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Markdown as a platform
Silver Bullet (SB) is highly-extensible, open source personal knowledge management software. Indeed, that’s fancy language for “a note taking app with links.”
Here is a screenshot:
At its core, SB is a Markdown editor that stores pages (notes) as plain markdown files in a folder referred to as a space. Pages can be cross-linked using the [[link to other page]]
syntax. However, once you leverage its various extensions (called plugs) it can feel more like a knowledge platform, allowing you to annotate, combine and query your accumulated knowledge in creative ways, specific to you. To get a good feel for it, watch this video.
Or try it in a sandbox demo environment.
Extensions
What type of extensions, you ask? Let us demonstrate this in a very meta way: by querying a list of plugs and injecting it into this page!
Here’s a list of (non-built-in) plugs documented in this space (note the #query
... /query
notation used):
- 🔌 Backlinks by Guillermo Vayá (repo)
- 🔌 Core by Silver Bullet Authors (repo)
- 🔌 Ghost by Zef Hemel (repo)
- 🔌 Git by Zef Hemel (repo)
- 🔌 Github by Zef Hemel (repo)
- 🔌 Mattermost by Zef Hemel (repo)
- 🔌 Mount by Zef Hemel (repo)
- 🔌 Query by Silver Bullet Authors (repo)
In a regular SB installation, the body of this query 👆 (in between the placeholders) would automatically be kept up to date as new pages are added to the space that match the query. 🤯 Have a look at the template/plug template (referenced in the render
clause) to see how the results are rendered using handlebars syntax and have a look at one of the linked pages to see how the metadata is specified, which is subsequently used to query and render in this page. And to learn about the specific plug, of course.
Explore more
Click on the links below to explore various aspects of Silver Bullet more in-depth:
More of a video person? Here are two to get you started:
- A Tour of Silver Bullet’s features — spoiler alert: it’s cool.
- A look the SilverBullet architecture — spoiler alert: it’s plugs all the way down.
Principles
Some core principles that underly Silver Bullet’s philosophy:
- Free and open source. Silver Bullet is MIT licensed.
- The truth is in the markdown. Markdown is simply text files, stored on disk. Nothing fancy. No proprietary formats or lock in. While SB uses a database for indexing and caching some data, all of that can be rebuilt from its markdown source at any time. If SB would ever go away, you can still read your pages with any text editor.
- Single, distraction-free mode. SB doesn’t have a separate view and edit mode. It doesn’t have a “focus mode.” You’re always in focused edit mode, why wouldn’t you?
- Keyboard oriented. You can use SB fully using the keyboard, typin’ the keys.
- Extend it your way. SB is highly extensible with 🔌 Plugs, and you can customize it to your liking and your workflows.
Installing Silver Bullet
Silver Bullet is built using Deno. To install it, you will need to have Deno installed (tested on 1.26 or later). If you have homebrew on a Mac, this is just a single brew install deno
away.
To run Silver Bullet create a folder for your pages (it can be empty, or be an existing folder with .md
files) and run the following command in your terminal:
deno run -A --unstable https://get.silverbullet.md <pages-path>
However, because this command is not super easy to remember, you may install it as well:
deno install -f --name silverbullet -A --unstable https://get.silverbullet.md
This will create a silverbullet
(feel free to replace silverbullet
in this command with whatever you like) alias in your ~/.deno/bin
folder. Make sure this path is in your PATH
environment variable.
This allows you to install Silver Bullet simply as follows:
silverbullet <pages-path>
By default, SB will bind to port 3000
, to use a different port use the
--port
flag. By default SB doesn’t offer any sort of authentication, to add basic password authentication, pass the --password
flag.
Once downloaded and booted, SB will print out a URL to open SB in your browser (spoiler alert: by default this will be http://localhost:3000 ).
That’s it! Enjoy.
If you (hypothetically) find bugs or have feature requests, post them in our issue tracker. Want to contribute? Check out the code.