This plugin allows you to write Obsidian vault metadata, which is only accessible via plugin, onto the hard drive. This enables Third-party apps to access Obsidian metadata which they normally wouldn't be able to access. Exemplary use cases are launcher apps (e.g. Alfred, Ulauncher) or graph analysis software.
See this guide for more information on Controlling Obsidian via a Third-party App.
They can be executed on a schedule.
One writes a JSON file to disk with each tag and its corresponding file paths.
Example:
[
{
"tag": "css-themes",
"tagCount": 5,
"relativePaths": ["Advanced topics/Contributing to Obsidian.md"]
},
{
"tag": "insider-build",
"tagCount": 3,
"relativePaths": ["Advanced topics/Insider builds.md"]
},
{
"tag": "anothertag",
"tagCount": 2,
"relativePaths": [
"Plugins/Zettelkasten prefixer.md",
"Advanced topics/Using obsidian URI.md"
]
}
]
TypeScript interface:
/**
* JSON export: tagToFile[]
*/
interface tagToFile {
tag: string;
tagCount: number;
relativePaths: string[] | string;
};
The second one writes a JSON file to disk with metadata for each file name. This is how the JSON structure is as a TypeScript interface.
/**
* JSON export: Metadata[]
*/
import {extendedFrontMatterCache} from "./interfaces";
interface Metadata {
fileName: string;
relativePath: string;
tags?: string[];
headings?: { heading: string; level: number }[];
aliases?: string[];
links?: links[];
backlinks?: backlinks[];
frontmatter?: extendedFrontMatterCache;
}
interface links {
link: string;
relativePath?: string;
cleanLink?: string;
displayText?: string;
}
interface backlinks {
fileName: string;
link: string;
relativePath: string;
cleanLink?: string;
displayText?: string;
}
interface extendedFrontMatterCache {
cssclass?: string;
publish?: boolean;
position: Pos; // Pos is from the Obsidian API
[key: string]: any;
}
The exported array contains a JSON array with Metadata
objects, one object for each Markdown file in your vault.
All objects have a fileName
and a relativePath
. fileName
doesn't contain the .md
extension, relativePath
is the path from your vault root.
If a file has tags, the object has a tags
property that contains an array of tags. Tags are all lower-cased and if a tag appears more than one time in a file, it will only appear one time in tags
. If a file has any frontmatter it is included in frontmatter
. The structure of the object depends on your frontmatter.
aliases
, links
and backlinks
also only exist if there are any of the in a file.
The links
contain both links to existing and non-existing files. If a file doesn't exist, the links
won't have a relativePath
.
link
is the full link, exluding anything after the |
, so if no alias is set, it also contains #
or #^
if there are headings or block references. If that is the case, there is also the cleanLink
property which provides just the filename for the link (omitting the .md
extension).
displayText
is what is displayed by Obsidian in preview mode. It can be the alias, but also the file name if there is a heading or block reference. If it is a heading link or block reference to the same file, it excludes the #
, just like Obsidian does in preview mode.
cleanLink
and displayText
don't exist if it is a normal link.
Backlinks always have a relativePath
property because the file linking to the current file (object) needs to exist.
fileName
and relativePath
are the file which contains the backlink.
link
, cleanLink
and displayText
behave as the links interface
The third writes a JSON file containing both all folders and non-Markdown files. The structure is like this.
/**
* JSON export
*/
interface exceptMd {
folders: folder[];
nonMdFiles?: file[];
}
interface folder {
name: string;
relativePath: string;
}
interface file {
name: string;
basename: string;
relativePath: string;
}
The name
is the file name including the extension, basename
excludes it. relativePath
is the path from the vault root.
The fourth export writes a JSON file containing name
, basename
and relativePath
of canvas files as object in an array.
[
{
"name": "my-canvas.canvas",
"basename": "my-canvas",
"relativePath": "Inbox/my-canvas.canvas"
},
{
"name": "visualisation.canvas",
"basename": "visualisation",
"relativePath": "visualisation.canvas"
}
]
If you don't touch any settings, the files will be saved to the plugin folder. You can configure their names in the settings.
You can however also specify absolute paths for each file. They need to include the file name and extension in this case. The setting above won't have any effect then.
You can also set the frequency for writing the JSON files in minutes (default setting is 0, so it is not enabled) and whether the JSON files should be written on launch (default setting is false).