NAME homebank2ledger - A tool to convert HomeBank files to Ledger format VERSION version 0.010 SYNOPSIS homebank2ledger --input FILEPATH [--output FILEPATH] [--format FORMAT] [--version|--help|--manual] [--account-width NUM] [--accounts|--no-accounts] [--payees|--no-payees] [--tags|--no-tags] [--commodities|--no-commodities] [--opening-date DATE] [--rename-account STR]... [--exclude-account STR]... DESCRIPTION homebank2ledger converts HomeBank files to a format usable by Ledger . It can also convert directly to the similar Beancount format. This software is EXPERIMENTAL, in early development. Its interface may change without notice. I wrote homebank2ledger because I have been maintaining my own personal finances using HomeBank (which is awesome) and I wanted to investigate using plain text accounting programs. It works well enough for my data, but you may be using HomeBank features that I don't so there may be cases this doesn't handle well or at all. Feel free to file a bug report. This script does NOT try to modify the original HomeBank files it converts from, so there won't be any crazy data loss bugs... but no warranty. Features * Converts HomeBank accounts and categories into a typical set of double-entry accounts. * Retains HomeBank metadata, including payees and tags. * Offers some customization of the output ledger, like account renaming. This program is feature-complete in my opinion (well, almost -- see "CAVEATS"), but if there is anything you think it could do to be even better, feedback is welcome; just file a bug report. Or fork the code and have fun! Use cases You can migrate the data you have in HomeBank so you can start maintaining your accounts in Ledger (or Beancount). Or if you don't plan to switch completely off of HomeBank, you can continue to maintain your accounts in HomeBank and use this script to also take advantage of the reports Ledger offers. INSTALL There are several ways to install homebank2ledger to your system. using cpanm You can install homebank2ledger using cpanm. If you have a local perl (plenv, perlbrew, etc.), you can just do: cpanm App::Homebank2Ledger to install the homebank2ledger executable and its dependencies. The executable will be installed to your perl's bin path, like ~/perl5/perlbrew/bin/homebank2ledger. If you're installing to your system perl, you can do: cpanm --sudo App::Homebank2Ledger to install the homebank2ledger executable to a system directory, like /usr/local/bin/homebank2ledger (depending on your perl). Downloading just the executable You may also choose to download homebank2ledger as a single executable, like this: curl -OL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/chazmcgarvey/homebank2ledger/solo/homebank2ledger chmod +x homebank2ledger For developers If you're a developer and want to hack on the source, clone the repository and pull the dependencies: git clone https://github.com/chazmcgarvey/homebank2ledger.git cd homebank2ledger make bootstrap # installs dependencies; requires cpanm OPTIONS --version Print the version and exit. Alias: -V --help Print help/usage info and exit. Alias: -h, -? --manual Print the full manual and exit. Alias: --man --input FILEPATH Specify the path to the HomeBank file to read (must already exist). Alias: --file, -i --output FILEPATH Specify the path to the Ledger file to write (may not exist yet). If not provided, the formatted ledger will be printed on STDOUT. Alias: -o --format STR Specify the output file format. If provided, must be one of: * ledger * beancount --account-width NUM Specify the number of characters to reserve for the account column in transactions. Adjusting this can provide prettier formatting of the output. Defaults to 40. --accounts Enables account declarations. Defaults to enabled; use --no-accounts to disable. --payees Enables payee declarations. Defaults to enabled; use --no-payees to disable. --tags Enables tag declarations. Defaults to enabled; use --no-tags to disable. --commodities Enables commodity declarations. Defaults to enabled; use --no-commodities to disable. --budget Enables budget transactions. Budget transactions are only supported by the Ledger format (for now). This option is silently ignored otherwise. Defaults to enabled; use --no-budget to disable. --opening-date DATE Specify the opening date for the "opening balances" transaction. This transaction is created (if needed) to support HomeBank's ability to configure accounts with opening balances. Date must be in the form "YYYY-MM-DD". Defaults to the date of the first transaction. --rename-account STR Specifies a mapping for renaming accounts in the output. By default homebank2ledger tries to come up with sensible account names (based on your HomeBank accounts and categories) that fit into five root accounts: * Assets * Liabilities * Equity * Income * Expenses The value of the argument must be of the form "REGEXP=REPLACEMENT". See "EXAMPLES". Can be repeated to rename multiple accounts. --exclude-account STR Specifies an account that will not be included in the output. All transactions related to this account will be skipped. Can be repeated to exclude multiple accounts. EXAMPLES Basic usage # Convert homebank.xhb to a Ledger-compatible file: homebank2ledger path/to/homebank.xhb -o ledger.dat # Run the Ledger balance report: ledger -f ledger.dat balance You can also combine this into one command: homebank2ledger path/to/homebank.xhb | ledger -f - balance Account renaming With the "--rename-account STR" argument, you have some control over the resulting account structure. This may be useful in cases where the organization imposed (or encouraged) by HomeBank doesn't necessarily line up with an ideal double-entry structure. homebank2ledger path/to/homebank.xhb -o ledger.dat \ --rename-account '^Assets:Credit Union Savings$=Assets:Bank:Credit Union:Savings' \ --rename-account '^Assets:Credit Union Checking$=Assets:Bank:Credit Union:Checking' Multiple accounts can be renamed at the same time because the first part of the mapping is a regular expression. The above example could be written like this: homebank2ledger path/to/homebank.xhb -o ledger.dat \ --rename-account '^Assets:Credit Union =Assets:Bank:Credit Union:' You can also merge accounts by simple renaming multiple accounts to the same name: homebank2ledger path/to/homebank.xhb -o ledger.dat \ --rename-account '^Liabilities:Chase VISA$=Liabilities:All Credit Cards' \ --rename-account '^Liabilities:Amex$=Liabilities:All Credit Cards' If you need to do anything more complicated, of course you can edit the output after converting; it's just plain text. Beancount # Convert homebank.xhb to a Beancount-compatible file: homebank2ledger path/to/homebank.xhb -f beancount -o ledger.beancount # Run the balances report: bean-report ledger.beancount balances CAVEATS * I didn't intend to make this a releasable robust product, so it's lacking tests. * Scheduled transactions are not (yet) converted. * There are some minor formatting tweaks I will make (e.g. consolidate transaction tags and payees) BUGS Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://github.com/chazmcgarvey/homebank2ledger/issues When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature. AUTHOR Charles McGarvey COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is Copyright (c) 2019 by Charles McGarvey. This is free software, licensed under: The MIT (X11) License