kristianfreeman / roam-backup

Automated Roam Research backups using GitHub Actions and AWS S3
MIT License
81 stars 53 forks source link

[[roam-backup]]

Automate backing up JSON copies of your Roam Research data, using GitHub Actions and AWS S3.

Backups will be generated using Puppeteer and saved into the backups folder (config.backupFolder, can be changed) of an S3 bucket of your choice.

Note from the dev: I'm using Roam more infrequently in favor of org-mode/plain text note-taking so this project is somewhat unmaintained. I'm looking for people to help test/update this PR which fixes some outstanding issues. In addition, if you're a Roam power user and care about this stuff being maintained, I'm looking to add at least one collaborator to the project to help maintain it - check out this ticket!

Usage

You can get roam-backup up and running in just a few minutes! The best part is that you don't need to deploy anything!

Just follow these steps and you'll be on your way:

1. Fork this repository

If you haven't done this before, you'll find the Fork button on the top right of a GitHub repository's screen.

2. Enable Actions on your newly forked repository

This is necessary because Actions get disabled when you fork a repository. Do this by tapping on the "Actions" tab in your repository (next to "Pull Requests"), and hit the big green button.

3. Setup an AWS S3 bucket to store your Roam backups

4. Set your repository Secrets

Go to your Github repository's Settings tab, and click on Secrets section on the left. Add the following secrets (naming must match exactly!), using your Roam login credentials and the AWS bucket name and user access key ID/secret from step #3:

Don't worry! Your Roam and AWS credentials will be secure. GitHub Secrets are encrypted, and provide a convenient methodology for storing secure data in repositories.

5. Make a commit. It can be any commit, but this will start the process and trigger workflows.

Congrats! 🎉 You've successfully automated the backup of your brain 🧠. Now go write about it in today's Daily Note!

NOTE: This is still fairly WIP, and this is my first project using Puppeteer, so it may be a little buggy.

Development

Running this project locally should be possible using .env - copy .env.example to .env and fill it in with your own authentication keys.

The project generates an error.png screenshot to capture the current page if something goes wrong, as well as ZIP folders, which are the JSON backups. Running npm start will clear any local screenshots and backups, and run the script as it would in the GitHub Actions workflow (npm start)