wallabag/docs/en/user/configuration.rst
2016-01-09 13:50:45 +01:00

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Configuration
=============
Now you're logged in, it's time to configure your account as you want.
Click on ``Config`` menu. You have five tabs: ``Settings``, ``RSS``, ``User information``, ``Password`` and ``Tagging rules``.
Settings
--------
Theme
~~~~~
wallabag is customizable. You can choose your prefered theme here. You can also create a new one, a chapter is dedicated for this. The default theme is ``Material``, it's the theme used in the documentation screenshots.
Items per page
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can change the number of articles displayed on each page.
Language
~~~~~~~~
You can change the language of wallabag interface.
RSS
---
wallabag provides RSS feeds for each article status: unread, starred and archive.
Firstly, you need to create a personal token: click on ``Create your token``.
It's possible to change your token by clicking on ``Reset your token``.
Now you have three links, one for each status: add them into your favourite RSS reader.
You can also define how many articles you want in each RSS feed (default value: 50).
User information
----------------
You can change your name, your email address and enable ``Two factor authentication``.
Two factor authentication
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Two-factor authentication (also known as 2FA) is a technology patented in 1984 that provides identification of users by means of the combination of two different components.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-factor_authentication
If you enable 2FA, each time you want to login to wallabag, you'll receive a code by email. You have to put this code on the following form.
.. image:: ../../img/user/2FA_form.png
:alt: Two factor authentication
:align: center
If you don't want to receive a code each time you want to login, you can check the ``I'm on a trusted computer`` checkbox: wallabag will remember you for 15 days.
Password
--------
You can change your password here.
Tagging rules
-------------
If you want to automatically assign a tag to new articles, this part of the configuration is for you.
What does « tagging rules » mean?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
They are rules used by wallabag to automatically tag new entries.
Each time a new entry is added, all the tagging rules will be used to add the tags you configured, thus saving you the trouble to manually classify your entries.
How do I use them?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Let assume you want to tag new entries as *« short reading »* when the reading time is inferior to 3 minutes.
In that case, you should put « readingTime <= 3 » in the **Rule** field and *« short reading »* in the **Tags** field.
Several tags can added simultaneously by separating them by a comma: *« short reading, must read »*.
Complex rules can be written by using predefined operators: if *« readingTime >= 5 AND domainName = "github.com" »* then tag as *« long reading, github »*.
Which variables and operators can I use to write rules?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following variables and operators can be used to create tagging rules:
=========== ============================================== ======== ==========
Variable Meaning Operator Meaning
----------- ---------------------------------------------- -------- ----------
title Title of the entry <= Less than…
url URL of the entry < Strictly less than…
isArchived Whether the entry is archived or not => Greater than…
isStared Whether the entry is starred or not > Strictly greater than…
content The entry's content = Equal to…
language The entry's language != Not equal to…
mimetype The entry's mime-type OR One rule or another
readingTime The estimated entry's reading time, in minutes AND One rule and another
domainName The domain name of the entry matches Tests that a subject is matches a search (case-insensitive). Example: title matches "football"
=========== ============================================== ======== ==========