Mercurial > libervia-backend
view doc/libervia-cli/pipe.rst @ 3911:8289ac1b34f4
plugin XEP-0384: Fully reworked to adjust to the reworked python-omemo:
- support for both (modern) OMEMO under the `urn:xmpp:omemo:2` namespace and (legacy) OMEMO under the `eu.siacs.conversations.axolotl` namespace
- maintains one identity across both versions of OMEMO
- migrates data from the old plugin
- includes more features for protocol stability
- uses SCE for modern OMEMO
- fully type-checked, linted and format-checked
- added type hints to various pieces of backend code used by the plugin
- added stubs for some Twisted APIs used by the plugin under stubs/ (use `export MYPYPATH=stubs/` before running mypy)
- core (xmpp): enabled `send` trigger and made it an asyncPoint
fix 375
author | Syndace <me@syndace.dev> |
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date | Tue, 23 Aug 2022 21:06:24 +0200 |
parents | 267e4987b58b |
children |
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================================================== pipe: send/receive data stream through shell pipes ================================================== ``pipe`` commands allow you to send or receive data stream through a Unix shell pipe. Libervia will create a network connection (using XMPP and Jingle) between you an your contact. in == Receive data stream. Data will be send to stdout, so it can be piped out or simply print to the screen. You can specify bare jids of entities to accept stream for, by default all streams are accepted. example ------- Receive a video stream, and redirect it to mpv_ so show the video:: $ li pipe in | mpv - .. _mpv: https://mpv.io/ out === Send data stream. Data comes from stdin, so you may use pipe in something or just write some text. The only expected argument is the full jid of the device where the stream must be piped out. example ------- Send a video to louise:: $ li pipe out louise@example.org/libervia.123 < some_video.webm Send output from ``cal`` command to louise:: $ cal | li pipe out louise@example.org/libervia.123