Kimün
A terminal-based notes app focused on simplicity and powerful search.
Check the docs.
Notes are plain Markdown files stored in a directory you own. Kimün indexes them into a local SQLite database for fast full-text and structured search.
If you are already using another markdown, local-first, note-taking app, you should feel right at home and be able to use Kimün just like your existing app (QownNotes, Obsidian, Logseq, etc.), only that in this case, it is on your terminal emulator.
Two ways to use it
TUI — an interactive terminal interface for writing, browsing, and organizing notes. Navigate your vault, search across notes, follow wiki links, and manage files without leaving the terminal.
CLI — a scriptable interface for automation and integration. Pipe output, capture command results into notes, log to your journal from cron jobs, or build custom workflows with jq and shell scripts:
# Quick capture from anywhere
# Pipe command output into a note
| |
# Search and process results
|
The CLI is also well-suited for integration with AI tools and agents. An AI assistant can create, append, and search notes on your behalf — logging findings, organizing research, or updating your journal as part of an automated workflow.
Note: There is a fair amount of AI-assisted code (using Claude) with manual reviews, although most of the core was written with my human hands. Initially for tedious refactors, data structures I'm too lazy to code myself, but also to help me building the foundations of more complex stuff, especially on the UI side. Anyway, I guess the lesson is, use AI as a tool, not as a replacement.

Quick Start
Kimün is a terminal UI for browsing and editing your Markdown notes with a powerful search engine. Use the TUI to write and organize notes, or the CLI for automation and scripting. Everything is stored as plain .md files — no lock-in.
Homebrew (macOS and Linux):
Cargo:
AI Skills
The skills/ directory contains ready-made skills for AI coding assistants, so they can use the Kimün CLI on your behalf — capturing notes, appending to your journal, searching your vault, and more.
Claude Code
# Copy the skill to your Claude skills directory
Claude Code will pick it up automatically. In any session, Claude can now create and append notes, log to your journal, and search your vault using the CLI.
Other AI tools (Codex, Gemini CLI, etc.)
Copy skills/kimun-cli/SKILL.md to wherever your tool loads skills from, following that tool's skill installation instructions.
Documentation
Full documentation is available in docs/:
To browse the docs locally with search:
# Install Zola: https://www.getzola.org/documentation/getting-started/installation/
Releasing
Releases are automated via release.sh, which uses semtag to determine the next version. Requires cargo-edit:
The script will:
- Calculate the next version from git history
- Bump the version in
tui/Cargo.toml(kimun-notes) - Commit the change and push a version tag
The tag triggers the CI workflow, which:
- Publishes to crates.io — skipping any crate whose current version is already published
- Pushes a formula to the homebrew-kimun tap (final releases only)
Releasing kimun_core: Core is versioned independently. Update core/Cargo.toml and the kimun_core entry in the root Cargo.toml [workspace.dependencies] manually, commit, then run ./release.sh as usual.
Required secrets (set in the repository settings):
CARGO_REGISTRY_TOKEN— crates.io API tokenHOMEBREW_TAP_TOKEN— GitHub PAT with write access tonico2sh/homebrew-kimun
Roadmap
- Command palette
- Display key shortcuts in command palette and help modal
- Backlinks panel
- Inline tags and search by tag (
#important) - Resolve relative paths on links and images
- Paste images into notes
- Calendar view for journal browsing
- Auto-continue list formatting on Enter
- Multiple workspaces
- Search under Markdown sections
- File management (create, rename, move, delete notes and directories)
- Autosave
- Wikilinks in preview
- Navigate notes via links in preview
- Embed neoVim as an option