The time has come to unveil Grimoire, a bookmark manager designed specifically for everyone who is missing a little bit of magic touch when it comes to organizing their bookmarks.

Its mission is simple: to help you add, process, and organize your bookmarks in a way that makes sense.

Reasoning behind the project

I’ve always struggled with organizing my bookmarks. Even though I tried many options, none of them really appealed to me. The built-in bookmark managers in browsers were too basic and didn’t allow me to organize my bookmarks in a way that made sense to me. The most popular external bookmark managers have been too simple, too complicated, or too expensive for what they offer.

What I liked the most was the idea of having a bookmark manager with a relational database I had access to. This would let me retrieve my bookmarks in any way I wanted, and I could easily add new features in the future. I’ve searched for a solution that would allow me to do that, but I couldn’t find anything that would fit my needs.

And that’s how the idea of the Grimoire was born. I wanted to create a bookmark manager that would be simple to use, but also powerful enough to let me organize my bookmarks in a way that made sense to me. Moreover, I wanted to take SvelteKit and PocketBase for a spin, and this seemed like a perfect opportunity to do so.

How it looks now

Starting with v0.1.0, Grimoire has most of the basic features you would expect from a bookmark manager:

  • bookmarks:
    • can be added, viewed, edited, and deleted
    • can be organized into categories and tagged
    • metadata, like title, description, HTML content, favicon, and image, is fetched from the website and stored locally
    • can have notes added to them
  • bookmark list:
    • display in a grid or list view
    • can be searched by title, description, URL, and tags
    • filtering by category, tag, and and more
    • sort by date added, domain, and more
  • users:
    • can sign up and sign in
    • all bookmarks, categories, and tags are private to the user
  • admin panel:
    • is used to manage users and see their bookmark, category, and tag counts
    • can be used to preview most of PocketBase settings
  • other:
    • it’s dockerized, so it’s easy to run it locally or deploy it to your server
    • all the benefits of a self-hosted PocketBase installation, like scheduled backups (local and to S3), high performance, and data security
    • dark mode, because dark wizardry requires darkness
    • responsive design as magic should be accessible to everyone, everywhere
    • early and experimental support for AI-powered features (more on that in the future), like automatic tag suggestions
  • and that’s just the beginning!

What’s next

It’s still a work in progress, but I’m happy with the functionality provided so far. You can expect more useful features, like a way to import bookmarks from other services and export them to most popular file formats, public profiles, better admin panel, AI-powered features - just to name a few. For more details, check out the roadmap.

How to get it up and running

If you want to try it out, you can run it locally!

Contributors are more than welcome​

To make Grimoire even better, I need your help! Don’t be a stranger and check out the contributing guidelines today!

  • KoppleForce@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    “Cross-site POST form submissions are forbidden”

    Every time I try to log in with the info i put into the .env file. Doing “sign up” from the app does not do anything.

    • DearBrotherJon@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      I’ve been poking around trying to deploy this as well.

      You’ll want to edit the Dockerfile and make sure your origin is set to whatever url you’ll be accessing grimoire from.

      However, even doing this, I’m not able to login even when I manual inject a user into pocketbase.

  • sirzoyisp@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Thanks for sharing your project with us, but did you know that adding a screen shot somewhere won’t kill your project⁉🗿

  • Baconspl1t@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I try to test this out but having problems setting it up properly?

    I set an Email and Password in all of the .env files and started the container with docker-compose up. But neither the admin panel or the normal login accept the credentials.

    Any help please?

  • RedditSlayer2020@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Love it but it’s absolutely overkill. What stack are you using? I saw svelte and tailwindcss.

    Growing up with the Internet seeing today’s ‘modern’ approaches when it comes to Web development the requirements grow exponentially and that’s frustrating because the barrier of entrance gets ridiculously high.

    Even though a lot of concepts have been invented, none feel ‘natural’ to me, it’s almost as if the clunkyness of language design (c, c++ etc) has been carried over to the modern webapp era

    • ProbablePenguin@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Don’t forget that the modern approaches also make it much quicker and easier for someone to make something.

    • goniszewski@alien.topOPB
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      1 year ago

      Thank you! I hope it will allow for smooth contributions for anyone willing to help make Grimoire better 🙂

  • gazoscalvertos@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Have always felt the same way about bookmark managers, we need one to rule them all.

    Thought about a semantic search? I always end up looking for bookmarks but don’t remember the website and I haven’t stored it in an organised way

  • traeblain@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    This looks great! Been debating between all the different bookmark managers available. Definitely going to give this a go.

  • darkcloud784@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Is there a browser extension we can use with this or a plan for one? Currently I use wallabag but I think this may be a good replacement as long as it has some sort of browser implementation

    • goniszewski@alien.topOPB
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      1 year ago

      Most definitely there will be an official browser extension. Grimoire is just meant to be accompanied by one! 🪄

        • goniszewski@alien.topOPB
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          1 year ago

          Firefox can use the same extension under the right conditions. I’m using it myself, so it’s one of my goals to make this happen!

      • Medium_Skirt@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        A browser extension will be useful for me if it caches the bookmarks for offline use, as I don’t keep a constant connection to my self hosted server from my mobile (I use tailscale to connect to my home server and it’s not constantly kept on).