Wayland clipboard "manager" with fast persistent history and multi-media support
  • Rust 97.1%
  • Nix 2.9%
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NotAShelf 1ed518a3b6
stash: move import logic into stash::commmands
Signed-off-by: NotAShelf <raf@notashelf.dev>
Change-Id: I6a6a6964f8fb8c9b14049ba3a343bb453ca59004
2025-08-20 11:06:52 +03:00
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src stash: move import logic into stash::commmands 2025-08-20 11:06:52 +03:00
vendor stash: use LoadCrediental in the vendored Systemd service 2025-08-14 17:24:22 +03:00
.envrc direnv: watch nix/shell.nix for changes 2025-08-13 13:47:32 +04:00
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Cargo.toml chore: remove unused rmp-serde dep 2025-08-20 11:06:50 +03:00
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README.md README: stash --import -> stash import 2025-08-14 16:05:29 +00:00

Stash

Wayland clipboard "manager" with fast persistent history and multi-media support. Stores and previews clipboard entries (text, images) on the command line.

Features

  • Stores clipboard entries with automatic MIME detection
  • Fast persistent storage using SQLite
  • List, search, decode, delete, and wipe clipboard history
  • Backwards compatible with Cliphist TSV format
    • Import clipboard history from TSV (e.g., from cliphist list)
  • Image preview (shows dimensions and format)
  • Deduplication and entry limit control
  • Text previews with customizable width
  • Sensitive clipboard filtering via regex (see below)

Installation

With Nix

Nix is the recommended way of downloading Stash. You can install it using Nix flakes using nix profile add if on non-nixos or add Stash as a flake input if you are on NixOS.

{
  # Add Stash to your inputs like so
  inputs.stash.url = "github:notashelf/stash";

  outputs = { /* ... */ };
}

Then you can get the package from your flake input, and add it to your packages to make stash available in your system.

{inputs, pkgs, ...}: let
  stashPkg = inputs.stash.packages.${pkgs.stdenv.hostPlatform}.stash;
in {
  environment.systemPackages = [stashPkg];

  # Additionally feel free to add the Stash package in `systemd.packages` to
  # automatically run the Stash watch daemon, which will watch your primary
  # clipboard for changes and persist them.
  systemd.packages = [stashPkg];
}

You can also run it one time with nix run

nix run github:notashelf/stash -- watch # start the watch daemon

Without Nix

You can also install Stash on any of your systems without using Nix. New releases are made when a version gets tagged, and are available under GitHub Releases. To install Stash on your system without Nix, eiter:

  • Download a tagged release from GitHub Releases for your platform and place the binary in your $PATH.

  • Build from source with Rust:

    cargo install --git https://github.com/notashelf/stash
    

Usage

Command interface is only slightly different from Cliphist. In most cases, it will be as simple as replacing cliphist with stash in your commands, aliases or scripts.

Note

It is not a priority to provide 1:1 backwards compatibility with Cliphist. While the interface is almost identical, Stash chooses to build upon Cliphist's design and extend existing design choices. See Migrating from Cliphist for more details.

Store an entry

echo "some clipboard text" | stash store

List entries

stash list

Decode an entry by ID

stash decode --input "1234"

Delete entries matching a query

stash delete --type query --arg "some text"

Delete multiple entries by ID (from a file or stdin)

stash delete --type id < ids.txt

Wipe all entries

stash wipe

Watch clipboard for changes and store automatically

stash watch

This runs a daemon that monitors the clipboard and stores new entries automatically.

Options

Some commands take additional flags to modify Stash's behavior. See each commands --help text for more details. The following are generally standard:

  • --db-path <path>: Custom database path
  • --max-items <N>: Maximum number of entries to keep (oldest trimmed)
  • --max-dedupe-search <N>: Deduplication window size
  • --preview-width <N>: Text preview max width for list
  • --version: Print the current version and exit

Sensitive Clipboard Filtering

Stash can be configured to avoid storing clipboard entries that match a sensitive pattern, using a regular expression. This is useful for preventing accidental storage of secrets, passwords, or other sensitive data. You don't want sensitive data ending up in your persistent clipboard, right?

The filter can be configured in one of two ways:

  • Environment variable: Set STASH_SENSITIVE_REGEX to a valid regex pattern. If clipboard text matches, it will not be stored.

  • Systemd LoadCredential: If running as a service, you can provide a regex pattern via a credential file. For example, add to your stash.service:

    LoadCredential=clipboard_filter:/etc/stash/clipboard_filter
    

    The file /etc/stash/clipboard_filter should contain your regex pattern (no quotes). This is done automatically in the vendored Systemd service. Remember to set the appropriate file permissions if using this option.

The service will check the credential file first, then the environment variable. If a clipboard entry matches the regex, it will be skipped and a warning will be logged.

Example regex to block common password patterns:

  • (password|secret|api[_-]?key|token)[=: ]+[^\s]+

Tips & Tricks

Migrating from Cliphist

Stash was designed to be a drop-in replacement for Cliphist, with only minor improvements. If you are migrating from Cliphist, here are a few things you should know.

  • Most Cliphist commands have direct equivalents in Stash. For example, cliphist store -> stash store, cliphist list -> stash list, etc.
  • Cliphist uses delete-query; in Stash, you must use stash delete --type query --arg "your query".
  • Both Cliphist and Stash support deleting by ID, including from stdin or a file.
  • Stash respects the STASH_CLIPBOARD_STATE environment variable for sensitive/clear entries, just like Cliphist. The STASH_ prefix is added for granularity, you must update your scripts.
  • You can export your Cliphist history to TSV and import it into Stash (see below).
  • Stash supports text and image previews, including dimensions and format.
  • Stash adds a watch command to automatically store clipboard changes. This is an alternative to wl-paste --watch cliphist list. You can avoid shelling out and depending on wl-paste as Stash implements it through wl-clipboard-rs crate.

TSV Export and Import

Both Stash and Cliphist support TSV format for clipboard history. You can export from Cliphist and import into Stash, or use Stash to export TSV for interoperability.

Export TSV from Cliphist:

cliphist list --db ~/.cache/cliphist/db > cliphist.tsv

Import TSV into Stash:

stash import < cliphist.tsv

Export TSV from Stash:

stash list > stash.tsv

Import TSV into Cliphist:

cliphist --import < stash.tsv

More Tricks

  • Use stash list to export your clipboard history in TSV format. This displays your clipboard in the same format as cliphist list
  • Use stash import --type tsv to import TSV clipboard history from Cliphist or other tools.