Mercurial > libervia-backend
view doc/jp/event_invitee.rst @ 3254:6cf4bd6972c2
core, frontends: avatar refactoring:
/!\ huge commit
Avatar logic has been reworked around the IDENTITY plugin: plugins able to handle avatar
or other identity related metadata (like nicknames) register to IDENTITY plugin in the
same way as for other features like download/upload. Once registered, IDENTITY plugin will
call them when suitable in order of priority, and handle caching.
Methods to manage those metadata from frontend now use serialised data.
For now `avatar` and `nicknames` are handled:
- `avatar` is now a dict with `path` + metadata like `media_type`, instead of just a string
path
- `nicknames` is now a list of nicknames in order of priority. This list is never empty,
and `nicknames[0]` should be the preferred nickname to use by frontends in most cases.
In addition to contact specified nicknames, user set nickname (the one set in roster) is
used in priority when available.
Among the side changes done with this commit, there are:
- a new `contactGet` bridge method to get roster metadata for a single contact
- SatPresenceProtocol.send returns a Deferred to check when it has actually been sent
- memory's methods to handle entities data now use `client` as first argument
- metadata filter can be specified with `getIdentity`
- `getAvatar` and `setAvatar` are now part of the IDENTITY plugin instead of XEP-0054 (and
there signature has changed)
- `isRoom` and `getBareOrFull` are now part of XEP-0045 plugin
- jp avatar/get command uses `xdg-open` first when available for `--show` flag
- `--no-cache` has been added to jp avatar/get and identity/get
- jp identity/set has been simplified, explicit options (`--nickname` only for now) are
used instead of `--field`. `--field` may come back in the future if necessary for extra
data.
- QuickContactList `SetContact` now handle None as a value, and doesn't use it to delete the
metadata anymore
- improved cache handling for `metadata` and `nicknames` in quick frontend
- new `default` argument in QuickContactList `getCache`
author | Goffi <goffi@goffi.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 14 Apr 2020 21:00:33 +0200 |
parents | 72583524cfd3 |
children |
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.. _jp-event_invitee: ======================================== event/invitee: event invitees management ======================================== ``invitee`` groups commands to invite somebody to an event, get or set data about an invitee, and list all invitees. You can send an invitation by e-mail to people without XMPP account. .. _jp-event_invitee_get: get === Retrieve the RSVP status of one guest. Note that you must the invitees node and not the event node. To retrieve invitees node, use :ref:`jp-event_get` with the event node. You may specify the guest bare jid using ``-j JID, --jid JID`` (by default your own bare jid will be used). If no response is known yet, no data is returned. example ------- Get RSVP of Louise:: $ jp event invitee get -u "xmpp:pierre@example.net?;node=generic%2F876a2b99-1c90-41fa-b823-c4a467140770" -j louise@example.org .. _jp-event_invitee_set: set === Set your own RSVP data. Note that as for jp-event_invitee_get_ you must use invitees node and not the event node. Use ``-f KEY VALUE, --field KEY VALUE`` to specify the data to set. ``KEY`` can be one of ``attend`` (where calue can be ``yes``, ``no``, or ``maybe``) and ``guests`` where value must be an integer. example ------- Indicate that you'll come to an event with 3 guests:: $ jp event invitee set -u "xmpp:pierre@example.net?;node=generic%2F876a2b99-1c90-41fa-b823-c4a467140770" -f attend yes -f guests 3 list ==== Get and format the RSVP of your invitees. Note that as for jp-event_invitee_get_ and jp-event_invitee_set_ you must use invitees node and not the event node. By default, only people who have answered are shown. You may use ``-m, --missing`` to show other people which were invited, but have not answered yet. When using this option, you can also use ``-R, --no-rsvp`` to only show people which have not answered yet. You'll also have a small summary indicating how many people who can expect at your event. example ------- Get the full list of invitees (including those who didn't answered yet) with the RSVP formatted:: $ jp event invitee list -u "xmpp:pierre@example.net?;node=generic%2F876a2b99-1c90-41fa-b823-c4a467140770" -m invite ------ Invite somebody to an event. The invitation is done by e-mail, a guest account will be created. Contrary to other ``invitee`` commands, in this one you'll use the event node directly. This command is really similar to :ref:`jp-invitation_create` E-mail address is specified using ``-e EMAIL, --email EMAIL`` and you'll need to give an URL template (using ``-U URL_TEMPLATE, --url-template URL_TEMPLATE``)leading to your website page handling the invitation (for Libervia default invitation page is ``<your_server>/g/<uuid>``). You can use ``{uuid}`` as a placeholder which will be replaced by event's id. You'll probably want to specify the name of the invitee, using ``-N NAME, --name NAME`` and your own name (as the host inviting), using ``-H HOST_NAME, --host-name HOST_NAME``. The language spoken by your guest can be specified using ``-l LANG, --lang LANG``, it is mainly useful if you have many invitee speaking different languages. example ------- Pierre is inviting Louise (whose e-mail address is ``louise_email@example.net``) to an event he's organising:: $ jp event invitee invite -e louise_email@example.et -N "Louise" -H "Pierre" -l fr -U "https://www.example.org/g/{uuid}" -u "xmpp:pierre@example.org?;node=generic%2F61400ea7-a2a2-4ce0-9b68-3735b602f671"