mtracker
cli movie tracker written in Rust - keep track of watched movies and series
What's this?
mtracker is a simple cli tool that lets you keep track of watched movies and series.
- Designed to work well with standard Linux command line tools like grep.
- Flat file system: All data is saved in a human-readable text file.
- No built-in cloud synchronization. Of course, you can set up some kind of synchronization yourself if you wish to.
- No data is fetched from the internet. You enter all the information that's useful to you manually.
Installation
If you have Rust installed, you can simply use cargo:
Otherwise just download the latest
release and put it somewhere
within your PATH variable, e.g.: /usr/local/bin
Don't forget to make the file executable:
More user-friendly install options will be added at some point.
Tutorial
Let's assume your friend Max tells you about a fun horror movie. This is how you add it to your watchlist:
After watching the movie you decide to rate it a 8/10:
This command assumes that you have now watched the item and removes it from the watchlist automatically.
You can rate movies you already know directly without having to add them first:
Now lets see what we have so far by listing all items:
Which returns this list, sorted by rating:
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This should cover the basics. Type mtracker help [subcommand] to see all
options.
Database
The database is just a plain text file that you can edit by hand. It looks like this:
Forrest Gump
year: 1994
rating: 9
tags: drama, comedy
last_seen: 2020-12-31
Bodies Bodies Bodies
year: 2022
tags: watchlist
note: recommended by Max
Whiplash
rating: 10
On Linux, the database file is automatically created and stored in:
~/.local/share/mtracker/db.txt
Features
Ratings
You can rate movies on a scale of your choice. mtracker doesn't force a rating system. The highest rated item in your database determines the scale: If the highest rated movie is a 7, then all the ratings go from 0 to 7. Of course, you don't have to rate anything at all.
Here are a few options:
- 1 to 10: Rate the way that most websites do.
- 1 to 5: In case you prefer fewer options. No decimal numbers though.
- 0 to 1: Binary mode, or: Like/Dislike. Simple! Ratings don't have to start at 1.
- 0 to 2: My personal favorite:
- 2 = Like
- 1 = Okayish
- 0 = Dislike
Tags
You can tag movies and filter by tags when listing them later. watchlist is a
special tag that highlights items and puts them on top of everything else.
Command examples
| Command | Action |
|---|---|
mtracker ls |
List all items |
mtracker ls --tag=horror,comedy |
List all items that are tagged both horror and comedy |
mtracker add "Aliens (1986)" --tag=watchlist,horror |
Add new item with tags OR add tags to an existing item |
mtracker rate "Aliens (1986)" 5 |
Rate item a 5 (and remove from watchlist) |
mtracker ls | grep -i aliens |
Use grep to find entries |
mtracker ls | grep +++ |
Use grep to search for items with a rating of at least 3 |