mirror of
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7fa4b06705
This makes it possible to use a factory function to create a transport of the right type and not having to repeat the address when calling Transport.Connect() |
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check.go | ||
doc.go | ||
log.go | ||
main.go | ||
README.md | ||
send.go | ||
TODO.md | ||
xmppmuc.go | ||
xmppsend.go |
fluuxmpp
fluuxIO's XMPP command-line tool
Installation
To install fluuxmpp
in your Go path:
$ go get -u gosrc.io/xmpp/cmd/fluuxmpp
Usage
$ fluuxmpp --help
fluuxIO's xmpp comandline tool
Usage:
fluuxmpp [command]
Available Commands:
check is a command-line to check if you XMPP TLS certificate is valid and warn you before it expires
help Help about any command
send is a command-line tool to send to send XMPP messages to users
Flags:
-h, --help help for fluuxmpp
Use "fluuxmpp [command] --help" for more information about a command.
check tls
$ fluuxmpp check --help
is a command-line to check if you XMPP TLS certificate is valid and warn you before it expires
Usage:
fluuxmpp check <host[:port]> [flags]
Examples:
fluuxmpp check chat.sum7.eu:5222 --domain meckerspace.de
Flags:
-d, --domain string domain if host handle multiple domains
-h, --help help for check
sending messages
$ fluuxmpp send --help
is a command-line tool to send to send XMPP messages to users
Usage:
fluuxmpp send <recipient,> [message] [flags]
Examples:
fluuxmpp send to@chat.sum7.eu "Hello World!"
Flags:
--addr string host[:port]
--config string config file (default is ~/.config/fluuxmpp.yml)
-h, --help help for send
--jid string using jid (required)
-m, --muc recipient is a muc (join it before sending messages)
--password string using password for your jid (required)
Examples
check tls
If you server is on standard port and XMPP domains matches the hostname you can simply use:
$ fluuxmpp check chat.sum7.eu
info All checks passed
⇢ address="chat.sum7.eu" domain=""
⇢ main.go:43 main.runCheck
⇢ 2019-07-16T22:01:39.765+02:00
You can also pass the port and the XMPP domain if different from the server hostname:
$ fluuxmpp check chat.sum7.eu:5222 --domain meckerspace.de
info All checks passed
⇢ address="chat.sum7.eu:5222" domain="meckerspace.de"
⇢ main.go:43 main.runCheck
⇢ 2019-07-16T22:01:33.270+02:00
Error code will be non-zero in case of error. You can thus use it directly with your usual monitoring scripts.
sending messages
Message from arguments:
$ fluuxmpp send to@example.org "Hello World!"
info client connected
⇢ cmd.go:56 main.glob..func1.1
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:42:43.310+02:00
info send message
⇢ muc=false text="Hello World!" to="to@example.org"
⇢ send.go:31 main.send
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:42:43.310+02:00
Message from STDIN:
$ journalctl -f | fluuxmpp send to@example.org -
info client connected
⇢ cmd.go:56 main.glob..func1.1
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:40:03.177+02:00
info send message
⇢ muc=false text="-- Logs begin at Mon 2019-07-08 22:16:54 CEST. --" to="to@example.org"
⇢ send.go:31 main.send
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:40:03.178+02:00
info send message
⇢ muc=false text="Jul 17 23:36:46 RECHNERNAME systemd[755]: Started Fetch mails." to="to@example.org"
⇢ send.go:31 main.send
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:40:03.178+02:00
^C
Multiple recipients:
$ fluuxmpp send to1@example.org,to2@example.org "Multiple recipient"
info client connected
⇢ cmd.go:56 main.glob..func1.1
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:47:57.650+02:00
info send message
⇢ muc=false text="Multiple recipient" to="to1@example.org"
⇢ send.go:31 main.send
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:47:57.651+02:00
info send message
⇢ muc=false text="Multiple recipient" to="to2@example.org"
⇢ send.go:31 main.send
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:47:57.652+02:00
Send to MUC:
journalctl -f | fluuxmpp send testit@conference.chat.sum7.eu - --muc
info client connected
⇢ cmd.go:56 main.glob..func1.1
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:52:56.269+02:00
info send message
⇢ muc=true text="-- Logs begin at Mon 2019-07-08 22:16:54 CEST. --" to="testit@conference.chat.sum7.eu"
⇢ send.go:31 main.send
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:52:56.270+02:00
info send message
⇢ muc=true text="Jul 17 23:48:58 RECHNERNAME systemd[755]: mail.service: Succeeded." to="testit@conference.chat.sum7.eu"
⇢ send.go:31 main.send
⇢ 2019-07-17T23:52:56.277+02:00
^C
Authentification
Configuration file
In /etc/
, ~/.config
and .
(here).
You could create the file name fluuxmpp
with you favorite file extension (e.g. toml
, yml
).
e.g. ~/.config/fluuxmpp.toml
jid = "bot@example.org"
password = "secret"
addr = "example.com:5222"
Environment variables
export FLUXXMPP_JID='bot@example.org';
export FLUXXMPP_PASSWORD='secret';
export FLUXXMPP_ADDR='example.com:5222';
fluuxmpp send to@example.org "Hello Welt";
Parameters
Warning: This should not be used for production systems, as all users on the system can read the running processes, and their parameters (and thus the password).
fluuxmpp send to@example.org "Hello World!" --jid bot@example.org --password secret --addr example.com:5222;