|
27997
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
# Skips install_id (which is NAS-only and managed separately).
ensure_columns() {
local table="$1"
local label="schema: $table"
printf " %-36s " "$label"
if ! table_exists "$DB_SRC" "$table"; then
printf "✗ source missing — skipping\n"
return 0
fi
if ! table_exists "$NAS_DB" "$table"; then
printf "✓ fresh (created above)\n"
return 0
fi
local src_cols
src_cols=$(table_columns_with_types "$DB_SRC" "$table")
local nas_cols
nas_cols=$(table_columns "$NAS_DB" "$table")
local added=0
local added_names=""
while IFS='|' read -r name type; do
[ -z "$name" ] && continue
if ! echo "$nas_cols" | grep -Fxq "$name"; then
sqlite3 "$NAS_DB" "ALTER TABLE $table ADD COLUMN \"$name\" $type;"
added=$((added + 1))
added_names="$added_names $name"
fi
done <<< "$src_cols"
if [ "$added" -gt 0 ]; then
printf "✓ added %d:%s\n" "$added" "$added_names"
else
printf "✓ in sync\n"
fi
}
# Comma-separated, double-quoted column list for a table from source DB.
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
27997
|
|
28007
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
# Skips install_id (which is NAS-only and managed separately).
ensure_columns() {
local table="$1"
local label="schema: $table"
printf " %-36s " "$label"
if ! table_exists "$DB_SRC" "$table"; then
printf "✗ source missing — skipping\n"
return 0
fi
if ! table_exists "$NAS_DB" "$table"; then
printf "✓ fresh (created above)\n"
return 0
fi
local src_cols
src_cols=$(table_columns_with_types "$DB_SRC" "$table")
local nas_cols
nas_cols=$(table_columns "$NAS_DB" "$table")
local added=0
local added_names=""
while IFS='|' read -r name type; do
[ -z "$name" ] && continue
if ! echo "$nas_cols" | grep -Fxq "$name"; then
sqlite3 "$NAS_DB" "ALTER TABLE $table ADD COLUMN \"$name\" $type;"
added=$((added + 1))
added_names="$added_names $name"
fi
done <<< "$src_cols"
if [ "$added" -gt 0 ]; then
printf "✓ added %d:%s\n" "$added" "$added_names"
else
printf "✓ in sync\n"
fi
}
# Comma-separated, double-quoted column list for a table from source DB.
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28007
|
|
28008
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
# Skips install_id (which is NAS-only and managed separately).
ensure_columns() {
local table="$1"
local label="schema: $table"
printf " %-36s " "$label"
if ! table_exists "$DB_SRC" "$table"; then
printf "✗ source missing — skipping\n"
return 0
fi
if ! table_exists "$NAS_DB" "$table"; then
printf "✓ fresh (created above)\n"
return 0
fi
local src_cols
src_cols=$(table_columns_with_types "$DB_SRC" "$table")
local nas_cols
nas_cols=$(table_columns "$NAS_DB" "$table")
local added=0
local added_names=""
while IFS='|' read -r name type; do
[ -z "$name" ] && continue
if ! echo "$nas_cols" | grep -Fxq "$name"; then
sqlite3 "$NAS_DB" "ALTER TABLE $table ADD COLUMN \"$name\" $type;"
added=$((added + 1))
added_names="$added_names $name"
fi
done <<< "$src_cols"
if [ "$added" -gt 0 ]; then
printf "✓ added %d:%s\n" "$added" "$added_names"
else
printf "✓ in sync\n"
fi
}
# Comma-separated, double-quoted column list for a table from source DB.
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28008
|
|
28009
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
# Skips install_id (which is NAS-only and managed separately).
ensure_columns() {
local table="$1"
local label="schema: $table"
printf " %-36s " "$label"
if ! table_exists "$DB_SRC" "$table"; then
printf "✗ source missing — skipping\n"
return 0
fi
if ! table_exists "$NAS_DB" "$table"; then
printf "✓ fresh (created above)\n"
return 0
fi
local src_cols
src_cols=$(table_columns_with_types "$DB_SRC" "$table")
local nas_cols
nas_cols=$(table_columns "$NAS_DB" "$table")
local added=0
local added_names=""
while IFS='|' read -r name type; do
[ -z "$name" ] && continue
if ! echo "$nas_cols" | grep -Fxq "$name"; then
sqlite3 "$NAS_DB" "ALTER TABLE $table ADD COLUMN \"$name\" $type;"
added=$((added + 1))
added_names="$added_names $name"
fi
done <<< "$src_cols"
if [ "$added" -gt 0 ]; then
printf "✓ added %d:%s\n" "$added" "$added_names"
else
printf "✓ in sync\n"
fi
}
# Comma-separated, double-quoted column list for a table from source DB.
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28009
|
|
28020
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
# Skips install_id (which is NAS-only and managed separately).
ensure_columns() {
local table="$1"
local label="schema: $table"
printf " %-36s " "$label"
if ! table_exists "$DB_SRC" "$table"; then
printf "✗ source missing — skipping\n"
return 0
fi
if ! table_exists "$NAS_DB" "$table"; then
printf "✓ fresh (created above)\n"
return 0
fi
local src_cols
src_cols=$(table_columns_with_types "$DB_SRC" "$table")
local nas_cols
nas_cols=$(table_columns "$NAS_DB" "$table")
local added=0
local added_names=""
while IFS='|' read -r name type; do
[ -z "$name" ] && continue
if ! echo "$nas_cols" | grep -Fxq "$name"; then
sqlite3 "$NAS_DB" "ALTER TABLE $table ADD COLUMN \"$name\" $type;"
added=$((added + 1))
added_names="$added_names $name"
fi
done <<< "$src_cols"
if [ "$added" -gt 0 ]; then
printf "✓ added %d:%s\n" "$added" "$added_names"
else
printf "✓ in sync\n"
fi
}
# Comma-separated, double-quoted column list for a table from source DB.
[ line 159 of 696 (22%), character 5153 of 29289 (17%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28020
|
|
28021
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
# Skips install_id (which is NAS-only and managed separately).
ensure_columns() {
local table="$1"
local label="schema: $table"
printf " %-36s " "$label"
if ! table_exists "$DB_SRC" "$table"; then
printf "✗ source missing — skipping\n"
return 0
fi
if ! table_exists "$NAS_DB" "$table"; then
printf "✓ fresh (created above)\n"
return 0
fi
local src_cols
src_cols=$(table_columns_with_types "$DB_SRC" "$table")
local nas_cols
nas_cols=$(table_columns "$NAS_DB" "$table")
local added=0
local added_names=""
while IFS='|' read -r name type; do
[ -z "$name" ] && continue
if ! echo "$nas_cols" | grep -Fxq "$name"; then
sqlite3 "$NAS_DB" "ALTER TABLE $table ADD COLUMN \"$name\" $type;"
added=$((added + 1))
added_names="$added_names $name"
fi
done <<< "$src_cols"
if [ "$added" -gt 0 ]; then
printf "✓ added %d:%s\n" "$added" "$added_names"
else
printf "✓ in sync\n"
fi
}
# Comma-separated, double-quoted column list for a table from source DB.
[ line 159 of 696 (22%), character 5153 of 29289 (17%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28021
|
|
28022
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
# Skips install_id (which is NAS-only and managed separately).
ensure_columns() {
local table="$1"
local label="schema: $table"
printf " %-36s " "$label"
if ! table_exists "$DB_SRC" "$table"; then
printf "✗ source missing — skipping\n"
return 0
fi
if ! table_exists "$NAS_DB" "$table"; then
printf "✓ fresh (created above)\n"
return 0
fi
local src_cols
src_cols=$(table_columns_with_types "$DB_SRC" "$table")
local nas_cols
nas_cols=$(table_columns "$NAS_DB" "$table")
local added=0
local added_names=""
while IFS='|' read -r name type; do
[ -z "$name" ] && continue
if ! echo "$nas_cols" | grep -Fxq "$name"; then
sqlite3 "$NAS_DB" "ALTER TABLE $table ADD COLUMN \"$name\" $type;"
added=$((added + 1))
added_names="$added_names $name"
fi
done <<< "$src_cols"
if [ "$added" -gt 0 ]; then
printf "✓ added %d:%s\n" "$added" "$added_names"
else
printf "✓ in sync\n"
fi
}
# Comma-separated, double-quoted column list for a table from source DB.
[ line 159 of 696 (22%), character 5153 of 29289 (17%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28022
|
|
28023
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28023
|
|
28029
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28029
|
|
28030
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28030
|
|
28031
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28031
|
|
28032
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28032
|
|
28033
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano --version
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28033
|
|
28034
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano --version
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28034
|
|
28035
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano --version
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28035
|
|
28036
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano --version
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28036
|
|
28037
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano --version
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28037
|
|
28046
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano --version
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28046
|
|
28047
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] install_id: 2ff6574c-4272-4dbf-a20b-434b024c65fb
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
[+00m00s] ▶ Preflight checks
Source DB: OK (4.2G)
NAS mount: OK /Volumes/screenpipe
Archive DB: will be created
Frame data dir: OK (283 files, 318M)
Audio files: OK (2507 files, 267M)
[+00m00s] ▶ Counting source rows for 2026-05-11
frames: 6857
elements: 672129
ui_events: 7063
ocr_text: 2332
meetings: 1
audio_chunks: 2507
audio_transcriptions: 226
audio_tags: 0
speakers: 15 (all-time)
speaker_embeddings: 58 (all-time)
[+00m01s] ▶ Initialising tables (CREATE IF NOT EXISTS)
creating vision tables ✓ 0m00s
creating audio tables ✓ 0m01s
Error: in prepare, no such column: id
S idx_ocr_text_install_pk ON ocr_text(install_id, id);
error here ---^
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ sqlite3 ~/.screenpipe/db.sqlite "PRAGMA table_info(ocr_text);"
0|frame_id|INTEGER|1||0
1|text|TEXT|1||0
2|text_json|TEXT|0||0
3|app_name|TEXT|1|''|0
4|ocr_engine|TEXT|1|'unknown'|0
5|window_name|TEXT|0||0
6|focused|BOOLEAN|0|FALSE|0
7|text_length|INTEGER|0||0
8|sync_id|TEXT|0||0
9|synced_at|DATETIME|0||0
10|redacted_at|INTEGER|0||0
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano screenpipe_sync.sh
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ nano --version
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
-zsh
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
-zsh...
|
iTerm2
|
-zsh
|
NULL
|
28047
|
|
28048
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28048
|
|
28049
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
——#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 1 of 29290 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28049
|
|
28050
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
——#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 1 of 29290 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28050
|
|
28051
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ Unknown Command: ^_ ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28051
|
|
28052
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ Unknown Command: ^_ ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28052
|
|
28054
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ Unknown Command: ^_ ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28054
|
|
28055
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ Unknown Command: ^_ ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28055
|
|
28056
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ Unknown Command: ^_ ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28056
|
|
28057
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28057
|
|
28058
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28058
|
|
28062
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28062
|
|
28063
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28063
|
|
28064
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28064
|
|
28065
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28065
|
|
28066
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28066
|
|
28067
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28067
|
|
28079
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
|
iTerm2
|
nano
|
NULL
|
28079
|
|
28080
|
Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
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iTerm2ShellEditViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHel iTerm2ShellEditViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHelpDOCKERO ₴1DEV (-zsh)AnanoО $82File: screenpipe_sync.shAPP (screenpipe")• *3100% <7*nanoTue 12 May 20:49:27T81*4ModifiedUW PICO 5.09#!/bin/bashscreenpipe_sync.shSyncs Screenpipe SQLitedata (vision+ audio)to a NAS archive database.#Append-only, no deletions.Key design points-...222222222228=#1.Multi-install safe via install_id.#SourceIDsreset to 1 on everyscreenpipereinstall.To avoid collisions#in the NASarchive,every syncedtable gets an extra'install_idcolumn,#and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a#unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in#~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id - wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what##happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.# 2.Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the#source DB,the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit#column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.##3.#FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use sourcerowid. After areinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collideswith a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most#recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for#multi-installsearches (which can filter by install_id).##Usage#####./screenpipe_sync.sh#syncs yesterday./screenpipe_sync.sh2026-04-15syncs a specific date./screenpipe_sync.shtoday#syncs today so far./screenpipe_sync.sh--reset-install-id #rotate install_id and exit./screenpipe_sync.sh--show-install-id# print install_id and exitset-euo pipefail#CONFIGDB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-SHOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT: -/Volumes/screenpipe}"NAS_DB="SNAS_MOUNT/archive.db"NAS_DATA="SNAS_MOUNT/data"^GGet HelpExitWriteOutJustifyline 1 of 696(0%),Read FileWhere ischaracter 0 of 29289 (0%)Prev PgNext PgCut TextUnCut TextCur PosTo Spell...
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screenpipe fts miarate.sh U• screenpipe [SSH: nas) screenpipe fts miarate.sh U• screenpipe [SSH: nas)• _ #recycietr app- dataarchive.db.bak-pre-installidA Screenpipe - ArchiveA All docs - AFFiNEш DXP4800PLUS-B5F8) New TabE-10E(*Screenpipe — Archive( SQLite Web: archive.dtla» SOLite Web: db salite* Claude$% Manage extra usage for paidG 2 TB in 25 MB/s - Google Senano keyboard shortcuts X— New TabATACH AVS Deredoe "crenting indexes" n'$NAS DB' AS nas;Debug ConsoleTerminal PortsOON frames(video chunk id):Cabash A +v@ M* SSH: nas iômaster @0A0 (g1• lue 1z May 20.49.21• coodlle Gemini.•• XGemini4. Luttne textrress ctrl+ kHow to Jump to a Line on a MacBecause macOS uses that ancient 2006 version of nano, the Ctrl + . shortcut is incrediblystrict abour now vou oress it• The exact keystroke: Press and hold Ctrl + Shift + - (the dash key).• The fallback: If that still aives vou an "Unknown Command" error. press Ctrll + W(Search), and then immediatelv press Ctrl + T. This will flio the search promot into a "GoTo Line" promptHiahlv Recommended: Fix vour Mac Terminal so nano works normallvIf you use the terminal frequently for your web development or home lab work, you can tell yourMac to treat the Option key like a normal Alt key. This will make all standard nano shortcutswork pertectly.If using the default Mac Terminal:1. Open the Terminal app.2. In the top menu bar, ao to Terminal › Settinas (or Preferences).3. Go to the Profilles tab at the tor.4. Go to the Keyboard tab on the riaht side.5. Check the box that savs "Use Ontion as Meta kev"If using iTerm2:1. Go to iTerm?> Settinas > Profiles > Kevs.2. At the bottom. chanae the "Left Option Kev" from "Normal" to "Esc+"Ack CeminilProVGemini ic Alland can make mistakes includina ahout neonle Your orivacv and GeminiSummarize page<nano-shorts.md^=ctrl key M = Alt key(F1)(F3)(F4)(r5)(F6)(F9)(F10)(F131F14(F15)(F16)(M-G)(M-R)M-A))(M-W)(M-6)32,M-^M-}M.S^SnaceM-SoaceTEEERSI7EM_Q))(M-O)(M-I)M-?M-.)(M-.)Display this help textclose the current Tle outter Exat Tron nanoWrite the current file to diskJustify the current paragraphInsert another tile 1nto the current oneSearch for a string or a regular expressionMove to the next screenCut the curront line and ctoro it in the cuthufferUncut frominto the current lineDisplay the position of the cursorinvoke the soell checker. 1t avanlableGo to line and column numberReplace a string or a regular expressionMark text at the cursor positionRepeat last searchCopy the current line and store it in the cutbufferIndent the current uineUnindent the current lineMove forward one characterMove nack one characterMove forward one wordMovebackMOVEto the previous lineMovethe next lineMovethe beginning of the current lineMovethe end of thecurrent luneMoveMovethe beginning of the current paragraphtotheMoveend of the current paragraphthefirstlinefileMove to thelast line of the fileMove to the matchina bracketScroll up one line without scrolling the cursonScroll down one Uine without scrouuind the cursonSwitch to the previous tile outterSwitch to the next file bufferIncort the neyt kevstroke verhatimInsert a tab at thecursor positionInsert anewline at thecursor positionDeleteDoloto tho charnctor to tho loft of tho curcorGut from the cursor nosition to the end of the filenustifv the entire fileCount the number of words. lines. and characters...
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iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHe iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHelp‹$0DOCKERO 81DEV (-zsh)nanoО $82File: screenpipe_sync.shAPP (screenpipe")• *3100% <8• Tue 12 May 20:49:28nanoT81*4ModifiedUW PICO 5.09B!/bin/bashscreenpipe_sync.sh# Syncs Screenpipe SQLitedata (vision+ audio)to a NAS archive database.#Append-only, no deletions.## Key design points#-....22222222288m#1. Multi-install safe via install_id.#SourceIDs reset to 1 on everyscreenpipereinstall.To avoid collisions#in the NAS archive,every syncedtable gets an extra'install_idcolumn,#and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a#unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in#~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id - wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what##happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.# 2.Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the#source DB,the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit#column lists so positionalmismatches can't occur.##3.#FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source'id'asrowid. After areinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collideswith a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most#recent install. Falls back to LIKE querieson the base tables for#multi-installsearches (which can filter by install_id).##Usage#####./screenpipe_sync.sh#syncs yesterday./screenpipe_sync.sh2026-04-15syncs a specific date./screenpipe_sync.shtoday#syncs today so far./screenpipe_sync.sh--reset-install-id #rotate install_id and exit./screenpipe_sync.sh--show-install-id# print install_id and exitset-euo pipefail#CONFIGDB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-SHOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT: -/Volumes/screenpipe}"NAS_DB="SNAS_MOUNT/archive.db"NAS_DATA="SNAS_MOUNT/data"^GGet HelpExitWriteOutJustifyline 1 of 696(0%),Read FileWhere ischaracter 0 of 29289(0%)Prev PgNext PgCut TextUnCut TextCur PosTo Spell...
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+0 .*•Tumix botn scripts to nandle tables without +0 .*•Tumix botn scripts to nandle tables without an id column.+8 -1SqLIte "ANAS,DB' "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS J6k.S(tbl)_ instolL_pk ON S(tbl)(instalL_1d, ronie);*salites "SNAS DB" "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS idx S<tbU Installok ON S<tbl(installid, rowid):*Fixed both scrints. They now check if a table has an di column before creatina the unique index. If the table lacks an 3dl columnl•) screennine svnc.ch (line 269-375): Added check for 1a column. fallback to rouidl• ›_ screenpipe_fts_migrate.sh (line 106-113): Added check for id column, fallback to rowidYou can now retry runnina the sunc scriot from vour Mac.0 aila.1 file +7 ›Ask anvthinalK SSH: nas %& master O ®0 A0 ( 1ó Not Committed Yet Screen Reader Optimized Ln 372, Col 29 Spaces: 2 UTF-8 LF Shell Script Teams Windsurf - Settings100% L28 • Tue 12 May 20:49:28••• Хuis incredlolv1 + W.motinioa cocan tell yourino shortcutsnano-shorts.md^ = Ctrl key M = Alt key(F1)(F3)(F4)(r5)(F6)(F9)(F10)(F13)(F14)(F15)(F16)(M-G)(M-R)M-A))(M-W)(M-6)M-^M-}M-f^SpaceM-SpaceTEEERSITE(M-9)(M-O)(M-I)M-?(M-,)(M-.)Pro VDisplay this help textclose the current Tle outter Exat Tron nanoWrite the current file to diskJustify the current paragraphInsert another tile into the current oneSearch for a string or a regular expressionMove to the next screenCut the curront line and ctoro it in the cuthufferUncut frominto the current lineDisplay the position of the cursorinvoke the soell checker. 1t avanlableGo to line and column numberReplace a string or a regular expressionMark text at the cursor positionRepeat last searchCopy the current line and store it in the cutbufferIndent the current uineUnindent the current lineMove forward one characterMove nack one characterMove forward one wordMovebackMOVEto the previous lineMovethe next lineMovethe beginning of the current lineMovethe end of thecurrent uneMoveMovethe beginning of the current paragraphtotheend of the current paragraphMovethefirstlinefileMove to thelast line of the fileMove to the matchina bracketScroll up one line without scrolling the cursorScroll down one Uine without scrouuind the cursonSwitch to the previous file bufferSwitch to the next file bufferIncort the neyt kevctroke vorhatimInsert a tab at thecursor positionInsert anewline at thecursor positionDeleteDoloto tho charnctor to tho loft of tho curcorCut from the cursor position to the end of the filenustifv the entire fileCount the number of words, lines, and characters...
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iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHe iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHelp‹$0DOCKERO 81DEV (-zsh)nanoО $82File: screenpipe_sync.shAPP (screenpipe")• *3100% <8• Tue 12 May 20:49:28nanoT81*4ModifiedUW PICO 5.09B!/bin/bashscreenpipe_sync.sh# Syncs Screenpipe SQLitedata (vision+ audio)to a NAS archive database.#Append-only, no deletions.## Key design points#-....2222222228=#1. Multi-install safe via install_id.#SourceIDs reset to 1 on everyscreenpipereinstall.To avoid collisions#in the NAS archive,every syncedtable gets an extra'install_idcolumn,#and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a#unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in#~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id - wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what##happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.# 2.Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the#source DB,the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit#column lists so positionalmismatches can't occur.##3.#FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source'id'asrowid. After areinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collideswith a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most#recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for#multi-installsearches (which can filter by install_id).##Usage#####./screenpipe_sync.sh#syncs yesterday./screenpipe_sync.sh2026-04-15syncs a specific date/screenpipe_sync.shtoday#syncs today so far./screenpipe_sync.sh--reset-install-id #rotate install_id and exit./screenpipe_sync.sh--show-install-id# print install_id and exitset-euo pipefail#CONFIGDB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-SHOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT: -/Volumes/screenpipe}"NAS_DB="SNAS_MOUNT/archive.db"NAS_DATA="SNAS_MOUNT/data"^GGet HelpExitWriteOutJustifyline 1 of 696(0%),Read FileWhere ischaracter 0 of 29289(0%)Prev PgNext PgCut TextUnCut TextCur PosTo Spell...
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Selectionscreenpipe SSH: nas — screenpipe_sync.sh Selectionscreenpipe SSH: nas — screenpipe_sync.sh — Moditied+0 .*•› Ch appTumix botn scripts to nandle tables without an id column.+8 -1SqLIte "ANAS,DB' "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS J6k.S(tbl)_ instolL_pk ON S(tbl)(instalL_1d, ronie);*salites "SNAS DB" "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS idx S<tbU Installok ON S<tbl(installid, rowid):*Fixed both scrints. They now check if a table has an di column before creatina the unique index. If the table lacks an 3dl columnl•) screennine svnc.ch (line 269-375): Added check for 1a column. fallback to rouidl• ›_ screenpipe_fts_migrate.sh (line 106-113): Added check for id column, fallback to rowidYou can now retry runnina the sunc scrint from vour Mac.0 aila.2 files +10 ›Ask anvthinalX SSH: nas %& master © @0A0 (1ó Not Committed Yet Screen Reader Optimized Ln 372, Col 29 Spaces: 2 UTF-8 LF Shell Script Teams Windsurf - Settings••• Xuis incredlolv1 + W.motinoa cocan tell yourino shortcutsPro V100% 58 • Tue 12 May 20:49:31E nano-shorts.md^ = Ctrl key M = Alt key(F1)(F3)(F4)(r5)(F6)(F9)(F10)(F13)(F14)(F15)(F16)(M-G)(M-R)M-A))(M-W)(M-6)M-^M-}M-f^SpaceM-SpaceTEEERSITE(M-9)(M-O)(M-I)M-?(M-,)(M-.)Display this help textclose the current Tle outter Exat Tron nanoWrite the current file to diskJustify the current paragraphInsert another tile into the current oneSearch for a string or a regular expressionMove to the next screenCut the curront line and ctoro it in the cuthufferUncut frominto the current lineDisplay the position of the cursorinvoke the soell checker. 1t avanlableGo to line and column numberReplace a string or a regular expressionMark text at the cursor positionRepeat last searchCopy the current line and store it in the cutbufferIndent the current uineUnindent the current lineMove forward one characterMove nack one characterMove forward one wordMovebackMOVEto the previous lineMovethe next lineMovethe beginning of the current lineMovethe end of thecurrent uneMoveMovethe beginning of the current paragraphtotheend of the current paragraphMovethefirstlinefileMove to thelast line of the fileMove to the matchina bracketScroll up one line without scrolling the cursorScroll down one Uine without scrouuind the cursonSwitch to the previous file bufferSwitch to the next file bufferIncort the neyt kevstroke verhatimInsert a tab at thecursor positionInsert anewline at thecursor positionDeleteDoloto tho charnctor to tho loft of tho curcorCut from the cursor position to the end of the filenustifv the entire fileCount the number of words, lines, and characters...
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iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHe iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHelp‹$0DOCKERO 81DEV (-zsh)nanoО $82File: screenpipe_sync.shAPP (screenpipe")• *3100% <8• Tue 12 May 20:49:31nano181*4ModifiedUW PICO 5.09B!/bin/bashscreenpipe_sync.sh# Syncs Screenpipe SQLitedata (vision+ audio)to a NAS archive database.#Append-only, no deletions.## Key design points#-....22222222288m#1. Multi-install safe via install_id.#SourceIDs reset to 1 on everyscreenpipereinstall.To avoid collisions#in the NAS archive,every syncedtable gets an extra'install_idcolumn,#and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a#unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in#~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id - wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what##happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.# 2.Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the#source DB,the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit#column lists so positionalmismatches can't occur.##3.#FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source'id'asrowid. After areinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collideswith a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most#recent install. Falls back to LIKE querieson the base tables for#multi-installsearches (which can filter by install_id).##Usage#####./screenpipe_sync.sh#syncs yesterday./screenpipe_sync.sh2026-04-15syncs a specific date./screenpipe_sync.shtoday#syncs today so far./screenpipe_sync.sh--reset-install-id #rotate install_id and exit./screenpipe_sync.sh--show-install-id# print install_id and exitset-euo pipefail#CONFIGDB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-SHOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT: -/Volumes/screenpipe}"NAS_DB="SNAS_MOUNT/archive.db"NAS_DATA="SNAS_MOUNT/data"^GGet HelpExitWriteOutJustifyline 1 of 696(0%),Read FileWhere ischaracter 0 of 29289 (0%)Prev PgNext PgCut TextUnCut TextCur PosTo Spell...
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iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHe iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHelp‹$0DOCKERO 81DEV (-zsh)nanoО $82File: screenpipe_sync.shAPP (screenpipe")• *3100% <8• Tue 12 May 20:49:32nanoT81*4ModifiedUW PICO 5.09B!/bin/bashscreenpipe_sync.sh# Syncs Screenpipe SQLitedata (vision+ audio)to a NAS archive database.#Append-only, no deletions.## Key design points#-....22222222288m#1. Multi-install safe via install_id.#SourceIDs reset to 1 on everyscreenpipereinstall.To avoid collisions#in the NAS archive,every syncedtable gets an extra'install_idcolumn,#and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a#unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in#~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id - wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what##happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.# 2.Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the#source DB,the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit#column lists so positionalmismatches can't occur.##3.#FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source'id'asrowid. After areinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collideswith a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most#recent install. Falls back to LIKE querieson the base tables for#multi-installsearches (which can filter by install_id).##Usage#####./screenpipe_sync.sh#syncs yesterday./screenpipe_sync.sh2026-04-15syncs a specific date./screenpipe_sync.shtoday#syncs today so far./screenpipe_sync.sh--reset-install-id #rotate install_id and exit./screenpipe_sync.sh--show-install-id# print install_id and exitset-euo pipefail#CONFIGDB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-SHOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT: -/Volumes/screenpipe}"NAS_DB="SNAS_MOUNT/archive.db"NAS_DATA="SNAS_MOUNT/data"^GGet HelpExitWriteOutJustifyline 1 of 696(0%),Read FileWhere ischaracter 0 of 29289(0%)Prev PgNext PgCut TextUnCut TextCur PosTo Spell...
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SelectionTerminalscreenpipe SSH: nas — screenpipe_ SelectionTerminalscreenpipe SSH: nas — screenpipe_sync.sh — Moditied+0 .*•› Ch appTumix botn scripts to nandle tables without an id column.+8 -1SqLIte "ANAS,DB' "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS J6k.S(tbl)_ instolL_pk ON S(tbl)(instalL_1d, ronie);*salites "SNAS DB" "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS idx S<tbU Installok ON S<tbl(installid, rowid):*Fixed both scrints. They now check if a table has an di column before creatina the unique index. If the table lacks an 3dl columnl•) screennine svnc.ch (line 269-375): Added check for 1a column. fallback to rouidl• ›_ screenpipe_fts_migrate.sh (line 106-113): Added check for id column, fallback to rowidYou can now retry runnina the sunc scrint from vour Mac.0 aila.2 files +10 ›Ask anvthinalX SSH: nas %& master © @0A0 (1ó Not Committed Yet Screen Reader Optimized Ln 372, Col 29 Spaces: 2 UTF-8 LF Shell Script Teams Windsurf - Settings••• Xuis incredlolv1 + W.motinoa cocan tell yourino shortcutsPro V100% 58 • Tue 12 May 20:49:32E nano-shorts.md^ = Ctrl key M = Alt key(F1)(F3)(F4)(r5)(F6)(F8)(F9)(F10)(F13)(F14)(F15)(F16)(M-G)(M-R)M-A))(M-W)(M-6)M-^M-}M-f^SpaceM-SpaceTEEERSITE(M-9)(M-O)(M-I)M-?(M-,)(M-.)Display this help textclose the current Tle outter Exat Tron nanoWrite the current file to diskJustify the current paragraphInsert another tile into the current oneSearch for a string or a regular expressionMove to the next screenCut the curront line and ctoro it in the cuthufferUncut frominto the current lineDisplay the position of the cursorinvoke the soell checker. 1t avanlableGo to line and column numberReplace a string or a regular expressionMark text at the cursor positionRepeat last searchCopy the current line and store it in the cutbufferIndent the current uineUnindent the current lineMove forward one characterMove nack one characterMove forward one wordMovebackMOVEto the previous lineMovethe next lineMovethe beginning of the current lineMovethe end of thecurrent uneMoveMovethe beginning of the current paragraphtotheend of the current paragraphMovethefirstlinefileMove to thelast line of the fileMove to the matchina bracketScroll up one line without scrolling the cursorScroll down one Uine without scrouuind the cursonSwitch to the previous file bufferSwitch to the next file bufferIncort the neyt kevstroke verhatimInsert a tab at thecursor positionInsert anewline at thecursor positionDeleteDoloto tho charnctor to tho loft of tho curcorCut from the cursor position to the end of the filenustifv the entire fileCount the number of words, lines, and characters...
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iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHe iTerm2ShellEdit ViewSessionScriptsProfilesWindowHelp‹$0DOCKERO 81DEV (-zsh)nanoО $82File: screenpipe_sync.shAPP (screenpipe")• *3100% <8• Tue 12 May 20:49:34nano181*4ModifiedUW PICO 5.09B!/bin/bashscreenpipe_sync.sh# Syncs Screenpipe SQLitedata (vision+ audio)to a NAS archive database.#Append-only, no deletions.## Key design points#-....2222222228=#1. Multi-install safe via install_id.#SourceIDs reset to 1 on everyscreenpipereinstall.To avoid collisions#in the NAS archive,every syncedtable gets an extra'install_idcolumn,#and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a#unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in#~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id - wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what##happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.# 2.Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the#source DB,the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit#column lists so positionalmismatches can't occur.##3.#FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source'id'asrowid. After areinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collideswith a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most#recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for#multi-installsearches (which can filter by install_id).##Usage#####./screenpipe_sync.sh#syncs yesterday./screenpipe_sync.sh2026-04-15syncs a specific date/screenpipe_sync.shtoday#syncs today so far./screenpipe_sync.sh--reset-install-id #rotate install_id and exit./screenpipe_sync.sh--show-install-id# print install_id and exitset-euo pipefail#CONFIGDB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-SHOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT: -/Volumes/screenpipe}"NAS_DB="SNAS_MOUNT/archive.db"NAS_DATA="SNAS_MOUNT/data"^GGet HelpExitWriteOutJustifyline 1 of 696(0%),Read FileWhere ischaracter 0 of 29289 (0%)Prev PgNext PgCut TextUnCut TextCur PosTo Spell...
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selectionTerminalWindowscreenpipe [SSH: nas] — scr selectionTerminalWindowscreenpipe [SSH: nas] — screenpipe_sync.sh — Modified› Ch appTumix botn scripts to nandle tables without an id column.+0 .*•+8 -1SqLIte "ANAS,DB' "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS J6k.S(tbl)_ instolL_pk ON S(tbl)(instalL_1d, ronie);*© screenpipe.dbsalites "SNAS DB" "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS idx S<tbU Installok ON S<tbl(installid, rowid):*Fixed both scrints. They now check if a table has an di column before creatina the unique index. If the table lacks an 3dl columnl•) screennine svnc.ch (line 269-375): Added check for 1a column. fallback to rouidl• ›_ screenpipe_fts_migrate.sh (line 106-113): Added check for id column, fallback to rowidYou can now retry runnina the sunc scrint from vour Mac.0 aila.@bash A +w@@@.Icx2 files +10 ›Ask anvthinalK SSH: nas %& master O ®0 A0 ( 1ó Not Committed Yet Screen Reader Optimized Ln 372, Col 29 Spaces: 2 UTF-8 LF Shell Script Teams Windsurf - Settings••• Xuis incredlolv1 + W.motinoa cocan tell yourino shortcutsPro V100% 58 • Tue 12 May 20:49:34E nano-shorts.md^ = Ctrl key M = Alt key(F1)(F3)(F4)(r5)(F6)(F8)(F9)(F10)(F13)(F14)(F15)(F16)(M-G)(M-R)M-A))(M-W)(M-6)M-^M-}M-f^SpaceM-SpaceTEEERSITE(M-9)(M-O)(M-I)M-?(M-,)(M-.)Display this help textclose the current Tle outter Exat Tron nanoWrite the current file to diskJustify the current paragraphInsert another tile 1nto the current oneSearch for a string or a regular expressionMove to the next screenCut the curront line and ctoro it in the cuthufferUncut frominto the current lineDisplay the position of the cursorinvoke the soell checker. 1t avanlaoleGo to line and column numberReplace a string or a regular expressionMark text at the cursor positionRepeat last searchCopy the current line and store it in the cutbufferIndent the current uineUnindent the current lineMove forward one characterMove nack one characterMove forward one wordMovebackMOVEto the previous lineMovethe next lineMovethe beginning of the current lineMovethe end of thecurrent uneMoveMovethe beginning of the current paragraphtotheend of the current paragraphMovethefirstlinefileMove to thelast line of the fileMove to the matchina bracketScroll up one line without scrolling the cursorScroll down one Uine without scrouuind the cursonSwitch to the previous file bufferSwitch to the next file bufferIncort the neyt kevstroke verhatimInsert a tab at thecursor positionInsert anewline at thecursor positionDeleteDoloto tho charnctor to tho loft of tho curcorCut from the cursor position to the end of the filenustifv the entire fileCount the number of words, lines, and characters...
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selectionTerminalWindowscreenpipe [SSH: nas] — scr selectionTerminalWindowscreenpipe [SSH: nas] — screenpipe_sync.sh — Modified+0 .*•› Ch appTumix botn scripts to nandle tables without an id column.+8 -1SqLIte "ANAS,DB' "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS J6k.S(tbl)_ instolL_pk ON S(tbl)(instalL_1d, ronie);*salites "SNAS DB" "CREATE UNTQUE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS idx S<tbU Installok ON S<tbl(installid, rowid):*Fixed both scrints. They now check if a table has an di column before creatina the unique index. If the table lacks an 3dl columnl•) screennine svnc.ch (line 269-375): Added check for 1a column. fallback to rouidl• ›_ screenpipe_fts_migrate.sh (line 106-113): Added check for id column, fallback to rowidYou can now retry runnina the sunc scriot from vour Mac.0 aila.AT e de e "ecesting intenes e1 file +7 >Ask anvthinalK SSH: nas %& master O ®0 A0 ( 1ó Not Committed Yet Screen Reader Optimized Ln 372, Col 29 Spaces: 2 UTF-8 LF Shell Script Teams Windsurf - Settings100% 58 • Tue 12 May 20:49:35••• Xuis incredlolv1 + W.motinoa cocan tell yourino shortcutsnano-shorts.md^ = Ctrl key M = Alt key(F1)(F3)(F4)(r5)(F6)(F8)(F9)(F10)(F13)(F14)(F15)(F16)(M-G)(M-R)M-A))(M-W)(M-6)M-^M-}M-f^SpaceM-SpaceTEEERSITE(M-9)(M-O)(M-I)M-?(M-,)(M-.)Pro VDisplay this help textclose the current Tle outter Exat Tron nanoWrite the current file to diskJustify the current paragraphInsert another tile into the current oneSearch for a string or a regular expressionMove to the next screenCut the curront line and ctoro it in the cuthufferUncut frominto the current lineDisplay the position of the cursorinvoke the soell checker. 1t avanlableGo to line and column numberReplace a string or a regular expressionMark text at the cursor positionRepeat last searchCopy the current line and store it in the cutbufferIndent the current uineUnindent the current lineMove forward one characterMove nack one characterMove forward one wordMovebackMOVEto the previous lineMovethe next lineMovethe beginning of the current lineMovethe end of thecurrent uneMoveMovethe beginning of the current paragraphtotheend of the current paragraphMovethefirstlinefileMove to thelast line of the fileMove to the matchina bracketScroll up one line without scrolling the cursorScroll down one Uine without scrouuind the cursonSwitch to the previous file bufferSwitch to the next file bufferIncort the neyt kevctroke vorhatimInsert a tab at thecursor positionInsert anewline at thecursor positionDeleteDoloto tho charnctor to tho loft of tho curcorCut from the cursor position to the end of the filenustifv the entire fileCount the number of words, lines, and characters...
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Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry Last login: Tue May 12 20:12:05 on ttys007
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
Poetry could not find a pyproject.toml file in /Users/lukas/jiminny/app or its parents
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ open ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/jiminny/app (JY-20725-handle-HS-search-rate-limit) $ cd ~/.screenpipe
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ll
total 8720288
drwxr-xr-x 21 lukas staff 672 12 May 09:21 .
drwx------+ 96 lukas staff 3072 12 May 20:12 ..
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 6148 12 May 20:14 .DS_Store
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 37 11 May 20:54 .sync_install_id
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 0 10 May 14:43 clipboard-disabled-after-crash
drwxr-xr-x 3660 lukas staff 117120 12 May 17:41 data
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 4457357312 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 65536 12 May 09:26 db.sqlite-shm
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 5001712 12 May 17:41 db.sqlite-wal
drwxr-xr-x 9 lukas staff 288 10 May 11:39 pipes
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 28408 6 May 21:02 screenpipe.2026-05-06.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 566164 7 May 21:50 screenpipe.2026-05-07.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 382102 8 May 22:20 screenpipe.2026-05-08.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 167023 9 May 23:04 screenpipe.2026-05-09.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 88266 10 May 23:51 screenpipe.2026-05-10.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 528943 11 May 22:54 screenpipe.2026-05-11.0.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 lukas staff 245484 12 May 17:39 screenpipe.2026-05-12.0.log
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 32005 11 May 20:54 screenpipe_sync.sh
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 14994 6 May 20:26 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak
-rwxr-xr-x@ 1 lukas staff 21485 10 May 13:34 screenpipe_sync.sh.bak2
-rw-r--r--@ 1 lukas staff 8541 11 May 20:54 sync.log
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ cat screenpipe_sync.sh | pbcopy
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
lukas@Lukas-Kovaliks-MacBook-Pro-Jiminny ~/.screenpipe $ ~/.screenpipe/screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
Pico Help Text
Pico is designed to be a simple, easy-to-use text editor with a
layout very similar to the Alpine mailer. The status line at the
top of the display shows pico's version, the current file being
edited and whether or not there are outstanding modifications
that have not been saved. The third line from the bottom is used
to report informational messages and for additional command input.
The bottom two lines list the available editing commands.
Each character typed is automatically inserted into the buffer
at the current cursor position. Editing commands and cursor
movement (besides arrow keys) are given to pico by typing
special control-key sequences. A caret, '^', is used to denote
the control key, sometimes marked "CTRL", so the CTRL-q key
combination is written as ^Q.
The following functions are available in pico (where applicable,
corresponding function key commands are in parentheses).
^G (F1) Display this help text.
^F move Forward a character.
^B move Backward a character.
^P move to the Previous line.
^N move to the Next line.
^A move to the beginning of the current line.
^E move to the End of the current line.
^V (F8) move forward a page of text.
^Y (F7) move backward a page of text.
^W (F6) Search for (where is) text, neglecting case.
^L Refresh the display.
^D Delete the character at the cursor position.
^^ Mark cursor position as beginning of selected text.
Note: Setting mark when already set unselects text.
^K (F9) Cut selected text (displayed in inverse characters).
Note: The selected text's boundary on the cursor side
ends at the left edge of the cursor. So, with
[ Unknown Command: Next Page ]
^X Exit Help ^V Next Pg
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] ========================================
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
[2026-05-12 20:19:37] Screenpipe sync starting for: 2026-05-11
UW PICO 5.09 New Buffer
[ Read 695 lines ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
UW PICO 5.09 File: screenpipe_sync.sh Modified
#!/bin/bash
# screenpipe_sync.sh
# Syncs Screenpipe SQLite data (vision + audio) to a NAS archive database.
# Append-only, no deletions.
#
# Key design points
# -----------------
# 1. Multi-install safe via install_id.
# Source IDs reset to 1 on every screenpipe reinstall. To avoid collisions
# in the NAS archive, every synced table gets an extra `install_id` column,
# and the logical primary key becomes (install_id, id) enforced by a
# unique index. The install_id is a UUID stored in
# ~/.screenpipe/.sync_install_id — wiping ~/.screenpipe/ (which is what
# happens on reinstall) discards it, so the next run generates a new one.
#
# 2. Schema-drift tolerant. If screenpipe migrations add new columns to the
# source DB, the NAS gets ALTER TABLE'd to match. Inserts use explicit
# column lists so positional mismatches can't occur.
#
# 3. FTS caveat. FTS tables in the NAS use source `id` as rowid. After a
# reinstall, INSERT OR IGNORE will silently skip rows whose id collides
# with a previous install's id, so FTS only reliably indexes the most
# recent install. Falls back to LIKE queries on the base tables for
# multi-install searches (which can filter by install_id).
#
# Usage
# -----
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh # syncs yesterday
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh 2026-04-15 # syncs a specific date
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh today # syncs today so far
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --reset-install-id # rotate install_id and exit
# ./screenpipe_sync.sh --show-install-id # print install_id and exit
set -euo pipefail
# ─── CONFIG ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
DB_SRC="${SCREENPIPE_DB:-$HOME/.screenpipe/db.sqlite}"
NAS_MOUNT="${NAS_MOUNT:-/Volumes/screenpipe}"
NAS_DB="$NAS_MOUNT/archive.db"
NAS_DATA="$NAS_MOUNT/data"
[ line 1 of 696 (0%), character 0 of 29289 (0%) ]
^G Get Help ^O WriteOut ^R Read File ^Y Prev Pg ^K Cut Text ^C Cur Pos
^X Exit ^J Justify ^W Where is ^V Next Pg ^U UnCut Text ^T To Spell
DOCKER
Close Tab
DEV (-zsh)
Close Tab
APP (screenpipe")
Close Tab
nano
Close Tab
⌥⌘1
nano...
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