diff --git a/cli/README.md b/cli/README.md index edcb6cb..3933473 100644 --- a/cli/README.md +++ b/cli/README.md @@ -1,14 +1,16 @@ -Work in progress +# CLI + +Before you dive in, keep in mind that the CLI is limited in functionality and not meant to replace the GUI in any remote way. It only works with volumes that don't use any keyfiles or advanced features, and you will still need the GUI to do anything more than basic file encryption. You should only use the CLI when you are not able to run the GUI or need an automatable interface for encrypting and decrypting files. # Installation -If you don't have Go installed, download it from here or install it from your package manager (`apt install golang-go`). The latest version of Go is recommended, although you may fall back to Go 1.19 should any issues arise in the future. Once Go is installed, run the command below: - +If you don't have Go installed, download it from here or install it from your package manager. Then, run the command below: ```bash go install github.com/HACKERALERT/Picocrypt/cli/picocrypt@latest ``` +You should now be able to run `picocrypt` in your terminal. If not, run `export PATH=$PATH:$(go env GOPATH)/bin` and try again. -You should now be able to run `picocrypt` in your terminal. If you can't, try adding Go's `bin` directory to your PATH: - -```bash -export PATH=$PATH:$(go env GOPATH)/bin +# Usage ``` +picocrypt -p password +``` +The CLI is designed to do one thing and one thing only: encrypt and decrypt a single file. Its goal isn't to be full-blown encryption tool, but to provide the basics of file encryption so that you can do the rest. This allows you to write custom scripts to encrypt your weekly backups, secure client files on a server, etc.