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cli (output/std): use `rich` to output JSON.
author | Goffi <goffi@goffi.org> |
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date | Wed, 20 Nov 2024 11:38:44 +0100 |
parents | c4418949aa37 |
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.. _libervia-cli_pubsub: ========================= pubsub: PubSub management ========================= PubSub commands are low level command to handle a PubSub Service. They are using the generic pubsub arguments For most of those commands, :ref:`pubsub_common` commands are used to specify the destination item. set === Publish a pubsub item. ``stdin`` is used to get the raw XML of the payload of the item to publish. ``-f KEY VALUE, --field KEY VALUE`` can be used to specify publish options, i.e. option which must be set if the node already exists, or used if the node is to be created, see `XEP-0060 §7.1.5`_ for details. In the same way as for :ref:`libervia-cli_pubsub_node_create`, ``-F, --full-prefix`` can be used if you need to specify the full option name. |e2e_arg| |pte_arg| |sign_arg| .. _XEP-0060 §7.1.5: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0060.html#publisher-publish-options example ------- Create an item with a custom note XML:: $ echo '<note xmlns="http://example.net/mynotes">this is a note</note>' | li pubsub set -n "notes" .. _li_pubsub_get: get === Retrieve items from specified node. Default output is prettified and highlighted XML. If the node is end-to-end encrypted, items will be automatically and transparently decrypted if the shared secrets are known. If you want to avoid this behaviour and get the items undecrypted, you can use the ``--no-decrypt`` flag. example ------- Retrieve the last 5 notes from our custom notes node:: $ li pubsub get -n notes -M 5 .. _li_pubsub_delete: delete ====== Delete an item from a node. If ``--no-notification`` is specified, subscribers wont be notified of the item retraction (this is NOT recommended, as it will cause trouble to keep items in sync, take caution when using this flag). By default a confirmation is requested before deletion is requested to the PubSub service, but you can override this behaviour by using ``-f, --force`` option. example ------- Delete item with id ``123456`` from a node:: $ li pubsub delete -n test_node -i 123456 edit ==== Edit the raw XML of an item payload using your local editor (the one set in ``$EDITOR``). If you don't change anything or publish an empty blog post, the edition will be cancelled. :ref:`draft_common` commands can be used. |e2e_arg| |pte_arg| |sign_arg| example ------- Edit the last note in our custom node:: $ li pubsub edit -n notes -L .. _li-pubsub_rename: rename ====== Move a item to a new ID. As there is currently no "rename" or "move" operation in XMPP PubSub, this is done by republishing the item with the new ID, then deleting the old item if the publication succeed. This is notably useful when user friendly URL based on ID are used, and one need to fix a typo or something else. example ------- Rename a PubSub item with ID ``123`` to ``456``:: $ li pubsub rename -n some_node -i 123 456 subscribe ========= Subscribe to a node. Subscription is used to get notifications from the node in case of new/updated item or deletion. If ``--public`` is used, the subscription will be made visible to anybody. For this to work, the target pubsub/PEP service must implement `XEP-0465 Public Pubsub Subscriptions`_. If your own server also implements XEP-0495 (and thus `XEP-0376 Pubsub Account Management`_ wich is a dependency), your subscription will also be visible to people requesting pubsub public subscriptions from your account. .. note:: Making a subscription public is interesting to show your center of interests and to let other people discover people that you are subscribed to or who are subscribed to you (this correspond the the "following" and "followers" feature that is seen on some software). However, it also makes your subscription visible to evil entities such as spammer, bot collectings informations for e.g. marketing or surveillance. In some locations, it may even be life threating as unwisely making public subscription may show your political views, sexual orientation, religion, etc. Furthermore, if you make public subscriptions, your JID may be retrieved easily (public subscriptions can be checked to see if a JID exists and is used, or your JID can be simply found from subscribed node, or from your subscribers). This is often desirable in the case of social interactions, but this is to be known if you're willing to keep your identifier secret (in this case, don't use public subscriptions). example ------- Subscribe to an information blog:: $ li pubsub subscribe -n informations -s pubsub.example.net Pierre wants to subscribe to Louise blog, and to make it public, so other people can discover it:: $ li pubsub subscribe -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -s louise@example.org --public unsubscribe =========== Unsubscribe from a node. example ------- Unsubscribe from an information blog:: $ li pubsub unsubscribe -n informations -s pubsub.example.net subscriptions ============= Retrieve subscriptions from a user, or subscriptions for all nodes on a service. If no service and no node are specified, and if your server supports `XEP-0376 Pubsub Account Management`_, all subscriptions to any server or node of the profile are returned. ``-n NODE, --node NODE`` can be used to request subscriptions for a specific node (e.g. if it has subscription with multiple subIDs). If ``--public`` is used, only public subscriptions are retrieved. This can be used to find public subscriptions from an external user. The PEP/Pubsub service of the target entity must implement `XEP-0465 Public Pubsub Subscriptions`_. .. _XEP-0376 Pubsub Account Management: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0376.html .. _XEP-0465 Public Pubsub Subscriptions: https://xmpp.org/extensions/inbox/pubsub-public-subscriptions.html example ------- Pierre server supports XEP-0465. To check all the node where he has a subscription, Pierre can use this command:: $ li pubsub subscriptions Retrieve all subscriptions on a specific pubsub service:: $ li pubsub subscriptions -s pubsub@example.net Louise wants to checks to which node Pierre is publicly subscribed. She do it with following command:: $ li pubsub subscriptions --public -s pierre@example.net affiliations ============ Retrieve affiliations for all nodes at a service. ``-n NODE, --node NODE`` can be used to request affiliation for a specific node. examples -------- Retrieve all affiliations at a pubsub service:: $ li pubsub affiliations -s pubsub@example.net Retrieve affiliation for the ``notes`` node:: $ li pubsub affiliations -s pubsub@example.net -n notes reference ========= Send a reference (e.g. a mention) of a pubsub item to an entity. example ------- Pierre send a reference to Louise to indicate that she has been mentioned in his blog post with ID ``from-paris-to-noumea-abcd``:: $ li pubsub reference -s pierre@example.net -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -i from-paris-to-noumea-abcd louise@example.org search ====== Search items corresponding to one or more filter(s). ``search`` will check all items (or some of them according to options used) from one or several nodes (several nodes can be checked if recursion is used, see below). For each item the given filters will be checked, and all corresponding items will be returned. This is a resource intensive method (both for server and client), use with caution, and use MAM to do searching when suitable. filters ------- To do a search you one or more filters. Filters are checked in the order in which they are specified. You can use 4 kinds of filters: ``-t TEXT, --text TEXT`` do a full-text search. If *TEXT* is appearing anywhere in the item (including in XML tags or arguments), the item is selected ``-r EXPRESSION, --regex EXPRESSION`` do a regular expression search. `Python standard re module`_ is used internally, so you can use its syntax. ``-x XPATH, --xpath XPATH`` use an `XPath version 1.0`_ expression to filter the query. You can have a look at `Wikipedia XPath page`_ for a user friendly introduction. ``-P PYTHON_CODE, --python PYTHON_CODE`` use a Python expression to do a test. The expression must return a boolean (``True`` to keep item, ``False`` otherwise). From within the Python expression 3 variables are defined: ``item`` which contain the raw item as a string, and ``item_xml`` which is the parsed XML as an lxml ``etree.Element`` and ``etree`` which is the ``lxml.etree`` module. .. _Python standard re module: https://docs.python.org/3.7/library/re.html .. _XPath version 1.0: https://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-xpath-19991116/ .. _Wikipedia XPath page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XPath filter modifiers ---------------- Before each filter you can specify one or more filter modifiers. A modifier will change filter behaviour, it's a flag which can be used either without argument (then it will activate the flag), or with an explicit boolean value (i.e. ``true`` or ``false``). The available filters are: ``-C [BOOLEAN], --ignore-case [BOOLEAN]`` (don't) ignore case. Filters are normally case sensitive, this modifier change this behaviour. ``-I [BOOLEAN], --invert [BOOLEAN]`` (don't) invert effect of following filters. This is applying a logical ``NOT`` to the filter. This means that instead of keeping item matching the filter, it will keep the items which are **not** matching the filter. ``-A [BOOLEAN], --dot-all [BOOLEAN]`` (don't) use `DOTALL`_ option for regex. This filter only makes sense before a ``--regex`` expression. ``-k [BOOLEAN], --only-matching [BOOLEAN]`` (don't) keep only the matching part of the item. Normally the whole item is returned, with this flag, only the part matching the filters are kept. .. _DOTALL: https://docs.python.org/3.7/library/re.html#re.DOTALL actions ------- Once filters are set, you may indicate what do to with the found items. By default they are printed, but you can also use an other li command, or even an external tool. The following actions are available: ``print`` (default) pretty print the found items. ``exec`` use the given li command on each found item. Everything after the ``exec`` is used to indicate the command and arguments to use (you must not specify ``li``, use the command directly). The service, node and item will be set to match the found item. ``external`` pipe the raw XML of each item to the given command. Everything after the ``external`` action is used to indicate the command and arguments to use. recursive search ---------------- By default, only items in the given node will be filtered, but if you specify a recursion depth > 0 (using ``-D MAX_DEPTH, --max-depth MAX_DEPTH``), every node linked in item will be checked too, then node linked in linked item and so on until depth level is reached. For instance, if you want to find all comments of a blog node containing an http(s) link, you can do that:: $ li pubsub search -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -s user@example.net -D 1 -r 'https?://' examples -------- Finding all items containing the text "something interesting" in personal blog:: $ li pubsub search -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -M -1 -t "something interesting" Find which blog items in the last 20 have a body with less than 200 characters (note that body can be either ``<title>`` or ``<content>``, see `XEP-0277`_ for details). Here we use a python expression on the text of the body to count the number of characters:: $ li pubsub search -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -M 20 --python "len((item_xml.find('.//{http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom}content[@type=\"text\"]') or item_xml.find('.//{http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom}title[@type=\"text\"]')).text) < 200" Find items published by ``toto@example.net`` among last 30 on a blog node, and use ``pubsub blog`` command to retrieve id and title. We use ``-N`` to specify the ``pubsub`` namespace which is used in the XPath expression, then we use ``exec`` to run ``blog get -k title -k id`` on found items:: $ li pubsub search -n some_blog_node -s pubsub.example.net -M 30 -N pubsub http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub -x '/pubsub:item[starts-with(@publisher, "toto@example.net")]' exec blog get -k title -k id Find items which have **NOT** a title among last 30 items in our personal blog. As explained in `XEP-0277`_ Atom's ``<title>`` is always used (even if there is only a body and no title), so we actually look for items without ``<content>``. We do that with an XPath looking for this ``atom:content`` element, then we use the ``-I [BOOLEAN], --invert [BOOLEAN]`` to filter out elements which match.:: $ li pubsub search -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -M 30 -I -x //atom:content -N atom http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom Display authors names from last 10 items and their comments, using the ``-k [BOOLEAN], --only-matching [BOOLEAN]`` modifier to only display the data we need. We use ``-D 1`` to do a recursive search of level 1, which will also look into comments nodes (using last 10 items there too):: $ li pubsub search -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -M 10 --only-matching -x //atom:author/atom:name -N atom http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom -D 1 .. _XEP-0277: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0277.html transform ========= Modify items using an external command. ``transform`` will retrieve requested items, and will send each of them to the standard input (stdin) of the specified command. The output of the command will be used, it can be 3 things: - a raw XML of the modified item, in which case the item will be republished - the string ``SKIP``, in which case the item will be ignored - the string ``DELETE``, in which case the item will be retracted By default a dry run is done, which means that no item is modified or deleted. To actually do the transformation, you have to use ``--apply`` argument. If you have to modify the ``publisher`` of an item, you need specific privileges. The ``--admin`` allows you do to that, but it must be supported by your PubSub service (currently only ``Libervia PubSub`` supports this non standard feature). To modify all items of a node, use the ``-A, --all`` option. This will use `RSM`_ repetitively until all items are treated. Of course that means that your PubSub service must support RSM. The items being republished, they will reappear on top of your node, that's why it is recommended to use ``--order-by creation`` option when supported by the service, to keep consistent order and avoid transforming the same items several times. If the command you're using exit with a non zero code, the process will stop. Use ``-I, --ignore_errors`` if you want to continue transformation even if an non zero code is returned. .. _RSM: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0059.html example ------- Imagine that you want to replace all occurrences of "SàT" by "Libervia" in your personal blog. You first create a Python script like this: .. sourcecode:: python #!/usr/bin/env python3 import sys item_raw = sys.stdin.read() if not "SàT" in item_raw: print("SKIP") else: print(item_raw.replace("SàT", "Libervia")) And save it a some location, e.g. ``~/expand_sat.py`` (don't forget to make it executable with ``chmod +x ~/expand_sat.py``). To be sure it's safe, you can first do a dry-run and check the result:: $ li pubsub transform -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -A -o creation ~/expand_sat.py Once you have checked that you have the expected behaviour, you can apply the transformations:: $ li pubsub transform -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 -A -o creation --apply ~/expand_sat.py And that's it. You can use the same technique for more complex transformations, including modifying the XML (with Python, you can easily do that with standard ``xml.etree.ElementTree`` module or with ``lxml.etree``). uri === Build an XMPP URI linking to a PubSub node or item. example ------- Build a link to personal blog:: $ li pubsub uri -n urn:xmpp:microblog:0 node ==== Subcommands for node management. Please check :ref:`libervia-cli_pubsub_node`. attachments =========== Subcommands to add or remove data attached to pubsub items. Please check :ref:`libervia-cli_pubsub_attachments`. signature ========= Subcommands to handle items signature. Please check :ref:`libervia-cli_pubsub_signature`. secret ====== Subcommands for pubsub node shared secrets management. Please check :ref:`libervia-cli_pubsub_secret`. hook ==== Subcommands for hooks management. Please check :ref:`libervia-cli_pubsub_hook`. cache ===== Subcommands for cache management. Please check :ref:`libervia-cli_pubsub_cache`.