status indicates the download status of a feed, which can be "to be downloaded" (indicated by "_"), "currently downloading" (indicated by "."), successfully downloaded (indicated by " ") and "download error" (indicated by "x"). .Available Identifiers for articlelist-format [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Identifier:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a:Article author D:Publication date f:Article flags i:Article index t:Article title T:If the article list displays articles from different feeds, then this identifier contains the title of the feed to which the article belongs. L:Article length ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .Available Identifiers for notify-format [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Identifier:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ n:Number of unread articles f:Number of unread feeds d:Number of new unread articles (i.e. that were added through the last reload) D:Number of new unread feeds (i.e. that were added through the last reload) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Examples: feedlist-format "%4i %n %11u %t" articlelist-format "%4i %f %D %?T?|%-17T| ?%t" notify-format "%d new articles (%n unread articles, %f unread feeds)" Dialog Titles ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Starting with newsbeuter 2.0, it is now officially supported to customize the title format of all available dialogs. Here is a list of dialogs with their respective title format configuration variables, and a list of available formats and their meaning. Please note taht the title formats are localized, so if you work on a different locale that is supported by newsbeuter, the actually displayed title text may vary unless you customize it. .Dialog Title Formats [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `20`30`50~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dialog:Configuration Variable:Default Value ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Feed List:feedlist-title-format:%N %V - Your feeds (%u unread, %t total)%?T? - tag `%T'&? Article List:articlelist-title-format:%N %V - Articles in feed '%T' (%u unread, %t total) - %U Search Result:searchresult-title-format:%N %V - Search result (%u unread, %t total) File Browser:filebrowser-title-format:%N %V - %?O?Open File&Save File? - %f Help:help-title-format:%N %V - Help Select Tag Dialog:selecttag-title-format:%N %V - Select Tag Select Filter Dialog:selectfilter-title-format:%N %V - Select Filter Article View:itemview-title-format:%N %V - Article '%T' URL View:urlview-title-format:%N %V - URLs Dialog List:dialogs-title-format:%N %V - Dialogs ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .Common Title Format Identifiers [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Identifier:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N:Name of the program, i.e. "newsbeuter" V:Program version u:Number of unread articles (if applicable) t:Number of total articles (if applicable) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .Feed List Title Format Identifiers [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Identifier:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ T:Currently selected tag (empty if none selected) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .Article List Title Format Identifiers [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Identifier:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ T:Feed title U:Feed URL ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .File Browser Title Format Identifiers [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Identifier:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ f:Filename O:Non-empty if file browser is in open mode, empty if in save mode ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .Article View Title Format Identifiers [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `30`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Identifier:Meaning ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ T:Article title ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Highlighting Text ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Since version 1.0, newsbeuter supports the highlighting of text in the feed list, the article list and the article view, using regular expressions to describe patterns to be highlighted. The command syntax goes like this: highlight [ [ ...]] Valid values for are "feedlist", "articlelist", "article" and "all". When specifying "all", the matching will be done in all three views. The must be regular expression, which will be matched case-insensitive against the text. and specify the foreground color resp. the background color of the matches. You can also specify 0 or more attributes. You can find a list of valid colors and attributes in the "Configuring Colors" section. Examples for possible highlighting configurations are: highlight all "newsbeuter" red highlight article "^(Feed|Title|Author|Link|Date):" default default underline highlight feedlist "https?://[^ ]+" yellow red bold Highlighting Articles in the Article List ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ In addition to generally highlighting text, there is also a specific way to highlight articles in the article list based on whether they match a certain filter expression. This means that you can highlight items in the article list based on their content. This is done using the "highlight-article" configuration command. The syntax is similar to the "highlight" configuration command, with the difference that there's no need to specify a target (since it only applies in the article list), and instead of a regular expression, a filter expression is used. After the filter expression, the colors and attributs are specified in the same way. Example: highlight-article "author =~ \"Andreas Krennmair\"" white red bold Advanced Dialog Management ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Since version 2.0, newsbeuter supports an advanced concept of dialogs. Previously, all dialogs (feed list, article list, article view) were internally laid out as a pure stack. In 2.0, this changed: all dialogs are managed in a list, and the user can jump to another, previously opened dialog from everywhere. This allows a user to open more than one article list, more than one article view, etc., and switch between them without closing them. The main dialog for this feature can be reached by pressing the "v" key. This opens the list of open dialogs. From there, the user can switch to another dialog by selecting the appropriate entry and pressing "ENTER", or can close open dialogs by selecting them and pressing Ctrl-X. XDG Base Directory Support ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Newsbeuter implements limited support for the http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html[XDG Base Directory Specification]. It needs to be set up manually by creating the following directories: ~/.local/share/newsbeuter/ ~/.config/newsbeuter/ If these directories exist or the environment variables $XDG_CONFIG_HOME and $XDG_DATA_HOME are set, newsbeuter will use these directories, otherwise it will default to ~/.newsbeuter as its configuration directory. Podcast Support ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ include::chapter-podcasts.txt[] .Podbeuter Configuration Commands [frame="all", grid="all",format="dsv",separator="|"] `10`15`15`40`20~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Configuration Command|Argument(s)|Default|Description|Example ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ include::podbeuter-cmds.dsv[] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .Available Operations in Podbeuter [frame="all", grid="all", format="dsv"] `20`20`60~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Operation:Default key:Description ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ quit:q:Quit the program. pb-download:d:Download the currently selected URL. pb-cancel:c:Cancel the currently selected download. pb-delete:D:Delete the currently selected URL from the queue. pb-purge:P:Remove all finished and deleted downloads from the queue and load URLs that were newly added to the queue. pb-toggle-download-all:a:Toggle the "automatic download" feature where all queued URLs are downloaded one after the other. The "max-downloads" configuration option controls how many downloads are done in parallel. pb-increase-max-dls:+:Increase the "max-downloads" option by 1. pb-decrease-max-dls:-:Decrease the "max-downloads" option by 1. If the option is already 1, no further decrease is possible. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A usual "use case" is to configure newsbeuter to automatically enqueue newly found podcast download URLs. Then, the user reloads the podcast RSS feeds in newsbeuter, and after that, he/she uses podbeuter to view the current queue, and either selectively download certain files or automatically download them all together by pressing "a" within podbeuter. Using SQLite Triggers with newsbeuter ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This section was kindly provided by mailto:elrond+newsbeuter(at)samba-tng.org[Elrond]. SQLite, the db used by newsbeuter, supports triggers. These are small snippets of SQL that get executed inside the database by the database engine. They're stored inside the db and the normal user (including newsbeuter itself) doesn't see them. Just the db seems to do some magic: Like changing some values when you change another value. So what is this good for when looking at newsbeuter? Well first of it's a hack. The real answer should be to use application logic (do it inside newsbeuter, not in the db). So: Don't use this, unless you know, what you're doing, and unless you have some sort of backup. Example ^^^^^^^ So after the "don't use it" you still want to know, what one can do? So here's an example. Suppose you have a strange feed where the articles become "new" by just changing their subject, and nothing else changes. The body is just empty, and the URL keeps the same. This feed really exists. It's the "updated software rss feed" of some major company and the title just contains the name of the driver and version number. And the URL points to the download page. newsbeuter considers articles only as new, when they have a new UniqueID (this is good). So those articles are never marked as new (unread) ever again. So what can we do? We do some magic: We let the db test if newsbeuter changes the subject and then let itself mark the article again as unread. 1. You need the sqlite3 command line tool (available via apt-get install sqlite3 on Debian) or some other tool to do direct sql on the sqlite database. 2. Start sqlite3 with the newsbeuter db: Rivendell:~/.newsbeuter% sqlite3 cache.db SQLite version 3.4.2 Enter ".help" for instructions sqlite> 3. Create the trigger: sqlite> create trigger update_item_title update of title on rss_item > for each row when old.title != new.title > begin > update rss_item set unread = 1 where rowid == new.rowid; > end; 4. Leave sqlite3 with or .quit. That's it. newsbeuter (well, its db) now marks articles as unread when their title changes. And nicely enough this works all inside newsbeuter, no need to restart it so that it rereads the cache, that magically modifies itself. It just works. Feedback -------- If you want to tell us something related to newsbeuter, don't hesitate to send an email: ak@newsbeuter.org Alternatively, you can reach the newsbeuter developers on IRC: channel #newsbeuter on irc.freenode.net. If you want to report newsbeuter bugs, please use this issue tracker: http://code.google.com/p/newsbeuter/issues/list[] License ------- MIT/X Consortium License (C)opyright 2006-2011 Andreas Krennmair Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.