Table of Contents
Org-Roam-UI is a frontend for exploring and interacting with your org-roam notes.
Org-Roam-UI is meant a successor of org-roam-server that extends functionality of org-roam with a Web app that runs side-by-side with Emacs.
For major new features/bugfixes we will update changelog.
org-roam-ui
is on MELPA!
org-roam-ui requires org-roam
, websocket
, simple-httpd
, f
and Emacs >= 27 for fast JSON parsing.
M-x package-install org-roam-ui
No configuration is necessary when you use package.el
to install ORUI.
Add the following to your package.el
Org-roam-ui tries to keep up with the latest features of org-roam
, which conflicts with Doom Emacs's desire for
stability. To make sure nothing breaks, use the latest version of org-roam
by unpinning it.
(unpin! org-roam)
(package! org-roam-ui)
Then something along the following to your config.el
(use-package! websocket
:after org-roam)
(use-package! org-roam-ui
:after org-roam ;; or :after org
;; normally we'd recommend hooking orui after org-roam, but since org-roam does not have
;; a hookable mode anymore, you're advised to pick something yourself
;; if you don't care about startup time, use
;; :hook (after-init . org-roam-ui-mode)
:config
(setq org-roam-ui-sync-theme t
org-roam-ui-follow t
org-roam-ui-update-on-save t
org-roam-ui-open-on-start t))
We recommend only loading org-roam-ui after loading org(-roam) as starting the server and making database requests can impact startup times quite a lot.
(use-package org-roam-ui
:straight
(:host github :repo "org-roam/org-roam-ui" :branch "main" :files ("*.el" "out"))
:after org-roam
;; normally we'd recommend hooking orui after org-roam, but since org-roam does not have
;; a hookable mode anymore, you're advised to pick something yourself
;; if you don't care about startup time, use
;; :hook (after-init . org-roam-ui-mode)
:config
(setq org-roam-ui-sync-theme t
org-roam-ui-follow t
org-roam-ui-update-on-save t
org-roam-ui-open-on-start t))
Use M-x org-roam-ui-mode RET
to enable the global mode.
It will start a web server on http://127.0.0.1:35901/ and connect to it via a WebSocket for real-time updates.
ORUI provides a few commands for interacting with the graph without ever having to leave Emacs. NOTE: This is quite janky at the moment and will change in the future. Consider this more of a teaser.
(orui-node-zoom)
Zooms to the current node in the global view ignoring local mode.
(orui-node-local)
Opens the current node in local view.
You can optionally give these command three parameters:
- the node id you want to zoom to (by default the current node)
- The speed at which you want to zoom (can be set in the UI) in ms.
- The padding of the zoom in px.
These options might not work at the moment, please configure them in the UI for the time being.
Org-Roam-UI exposes a few variables, but most of the customization is done in the web app.
ORUI follows you around Emacs by default. To disable this, set
(setq org-roam-ui-follow nil)
or disable the minor mode org-roam-ui-follow-mode
.
We plan to make updates to the graph happen smoothly, at the moment it is only possible to reload the entire graph when an update happens (but local mode is preserved). This is enabled by default, to disable
(setq org-roam-ui-update-on-save nil)
Org-Roam-UI can sync your Emacs theme! This is the default behavior, to disable it do
(setq org-roam-ui-sync-theme nil)
Then call M-x orui-sync-theme
.
You can also provide your own theme if you do not like syncing nor like the default one. To do so, set org-roam-ui-custom-theme
to an alist of (rather specific) variables, like so
(setq org-roam-ui-custom-theme
'((bg . "#1E2029")
(bg-alt . "#282a36")
(fg . "#f8f8f2")
(fg-alt . "#6272a4")
(red . "#ff5555")
(orange . "#f1fa8c")
(yellow ."#ffb86c")
(green . "#50fa7b")
(cyan . "#8be9fd")
(blue . "#ff79c6")
(violet . "#8be9fd")
(magenta . "#bd93f9")))
You can optionally provide (base1 . "#XXXXXX")
arguments after the last one to also set the background shades, otherwise ORUI will guess based on the provides bg and fg.
By default, org-roam-ui will try to open itself in your default browser. To disable this, set
(setq org-roam-ui-open-on-start nil)
- We only support org-roam v2; v1 will never be supported.
- As the name suggests, Org-Roam-UI only works with org-roam! If you organize your notes in some other form org-roam-ui cannot work, as it uses org-roam to fetch all the connections.
- Feature-parity with org-roam-server is not the goal. Although we aim to make a similar product which is having a visual graph to help you explore and navigate your org-roam nodes, we do not intend to replicate all of the, nor be limited to replicating the features of org-roam-server.
- This is alpha software: please do give it a try and use it, but expect bugs and troubleshooting!
- The project was created by a couple of tinkerers to scratch their own itch. We don't get rewarded in any material way and development may stop any day (because life). The best way to keep the project alive is to explore the code and contribute!
Sorry! This is still alpha software, so expect it to break from time to time. Best thing you can try is to remove your settings by going to "Storage > Local Storage" on Firefox or "Application > Local Storage" on Chromium and deleting everything there.
If the issue still persists, please file a bug report with
- Your browsers console log
- Your browsers
- What you were doing when it broke
and we'll try to help you ASAP!
If you receive an error, in emacs, stating function definition is void json-parse-string
, then you must compile emacs with json support. This is not automatically done on systems such as Gentoo.
While we try to optimize the display of the graph, there is only so much we can do. For largish networks (>2k nodes) dragging the graph around a lot can cause some performance issues, but there are a few things you can do to speed it up.
At the time of writing (Aug 8) it is very much not optimized, and shifting between global and local mode or 2d or 3d is noticeably slower with the tweaks panel open than without. This will be fixed in a future release.
As much as it saddens us to say, Firefox's rendering engine is quite a bit slower than its Chromium cousins. Compare the performance of the two and see if that's the main issue first.
I know, very cool to see those little guys travel up and down your notes, but very slow, especially in 3D mode.
Probably the second slowest thing to render, with little possibility of speeding it up. Consider only turning on labels on highlight or cranking up the "Label appearance scale".
I know, they're gorgeous, but not very performant.
Nice, but costly! If you like to have the graph more spread out, turning off collision will change little in the resulting layout, but will help performance quite a bit.
Fewer forces fewer worries
I know, it looks cool, but man is it slow.
In our experience, once the graph has actually settled and nothing needs to be rendered again, looking around should pose little trouble. At the moment there is no way of "saving" the graph configuration, but we are exploring the possibility. The graph layout algorithm is deterministic however, so barring any changes to the data it should produce the same results each time.
Hopefully, yeah! But time is limited, and so is the amount of features we can cram into this things before it implodes in itself, so we are adding things incrementally to make sure they work. That said, we'd love to hear from you! If your feature is not already on the project board, please post minor feature requests such as "I want to be able to color this specific node" in the minor feature requests discussion and major feature requests (e.g. "I want to publish my graph) in the major feature requests discussion or upvote those already posted, this way we can adjust our priorities somewhat!
Correct! We only support org-roam v2, although we might introduce a backend agnostic implementation later.
Org-roam-ui's main feature is the ability to generate a graph visualization of your org-roam notes.
(Double) clicking a node will open the corresponding note in Emacs, very cool. You don't need org-protocol for this, it works out of the box!
2021-07-31.18-16-52.mkv.mp4
For when you leave Emacs in a moment of weakness.
fileviewer.mp4
When you open a note in Emacs, org-roam-ui will move to the corresponding node on the graph.
2021-07-31.18-17-19.mkv.mp4
Your gruvbox is only a M-x orui-sync-theme
away (or you can just select them in the settings).
2021-07-31.18-26-01.mkv.mp4
Filter out all those "temporary" notes you'll sift through someday.
filters.mp4
Literally deepen your understanding of your thoughts (and it looks cool)
2021-07-31.18-32-53.mkv.mp4
In no particular order
Citation links + customizationTag filtering/coloringLocal graph show Nth neighborColorization options (by neighbors, centrality, etc)- Setting profiles
File viewing using AST parsing- Displaying notes Andy Matushak style
- Discovery options, e.g. "show shortest path between X and Y"
Use markdown notes interchangeably with Org-mode notes!
tbd
We have a small telegram group for discussing org-roam-ui, you can join if you're cool. https://t.me/+sEuL2qi37yw1NzQy
For feature suggestions, please make an issue or check out the discussions for major and minor features. For other feedback, please go to the feedback discussion, or open up a new one!
The best way to support the continued development of org-roam-ui is to get involved yourself! To get started, simply
git clone https://github.com/org-roam/org-roam-ui
yarn
yarn dev
and a development server will be lauched on localhost:3000
.
GitHub Community Guidelines apply.
If you are interested in being more closely involved with the project, go here to have an onboarding call with a member of the core team.
We would ❤️ to have you on board!
If you really really like org-roam-ui, you can make a one-time donation or sponsor one of us monthly!