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README @ 142:05ec7103c0f7
clix.watch_pep: Include short names for some common PEP nodes
author | Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se> |
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date | Mon, 16 Nov 2020 17:16:01 +0100 |
parent | 39:4b08296a6748 |
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# clix - Command-line XMPP tool ## Description Clix is a small utility to interact with an XMPP server. It can be used to send messages, presence, and info queries to any XMPP address. ## Example clix send --to=user@example.com "The kettle has now boiled" ## Usage Syntax: clix COMMAND [OPTIONS] [...] Different commands accept different sets of options, but they all follow some general conventions. The command must be the first parameter, followed by a series of flags or options. Global options include: --account=default The account to use from the configuration file (default is 'default') -c --chatroom[=chatroom address] Join a chatroom, if no address is specified then the value of the --to parameter is used. --nick=nickname The nickname to use if clix joins a chatroom, default "clix" -o --presence Send presence, that is - appear online to contacts. -p --password=password Set the password to use for authentication (overrides config) -r --resource=resource Set the resource to use (default is to let the server choose) -q --quiet Suppress informational messages -v --verbose Enables verbose logging of the XMPP connection When no command is specified, clix will print a list of the names and descriptions of all built-in commands. ## Configuration Clix looks for its config file at $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/.clixrc or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/.clix (XDG_CONFIG_HOME defaults to ~/.config) - it is a simple 'ini' format, which looks like this: [default] jid=user@example.com password=mypassword [otheraccount] jid=otheruser@example.org password=theirpassword and so on. You can define as many accounts as you want, if no account is called 'default' then the first account is the default. If there is no [] header at the start of the file it is assumed to be [default]. ## Building and installing Building clix is (by no accident) quite simple. It depends on Verse, an XMPP client library for Lua. Verse in turn depends on several libraries, all dependencies are listed here. Verse 2.0+: http://matthewwild.co.uk/projects/verse At the time of writing Verse 2.x has not been released yet and is available only from: http://code.matthewwild.co.uk/verse/ LuaExpat: http://www.keplerproject.org/luaexpat/ Lua XML parser. Available in Debian as liblua5.1-expat0 LuaSocket: http://www.tecgraf.puc-rio.br/~diego/professional/luasocket/ Lua networking library. Available in Debian as liblua5.1-socket2 Clix can be run directly from source if the above dependencies are installed. To make life easier it can be installed to standard directories, on most systems this means to copy clix.lua to /usr/bin/clix and the clix directory to /usr/lib/lua/5.1/clix (on some non-Debian systems the 5.1 directory isn't needed). Alternatively you can use Squish to compress all Clix's files into a single executable. If you have Squish installed then simply type 'squish' in clix's source directory to generate the compacted 'clix.bin' file. Squish can be found at http://matthewwild.co.uk/projects/squish .