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looqs/USAGE.md

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looqs - User guide

This document is still work in progress.

General points

Please consult the README for a description of what looqs is and on how to obtain it.

The GUI and CLI operate on the same database, so if you add files using the CLI, the GUI will search them too.

Limitations

You should be aware of the following:

  • Database paths are stored inefficiently, not deduplicated to simplify queries. This adds up quickly. Also, each PDF text is stored twice. Each page separately + the whole document to simplify queries.

I currently have 167874 files in the index. A FTS index is built for 14280 of those, of which 4146 are PDF documents. The PDFs take around 10GB storage space on the filesystem. All files for which an FTS has been built are around 7GB in size on the filesystem.

The looqs database has a size of 1.6 GB.

Config

It's in $HOME/.config/quitesimple.org/looqs.conf. It will be created on first execution of the CLI or GUI interface.

Database default path: $HOME/.local/share/quitesimple.org/looqs/looqs.sqlite. If this does not work for you, move it, but you must adjust the path in the config file.

GUI

It's minimal at this point, therefore some settings must be performed by editing the config file.

First run

You will be presented with an empty list. Go to the "Index" tab, add some directories and click "Start indexing".

For large directories the progress bar is essentially just decoration. As long as you see the counters increase, everything is fine even if it seems the progress bar is stuck.

The indexing can be stopped. If you run it again you do not start from scratch, because looqs knows which files have been modified or not since they have been added to the index. Thus, files will only be reprocedded when necessary.

Configuring PDF viewer

It's most convenient if, when you click on a preview, the PDF reader opens the page you clicked. For that, looqs needs to know which viewer you want to launch.

It tries to auto detect some common viewers. You must set the value yourself if it doesn't do something you like, such as not opening your favorite viewer. "%f" represents the filepath, "%p" the page number.

Preview tab

The preview tab shows previews. It marks you search keywords too. Click on a preview to open the file. You can click right to copy the file path, or open the containing folder. Hovering tells you which file the preview originates from.

CLI

The CLI command "looqs" has helptext provided. This documentation is incomplete at the moment.

First run

There is no point in using the "search" command on the first run. Add some files.

Adding files

To add files to the index, run ``looqs add [path]```, where 'path' can be a directory or a single file. If the path is a directory, the directory will be recursively descended, and all files in there added.

"Skipped" implies the file has not been changed since it has been added to the index.

Searching files

Of course the CLI will not render any previews, but it can show you the paths where search results have been found.

looqs search [terms...]

There is an implicit "AND" condition, meaning if you search for "photo" and "mountain", only paths will be shown containing both terms, but not either alone.

Deletion and Fixing Out of sync index

You sometimes delete files, to get rid of those from the index too:

looqs delete --deleted --dry-run

This commands lists all files which are indexed, but which cannot be found anymore.

Remove them using:

looqs delete --deleted --verbose

You can also delete by pattern:

looqs delete --pattern '*.java'

Delete never removes anything from the file system, it only operates on the database.

Updating files

The content and metadata index for files can be updated:

looqs update -n

Those files still exist, but the content that has been indexed it out of date. This can be corrected with

looqs update

This will not add new files, you must run looqs add for this. For this reason, most users will probably seldomly use the 'update' command alone.