russ
Russ is a TUI RSS/Atom reader with vim-like controls and a local-first, offline-first focus.
This is a fork of ckampfe/russ with a few personal improvements. The original project is excellent and I use it daily, merely trying to customize for my needs.

install
From crates.io (recommended):
cargo install rss-tui
Note that on linux, you may need additional system dependencies as well, for example:
sudo apt update && sudo apt install libxcb-shape0-dev libxcb-xfixes0-dev
The binary will be installed as rss-tui. You can run it with:
rss-tui read
From this repository:
cargo install rss-tui --git https://github.com/shalloran/russ
Note: This is a fork with some additional features. If you want the original, use: cargo install russ --git https://github.com/ckampfe/russ.
Note: If you want to force overwrite an existing installation, use:
cargo install --force rss-tui (from crates.io) or cargo install --force --git https://github.com/shalloran/russ rss-tui (from git)
Note that on its first run with no arguments, rss-tui read creates a SQLite database file called feeds.db to store RSS/Atom feeds in a location of its choosing. If you wish to override this, you can pass a path with the -d option, like rss-tui -d /your/database/location/my_feeds.db. If you use a custom database location, you will need to pass the -d option every time you invoke rss-tui. See the help with rss-tui -h for more information about where rss-tui will store the feeds.db database by default on your platform.
use
Russ is modal, like vim. If you are comfortable with vim, or know of vim, you are probably going to be immediately comfortable with Russ. If you don't know vim, don't be afraid! If you read the following controls section and tinker a bit, you'll have no trouble using Russ.
There are two modes: normal mode and insert mode.
In normal mode, you read your RSS entries, navigate between entries, navigate between feeds, refresh feeds, and a few other things. This is where you spend 99% of your time when using Russ.
When you want to start following a new feed, you enter insert mode. In insert mode, you enter the URL of a feed you wish to begin following, and Russ will download that feed for you.
That's basically it!
Russ can also import feeds from an OPML file, export your feeds to OPML, and email articles directly from the reader. See below for more details.
controls - normal mode
Some normal mode controls vary based on whether you are currently selecting a feed or an entry.
q/Esc- quit Russhjkl/arrows - move up/down/left/right between feeds and entries, scroll up/down on an entryEnter- read selected entryr- refresh the selected feed (when feeds selected) or mark entry as read/unread (when entries selected)x- refresh all feedsi/e- change to insert mode (when feeds selected)e- email the current article (when viewing an entry; opens your default email client with the article title as subject and URL as body)a- toggle between read/unread entriesc- copy the selected link to the clipboard (feed or entry)o- open the selected link in your browser (feed or entry)d- delete the selected feed (with confirmation; pressdagain to confirm,nto cancel)E- export all feeds to an OPML file (saves to a timestamped file in your database directory)ctrl-u/ctrl-d- scroll up/down a page at a time
controls - insert mode
Esc- go back to normal modeEnter- subscribe to the feed you just typed in the input boxDel- delete the selected feed (original behavior, still works)
help/options/config
rss-tui -h
A TUI RSS reader with vim-like controls and a local-first, offline-first focus
Usage: russ <COMMAND>
Commands:
read Read your feeds
import Import feeds from an OPML document
export Export feeds to an OPML document
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
Options:
-h, --help Print help
-V, --version Print version
read mode
rss-tui read -h
Read your feeds
Usage: russ read [OPTIONS]
Options:
-d, --database-path <DATABASE_PATH>
Override where `russ` stores and reads feeds. By default, the feeds database on Linux this will be at `XDG_DATA_HOME/russ/feeds.db` or `$HOME/.local/share/russ/feeds.db`. On MacOS it will be at `$HOME/Library/Application Support/russ/feeds.db`. On Windows it will be at `{FOLDERID_LocalAppData}/russ/data/feeds.db`
-t, --tick-rate <TICK_RATE>
time in ms between two ticks [default: 250]
-f, --flash-display-duration-seconds <FLASH_DISPLAY_DURATION_SECONDS>
number of seconds to show the flash message before clearing it [default: 4]
-n, --network-timeout <NETWORK_TIMEOUT>
RSS/Atom network request timeout in seconds [default: 5]
-h, --help
Print help
import OPML mode
rss-tui import -h
Import feeds from an OPML document
Usage: russ import [OPTIONS] --opml-path <OPML_PATH>
Options:
-d, --database-path <DATABASE_PATH>
Override where `russ` stores and reads feeds. By default, the feeds database on Linux this will be at `XDG_DATA_HOME/russ/feeds.db` or `$HOME/.local/share/russ/feeds.db`. On MacOS it will be at `$HOME/Library/Application Support/russ/feeds.db`. On Windows it will be at `{FOLDERID_LocalAppData}/russ/data/feeds.db`
-o, --opml-path <OPML_PATH>
-n, --network-timeout <NETWORK_TIMEOUT>
RSS/Atom network request timeout in seconds [default: 5]
-h, --help
Print help
export OPML mode
rss-tui export -h
Export feeds to an OPML document
Usage: russ export [OPTIONS] --opml-path <OPML_PATH>
Options:
-d, --database-path <DATABASE_PATH>
Override where `russ` stores and reads feeds. By default, the feeds database on Linux this will be at `XDG_DATA_HOME/russ/feeds.db` or `$HOME/.local/share/russ/feeds.db`. On MacOS it will be at `$HOME/Library/Application Support/russ/feeds.db`. On Windows it will be at `{FOLDERID_LocalAppData}/russ/data/feeds.db`
-o, --opml-path <OPML_PATH>
Path where the OPML file will be written
-h, --help
Print help
You can also export from within the TUI by pressing E (capital E) in normal mode. This will create a timestamped OPML file in the same directory as your database.
design
Russ stores all application data in a SQLite database. Additionally, Russ is non-eager. It will not automatically refresh your feeds on a timer, it will not automatically mark entries as read. Russ will only do these things when you tell it to. This is intentional, as Russ has been designed to be 100% usable offline, with no internet connection. You should be able to load it up with new feeds and entries and fly to Australia, and not have Russ complain when the plane's Wifi fails. As long as you have a copy of Russ and a SQLite database of your RSS/Atom feeds, you will be able to read your RSS/Atom feeds.
Russ is a tui app that uses crossterm. The original author developed and used Russ primarily on a Mac, but it has been run successfully on Linux and WSL. It should be possible to use Russ on Windows, but I haven't personally tested it. If you use Russ on Windows or have tried to use Russ on Windows, feel free to open an issue and let me know!
stability
The application-level and database-level contracts encoded in Russ are stable. I can't remember the last time I broke one. That said, I still reserve the right to break application or database contracts to fix things, but I have no reason to believe this will happen. I use Russ every day, and it basically "just works". If you use Russ and this is not the case for you, please open an issue and let me know.
SQL
Despite being a useful RSS reader for me and a few others, Russ cannot possibly provide all of the functionality everyone might want from an RSS reader.
However, Russ uses a regular SQLite database to store RSS feeds (more detail below), which means that if a feature you want isn't in Russ itself, you can probably accomplish what you want to do with regular SQL.
This is especially true for one-off tasks like running analysis of your RSS feeds, removing duplicates when a feed changes its link scheme, etc.
If there's something you want to do with your RSS feeds and Russ doesn't do it, consider opening a Github issue and asking if anyone knows how to make it happen with SQL.
features/todo
This is not a strict feature list, and it is not a roadmap. Unchecked items are ideas to explore rather than features that are going to be built. If you have an idea for a feature that you would enjoy, open an issue and we can talk about it.
shalloran's roadmap
- visual indicator for which feeds have new/unacknowledged entries
- integration with ollama or LMStudio for local summarization
- bug: wrap text on
fork-specific additions
- improved feed deletion with confirmation (press
dto delete, confirm withdagain) - export feeds to OPML format (CLI:
rss-tui export -o <path>, UI: pressE) - email article functionality (press
ewhen viewing an entry to open your email client with the article title as subject and URL as body)
Minimum Supported Rust Version (MSRV) policy
Russ targets the latest stable version of the Rust compiler. Older Rust versions may work, but building Russ against non-latest stable versions is not a downstream project goal and is not supported. See upstream for more info.
SQLite version
russ compiles and bundles its own embedded SQLite via the Rusqlite project, which is version 3.45.1.
If you prefer to use the version of SQLite on your system, edit Cargo.toml to
remove the "bundled" feature from the rusqlite dependency and recompile russ.
Please note that while russ may run just fine with whatever version of SQLite you happen to have on your system, I do not test russ with a system SQLite, and running russ with a system SQLite is not officially supported.
contributing
The original project welcomes contributions. If you have an idea for something you would like to contribute to the original, open an issue on ckampfe/russ and they can address it!
For this fork, I'm happy to consider pull requests, but keep in mind this is primarily for my own use. If you want a feature that's more broadly useful, consider contributing to the upstream project instead.
license
See the license. SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0-or-later