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view doc/libervia-cli/index.rst @ 3528:849374e59178
component file sharing: quotas implementation:
quotas can now be specified using the `quotas_json` option of `component file_sharing`
section in settings. This must be a dict where:
- `users` key contains default quotas for all users
- `admins` key contains quotas for administrators (not implemented yet)
- `jids` contain bare JID to quota mapping, to have user-specific quota
The value can be either a int for quota in bytes, or a case insensitive string with an
optional multiplier symbol (e.g. "500 Mio"). `None` can be used for explicit unlimited
quota (which is the default is `users` is not set).
When a file size is too big for quota, upload is refused with an error message indicating
allowed quota, used space, and the size of the file that user wants to upload.
author | Goffi <goffi@goffi.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 05 May 2021 15:37:33 +0200 |
parents | 4705f80b6e23 |
children |
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.. _libervia-cli_documentation: ============ Libervia CLI ============ Libervia CLI is the Command Line Interface of Libervia ``libervia-cli`` is the command to launch it. ``li`` is short alias for ``libervia-cli``, it is the command used through this documentation. Overview ======== ``li`` is a powerful tool to work with Libervia/XMPP. With it you can send chat messages, share files, retrieve avatars, write blog entries, etc. Usage ===== To get help on commands or their options, use:: $ li --help which can be used on any command, so if you need help on ``message send`` command, just do:: $ li message send --help With li, you always enter commands first, then options and arguments. There are several levels of commands: first one is the main category (``message``, ``blog``, ``avatar``, etc.), then there are often subcommands (e.g. ``message send``). After the commands come the options. For instance if you want to send a message, you can get the available options with ``--help`` as explained above:: $ li message send --help usage: li message send [-h] [-p PROFILE] [--pwd PASSWORD] [-c] [-l LANG] [-s] [-n] [-S SUBJECT] [-L SUBJECT_LANG] [-t {chat,error,groupchat,headline,normal,auto}] [-e ALGORITHM] [--encrypt-noreplace] [-x | -r] jid positional arguments: jid the destination jid optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -p PROFILE, --profile PROFILE Use PROFILE profile key (default: @DEFAULT@) --pwd PASSWORD Password used to connect profile, if necessary -c, --connect Connect the profile before doing anything else -l LANG, --lang LANG language of the message -s, --separate separate xmpp messages: send one message per line instead of one message alone. -n, --new-line add a new line at the beginning of the input (usefull for ascii art ;)) -S SUBJECT, --subject SUBJECT subject of the message -L SUBJECT_LANG, --subject_lang SUBJECT_LANG language of subject -t {chat,error,groupchat,headline,normal,auto}, --type {chat,error,groupchat,headline,normal,auto} type of the message -e ALGORITHM, --encrypt ALGORITHM encrypt message using given algorithm --encrypt-noreplace don't replace encryption algorithm if an other one is already used -x, --xhtml XHTML body If you want to send a message to, say, ``pierre@example.net``, and encrypt it with OMEMO, just do the following:: echo "hi, I'm writing with li" | li message send -e omemo pierre@example.net (note that with OMEMO, you need to have previously validated fingerprint of your contact for this to work). The different commands are explained in dedicated sections. .. toctree:: :caption: li commands: :glob: :maxdepth: 2 common_arguments * Tutorial ======== You can check this third party tutorial: https://blog.agayon.be/sat_jp.html