If you're just looking to make a backup of the entire tablet at once, and you don't need the backed-up files to be usable for anything on the computer (other than being able to restore them back to the tablet when/if needed) ...
-
You can use
rsync
orscp
to just plain copy the files from the tablet. Myrm2-backup
script does this, usingrsync
, plus it stores the backed-up files in a way that files which didn't change from the previous backup are not copied again, they are "hard linked" to the same file in the previous backup - so if you've only edited one document, it might only download 15-20 files, but the directory it produces will still be a full backup of the entire tablet.The Filesystem page on the same site has more information about how the tablet stores documents, and why you can't "just download them" in a format that the software on your computer can deal with.
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You can use RCU to back up individual documents to
.rmn
files, which can later be uploaded back to a reMarkable tablet.I've heard that RCU also has a command line interface to do this without having to use the GUI, but I haven't used it myself - mostly because it takes forever to start. Just running
./RCU --help
takes 16 seconds on an M2 MacBook Air, which IMHO is "not great but not horrible" for a GUI program, but is a deal-killer for command line utilities which might be called from a script. (I understand why it takes so long, and I don't disagree with doing it that way, it's just ... as a user it's kind of irritating.) -
I am working on a Perl script which can download the same
.rmn
files that RCU creates, and which has an option to download all documents at once. It isn't ready yet, mostly because I haven't had time to concentrate on it, but I have gotten as far as producing files that RCU is able to upload into a different tablet. (Plus it doesn't take 15+ seconds just to start up.)I want to finish it, then I want to re-write it in Golang so people don't have to deal with figuring out how to install Perl modules just to use it.
If you need the backed-up files to be usable (i.e. all files converted to PDF, with pen strokes "burned into" the PDFs and therefore not edit-able if the PDF files are uploaded back to a tablet), you can ...
-
use the built-in web interface to export them as PDF files.
-
use the reMarkable apps, if the tablet is connected to a cloud account. (I'm pretty sure they can export documents to PDF, but I've never used them so I can't say for sure from direct experience.)
-
use RCU to download them to PDF files.
For me it's more about understanding what's going on inside the tablet. The only real "change" I've made in the software was renaming the "Life/oragnize" template category to "LifeOrg" in order to make room on the screen for a new "Custom" category, which I use for the custom templates I use - and that was done by editing a JSON file, not by monkey-patching the
xochitl
executable itself (which makes me nervous).Other than that, everything I've done is writing programs to interact with the tablet (backups, list files, delete files which aren't cleaned up on tablets that don't connect to a cloud account, etc.), and writing documentation about what I'm learning along the way.