0.1.5 • Published 10 years ago

slack-line v0.1.5

Weekly downloads
1
License
ISC
Repository
-
Last release
10 years ago

command line interface for some simple interractions with slack.com

this is a work in progress. feel free to contact through github with questions, concerns, or pull requests

installation

npm install slack-line -g

configuration

configuration happens at ~/.slack_info.json by default. This may be configured with the -s or --slack-info flags

all configuration, aside from setting your slack token, is completely optional. Your name will be used based on your token

{
  "user": {
    "username": "Evan-Bot",
    "icon_emoji": ":smiling-imp:"
    "slack_token": "xoxp-2398234273-234892734723-2372439874-239487234"
  }
}

alternatively, slack_token may be set with the SLACK_TOKEN environment variable. --slack-info takes precidence, if the token exists.

you may also set a default feed to read from and write to by setting channel in the config file

{
  "user": {
    "username": "Evan-Bot",
    "icon_emoji": ":smiling-imp:"
    "slack_token": "xoxp-2398234273-234892734723-2372439874-239487234"
    "channel": "channel_1"
  }
}

this channel will be overridden by command line arguments

you may also follow channels by writing their events into a file. in order to do this, you must define the channels you wish to follow

a file will be created for each room you follow. files are started fresh each time the follow command is started

{
  "user": {
    "username": "Evan-Bot",
    "icon_emoji": ":smiling-imp:"
    "slack_token": "xoxp-2398234273-234892734723-2372439874-239487234"
    "channel": "channel_1"
  },
  "follow":[
    "channel_1",
    "channel_2"
  ]
}

finally, you may define the directory which these follow files will be saved. by default, they are saved in ~/.slack. the history directory will be created if it doesn't already exist

{
  "user": {
    "username": "Evan-Bot",
    "icon_emoji": ":smiling-imp:"
    "slack_token": "xoxp-2398234273-234892734723-2372439874-239487234"
    "channel": "channel_1"
  },
  "follow":[
    "channel_1",
    "channel_2"
  ],
  "history": "~/.slack"
}

options

use the -h or --help flags to find out more about slack-line

-h and --help are also available on each subcommand

read

read the last 20 messages from #channel_1

slackit.js read -n 20 -c channel_1

read the last 20 minutes of messages from #channel_1

slackit.js read -t 20 -c channel_1

write

write a message to #channel_1

slackit.js write -m "my message goes here" -c channel_1

follow

follow a set of channels by piping their output into text files to tail, grep, or otherwise watch

channels are defined in .slack_info.json

0.1.5

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