HLEDGER-WEB(1) hledger User Manuals HLEDGER-WEB(1) NAME hledger-web - robust, friendly plain text accounting (Web version) SYNOPSIS hledger-web [OPTIONS] # run temporarily & browse hledger-web --serve [OPTIONS] # run without stopping hledger-web --serve-api [OPTIONS] # run JSON server only hledger web -- [OPTIONS] [QUERYARGS] # start from hledger DESCRIPTION This manual is for hledger's web interface, version 1.29.99. See also the hledger manual for common concepts and file formats. hledger is a robust, user-friendly, cross-platform set of programs for tracking money, time, or any other commodity, using double-entry accounting and a simple, editable file format. hledger is inspired by and largely compatible with ledger(1), and largely interconvertible with beancount(1). hledger-web is a simple web application for browsing and adding trans- actions. It provides a more user-friendly UI than the hledger CLI or hledger-ui TUI, showing more at once (accounts, the current account register, balance charts) and allowing history-aware data entry, inter- active searching, and bookmarking. hledger-web also lets you share a journal with multiple users, or even the public web. There is no access control, so if you need that you should put it behind a suitable web proxy. As a small protection against data loss when running an unprotected instance, it writes a numbered backup of the main journal file (only) on every edit. Like hledger, it reads data from one or more files in journal, time- clock, timedot, or CSV format. The default file is .hledger.journal in your home directory; this can be overridden with one or more -f FILE options, or the LEDGER_FILE environment variable. For more about this see hledger(1). hledger-web can be run in three modes: o Transient mode (the default): your default web browser will be opened to show the app if possible, and the app exits automatically after two minutes of inactivity (no requests received and no open browser windows viewing it). o With --serve: the app runs without stopping, and without opening a browser. o With --serve-api: only the JSON API is served. In all cases hledger-web runs as a foreground process, logging requests to stdout. OPTIONS Command-line options and arguments may be used to set an initial filter on the data. These filter options are not shown in the web UI, but it will be applied in addition to any search query entered there. Note: if invoking hledger-web as a hledger subcommand, write -- before options, as shown in the synopsis above. --serve serve and log requests, don't browse or auto-exit after timeout --serve-api like --serve, but serve only the JSON web API, without the server-side web UI --host=IPADDR listen on this IP address (default: 127.0.0.1) --port=PORT listen on this TCP port (default: 5000) --socket=SOCKETFILE use a unix domain socket file to listen for requests instead of a TCP socket. Implies --serve. It can only be used if the operating system can provide this type of socket. --base-url=URL set the base url (default: http://IPADDR:PORT). Note: affects url generation but not route parsing. Can be useful if running behind a reverse web proxy that does path rewriting. --file-url=URL set the static files url (default: BASEURL/static). hledger-web normally serves static files itself, but if you wanted to serve them from another server for efficiency, you would set the url with this. --capabilities=CAP[,CAP..] enable the view, add, and/or manage capabilities (default: view,add) --capabilities-header=HTTPHEADER read capabilities to enable from a HTTP header, like X-Sand- storm-Permissions (default: disabled) --test run hledger-web's tests and exit. hspec test runner args may follow a --, eg: hledger-web --test -- --help hledger input options: -f FILE --file=FILE use a different input file. For stdin, use - (default: $LEDGER_FILE or $HOME/.hledger.journal) --rules-file=RULESFILE Conversion rules file to use when reading CSV (default: FILE.rules) --separator=CHAR Field separator to expect when reading CSV (default: ',') --alias=OLD=NEW rename accounts named OLD to NEW --anon anonymize accounts and payees --pivot FIELDNAME use some other field or tag for the account name -I --ignore-assertions disable balance assertion checks (note: does not disable balance assignments) -s --strict do extra error checking (check that all posted accounts are declared) hledger reporting options: -b --begin=DATE include postings/txns on or after this date (will be adjusted to preceding subperiod start when using a report interval) -e --end=DATE include postings/txns before this date (will be adjusted to fol- lowing subperiod end when using a report interval) -D --daily multiperiod/multicolumn report by day -W --weekly multiperiod/multicolumn report by week -M --monthly multiperiod/multicolumn report by month -Q --quarterly multiperiod/multicolumn report by quarter -Y --yearly multiperiod/multicolumn report by year -p --period=PERIODEXP set start date, end date, and/or reporting interval all at once using period expressions syntax --date2 match the secondary date instead (see command help for other effects) --today=DATE override today's date (affects relative smart dates, for tests/examples) -U --unmarked include only unmarked postings/txns (can combine with -P or -C) -P --pending include only pending postings/txns -C --cleared include only cleared postings/txns -R --real include only non-virtual postings -NUM --depth=NUM hide/aggregate accounts or postings more than NUM levels deep -E --empty show items with zero amount, normally hidden (and vice-versa in hledger-ui/hledger-web) -B --cost convert amounts to their cost/selling amount at transaction time -V --market convert amounts to their market value in default valuation com- modities -X --exchange=COMM convert amounts to their market value in commodity COMM --value convert amounts to cost or market value, more flexibly than -B/-V/-X --infer-market-prices use transaction prices (recorded with @ or @@) as additional market prices, as if they were P directives --auto apply automated posting rules to modify transactions. --forecast generate future transactions from periodic transaction rules, for the next 6 months or till report end date. In hledger-ui, also make ordinary future transactions visible. --commodity-style Override the commodity style in the output for the specified commodity. For example 'EUR1.000,00'. --color=WHEN (or --colour=WHEN) Should color-supporting commands use ANSI color codes in text output. 'auto' (default): whenever stdout seems to be a color- supporting terminal. 'always' or 'yes': always, useful eg when piping output into 'less -R'. 'never' or 'no': never. A NO_COLOR environment variable overrides this. --pretty[=WHEN] Show prettier output, e.g. using unicode box-drawing charac- ters. Accepts 'yes' (the default) or 'no' ('y', 'n', 'always', 'never' also work). If you provide an argument you must use '=', e.g. '--pretty=yes'. When a reporting option appears more than once in the command line, the last one takes precedence. Some reporting options can also be written as query arguments. hledger help options: -h --help show general or COMMAND help --man show general or COMMAND user manual with man --info show general or COMMAND user manual with info --version show general or ADDONCMD version --debug[=N] show debug output (levels 1-9, default: 1) A @FILE argument will be expanded to the contents of FILE, which should contain one command line option/argument per line. (To prevent this, insert a -- argument before.) By default the server listens on IP address 127.0.0.1, accessible only to local requests. You can use --host to change this, eg --host 0.0.0.0 to listen on all configured addresses. Similarly, use --port to set a TCP port other than 5000, eg if you are running multiple hledger-web instances. Both of these options are ignored when --socket is used. In this case, it creates an AF_UNIX socket file at the supplied path and uses that for communication. This is an alternative way of running multiple hledger-web instances behind a reverse proxy that handles authentica- tion for different users. The path can be derived in a predictable way, eg by using the username within the path. As an example, nginx as reverse proxy can use the variable $remote_user to derive a path from the username used in a HTTP basic authentication. The following proxy_pass directive allows access to all hledger-web instances that created a socket in /tmp/hledger/: proxy_pass http://unix:/tmp/hledger/${remote_user}.socket; You can use --base-url to change the protocol, hostname, port and path that appear in hyperlinks, useful eg for integrating hledger-web within a larger website. The default is http://HOST:PORT/ using the server's configured host address and TCP port (or http://HOST if PORT is 80). With --file-url you can set a different base url for static files, eg for better caching or cookie-less serving on high performance websites. PERMISSIONS By default, hledger-web allows anyone who can reach it to view the journal and to add new transactions, but not to change existing data. You can restrict who can reach it by o setting the IP address it listens on (see --host above). By default it listens on 127.0.0.1, accessible to all users on the local machine. o putting it behind an authenticating proxy, using eg apache or nginx o custom firewall rules You can restrict what the users who reach it can do, by o using the --capabilities=CAP[,CAP..] flag when you start it, enabling one or more of the following capabilities. The default value is view,add: o view - allows viewing the journal file and all included files o add - allows adding new transactions to the main journal file o manage - allows editing, uploading or downloading the main or included files o using the --capabilities-header=HTTPHEADER flag to specify a HTTP header from which it will read capabilities to enable. hledger-web on Sandstorm uses the X-Sandstorm-Permissions header to integrate with Sandstorm's permissions. This is disabled by default. EDITING, UPLOADING, DOWNLOADING If you enable the manage capability mentioned above, you'll see a new "spanner" button to the right of the search form. Clicking this will let you edit, upload, or download the journal file or any files it includes. Note, unlike any other hledger command, in this mode you (or any visi- tor) can alter or wipe the data files. Normally whenever a file is changed in this way, hledger-web saves a numbered backup (assuming file permissions allow it, the disk is not full, etc.) hledger-web is not aware of version control systems, cur- rently; if you use one, you'll have to arrange to commit the changes yourself (eg with a cron job or a file watcher like entr). Changes which would leave the journal file(s) unparseable or non-valid (eg with failing balance assertions) are prevented. (Probably. This needs re-testing.) RELOADING hledger-web detects changes made to the files by other means (eg if you edit it directly, outside of hledger-web), and it will show the new data when you reload the page or navigate to a new page. If a change makes a file unparseable, hledger-web will display an error message until the file has been fixed. (Note: if you are viewing files mounted from another machine, make sure that both machine clocks are roughly in step.) JSON API In addition to the web UI, hledger-web also serves a JSON API that can be used to get data or add new transactions. If you want the JSON API only, you can use the --serve-api flag. Eg: $ hledger-web -f examples/sample.journal --serve-api ... You can get JSON data from these routes: /version /accountnames /transactions /prices /commodities /accounts /accounttransactions/ACCOUNTNAME Eg, all account names in the journal (similar to the accounts command). (hledger-web's JSON does not include newlines, here we use python to prettify it): $ curl -s http://127.0.0.1:5000/accountnames | python -m json.tool [ "assets", "assets:bank", "assets:bank:checking", "assets:bank:saving", "assets:cash", "expenses", "expenses:food", "expenses:supplies", "income", "income:gifts", "income:salary", "liabilities", "liabilities:debts" ] Or all transactions: $ curl -s http://127.0.0.1:5000/transactions | python -m json.tool [ { "tcode": "", "tcomment": "", "tdate": "2008-01-01", "tdate2": null, "tdescription": "income", "tindex": 1, "tpostings": [ { "paccount": "assets:bank:checking", "pamount": [ { "acommodity": "$", "aismultiplier": false, "aprice": null, ... Most of the JSON corresponds to hledger's data types; for details of what the fields mean, see the Hledger.Data.Json haddock docs and click on the various data types, eg Transaction. And for a higher level understanding, see the journal docs. In some cases there is outer JSON corresponding to a "Report" type. To understand that, go to the Hledger.Web.Handler.MiscR haddock and look at the source for the appropriate handler to see what it returns. Eg for /accounttransactions it's getAccounttransactionsR, returning a "accountTransactionsReport ...". Looking up the haddock for that we can see that /accounttransactions returns an AccountTransactionsReport, which consists of a report title and a list of AccountTransactionsRe- portItem (etc). You can add a new transaction to the journal with a PUT request to /add, if hledger-web was started with the add capability (enabled by default). The payload must be the full, exact JSON representation of a hledger transaction (partial data won't do). You can get sample JSON from hledger-web's /transactions or /accounttransactions, or you can export it with hledger-lib, eg like so: .../hledger$ stack ghci hledger-lib >>> writeJsonFile "txn.json" (head $ jtxns samplejournal) >>> :q Here's how it looks as of hledger-1.17 (remember, this JSON corresponds to hledger's Transaction and related data types): { "tcomment": "", "tpostings": [ { "pbalanceassertion": null, "pstatus": "Unmarked", "pamount": [ { "aprice": null, "acommodity": "$", "aquantity": { "floatingPoint": 1, "decimalPlaces": 10, "decimalMantissa": 10000000000 }, "aismultiplier": false, "astyle": { "ascommodityside": "L", "asdigitgroups": null, "ascommodityspaced": false, "asprecision": 2, "asdecimalpoint": "." } } ], "ptransaction_": "1", "paccount": "assets:bank:checking", "pdate": null, "ptype": "RegularPosting", "pcomment": "", "pdate2": null, "ptags": [], "poriginal": null }, { "pbalanceassertion": null, "pstatus": "Unmarked", "pamount": [ { "aprice": null, "acommodity": "$", "aquantity": { "floatingPoint": -1, "decimalPlaces": 10, "decimalMantissa": -10000000000 }, "aismultiplier": false, "astyle": { "ascommodityside": "L", "asdigitgroups": null, "ascommodityspaced": false, "asprecision": 2, "asdecimalpoint": "." } } ], "ptransaction_": "1", "paccount": "income:salary", "pdate": null, "ptype": "RegularPosting", "pcomment": "", "pdate2": null, "ptags": [], "poriginal": null } ], "ttags": [], "tsourcepos": { "tag": "JournalSourcePos", "contents": [ "", [ 1, 1 ] ] }, "tdate": "2008-01-01", "tcode": "", "tindex": 1, "tprecedingcomment": "", "tdate2": null, "tdescription": "income", "tstatus": "Unmarked" } And here's how to test adding it with curl. This should add a new entry to your journal: $ curl http://127.0.0.1:5000/add -X PUT -H 'Content-Type: application/json' --data-binary @txn.json DEBUG OUTPUT Debug output You can add --debug[=N] to the command line to log debug output. N ranges from 1 (least output, the default) to 9 (maximum output). Typi- cally you would start with 1 and increase until you are seeing enough. Debug output goes to stderr, interleaved with the requests logged on stdout. To capture debug output in a log file instead, you can usually redirect stderr, eg: hledger-web --debug=3 2>hledger-web.log. ENVIRONMENT LEDGER_FILE The journal file path when not specified with -f. On unix computers, the default value is: ~/.hledger.journal. A more typical value is something like ~/finance/YYYY.journal, where ~/finance is a version-controlled finance directory and YYYY is the current year. Or, ~/finance/current.journal, where current.journal is a symbolic link to YYYY.journal. The usual way to set this permanently is to add a command to one of your shell's startup files (eg ~/.profile): export LEDGER_FILE=~/finance/current.journal` On some Mac computers, there is a more thorough way to set environment variables, that will also affect applications started from the GUI (eg, Emacs started from a dock icon): In ~/.MacOSX/environment.plist, add an entry like: { "LEDGER_FILE" : "~/finance/current.journal" } For this to take effect you might need to killall Dock, or reboot. On Windows computers, the default value is probably C:\Users\YOUR- NAME\.hledger.journal. You can change this by running a command like this in a powershell window (let us know if you need to be an Adminis- trator, and if this persists across a reboot): > setx LEDGER_FILE "C:\Users\MyUserName\finance\2021.journal" Or, change it in settings: see https://www.java.com/en/down- load/help/path.html. FILES Reads data from one or more files in journal, timeclock, timedot, or CSV format. The default file is .hledger.journal in your home direc- tory; this can be overridden with one or more -f FILE options, or the LEDGER_FILE environment variable. BUGS -f- doesn't work (hledger-web can't read from stdin). Query arguments and some hledger options are ignored. Does not work in text-mode browsers. Does not work well on small screens. REPORTING BUGS Report bugs at http://bugs.hledger.org (or on the #hledger chat or hledger mail list) AUTHORS Simon Michael and contributors. See http://hledger.org/CREDITS.html COPYRIGHT Copyright 2007-2023 Simon Michael and contributors. LICENSE Released under GNU GPL v3 or later. SEE ALSO hledger(1), hledger-ui(1), hledger-web(1), ledger(1) hledger-web-1.29.99 March 2023 HLEDGER-WEB(1)