# supernote > Access a self-hosted Supernote Private Cloud instance to browse files and folders, upload documents (PDF, EPUB) and notes, convert web articles to EPUB/PDF and send them to the device, check storage capacity, and navigate the directory tree. Use when the user mentions Supernote, e-ink device files, wants to upload/browse documents on their Supernote cloud, or wants to send an article/URL to their e-reader. - Author: clawdhub[bot] - Repository: openclaw/skills - Version: 20260130050700 - Stars: 640 - Forks: 0 - Last Updated: 2026-02-06 - Source: https://github.com/openclaw/skills - Web: https://mule.run/skillshub/@@openclaw/skills~supernote:20260130050700 --- --- name: supernote description: Access a self-hosted Supernote Private Cloud instance to browse files and folders, upload documents (PDF, EPUB) and notes, convert web articles to EPUB/PDF and send them to the device, check storage capacity, and navigate the directory tree. Use when the user mentions Supernote, e-ink device files, wants to upload/browse documents on their Supernote cloud, or wants to send an article/URL to their e-reader. --- # Supernote Private Cloud Browse, upload, and manage files on a self-hosted Supernote Private Cloud via its reverse-engineered REST API. Includes article-to-ebook conversion for sending web content to the device. ## Setup ```bash export SUPERNOTE_URL="http://192.168.50.168:8080" export SUPERNOTE_USER="your@email.com" export SUPERNOTE_PASSWORD="your_password" ``` Python dependencies (for article conversion): `readability-lxml`, `ebooklib`, `requests`, `beautifulsoup4`, `lxml`. ## Commands ### Send a web article to the device ```bash {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh send-article --url "https://example.com/article" --format epub --dir-path Document {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh send-article --url "https://example.com/article" --format pdf --dir-path "Document/Articles" {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh send-article --url "https://example.com/article" --title "Custom Title" --dir-path Document ``` Fetches article content, extracts readable text with images, converts to clean EPUB or PDF, then uploads to the specified folder. Default format: epub. Default folder: Document. ### List directory contents ```bash {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh ls {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh ls --path Document {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh ls --path "Note/Journal" {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh ls --dir 778507258886619136 ``` ### Directory tree ```bash {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh tree --depth 2 ``` ### Find directory ID by path ```bash {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh find-dir --path "Document/Books" ``` ### Upload a file ```bash {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh upload --file /path/to/file.pdf --dir-path Document {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh upload --file /path/to/book.epub --dir-path "Document/Books" {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh upload --file /path/to/file.pdf --dir 778507258773372928 --name "Renamed.pdf" ``` ### Check storage capacity ```bash {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh capacity ``` ### Login (manual) ```bash {baseDir}/scripts/supernote.sh login ``` ## Default Folders | Folder | Purpose | |--------|---------| | Note | Handwritten notes (.note files) | | Document | PDFs, EPUBs, documents | | Inbox | Incoming files | | Export | Exported content | | Screenshot | Screenshots | | Mystyle | Custom styles/templates | ## Notes - EPUB is recommended for articles — renders cleanly on e-ink with reflowable text - The API is reverse-engineered and unofficial — endpoints may change with firmware updates - Directory args accept paths (e.g., "Document/Books") or numeric IDs - Some sites block scraping — if fetch fails, try a different URL or use a cached/saved page