A more-unixy twtxt client.
Doesn't force you to maintain a master "following" file (the way Twitter does), but let's you point it to any follow-file every time it runs.
This means unlimited possibilities for ad-hoc, interesting filtering combinations. Especially when paired with process substitution.
- Void Linux:
xbps-install racket
- Debian:
apt install racket
make build && make install
will build and copy tt
binary into
$PREFIX/bin
, where $PREFIX
defaults to $HOME
.
Put your <nick>
and <uri>
into ~/.tt/me
. For example, mine is:
$ cat ~/.tt/me
xandkar https://xandkar.net/twtxt.txt
It will be used to fill the User-Agent
header, so that others can tell you're
reading their twtxts and perhaps read yours. This isn't strictly necessary and
if omitted, you'll stay anonymous.
$ tt --help
tt [ <option> ... ] <command> [<args>] ...
where <option> is one of
-d, --debug : Enable debug log level.
and <command> is one of
r, read : Read the timeline (offline operation).
d, download : Download the timeline.
u, upload : Upload your twtxt file (alias to execute ~/.tt/upload).
c, crawl : Discover new peers mentioned by known peers (offline operation).
--help, -h : Show this help
-- : Do not treat any remaining argument as a switch (at this level)
Multiple single-letter switches can be combined after one `-'; for
example: `-h-' is the same as `-h --'
peers' feeds from the Internet:
$ tt d -h
tt download [ <option> ... ] [<file-paths>] ...
where <option> is one of
-j <njobs>, --jobs <njobs> : Number of concurrent jobs.
--help, -h : Show this help
-- : Do not treat any remaining argument as a switch (at this level)
Multiple single-letter switches can be combined after one `-'; for
example: `-h-' is the same as `-h --'
your timeline:
$ tt r -h
tt read [ <option> ... ] [<file-paths>] ...
where <option> is one of
-r, --rev : Reverse displayed timeline order.
/ -s, --short : Short output format
\ -l, --long : Long output format
--help, -h : Show this help
-- : Do not treat any remaining argument as a switch (at this level)
/|\ Brackets indicate mutually exclusive options.
Multiple single-letter switches can be combined after one `-'; for
example: `-h-' is the same as `-h --'
FOLLOW-FILE
contains lines with space-separated nick and twtxt.txt URI, like:
xandkar https://xandkar.net/twtxt.txt
If omitted, FOLLOW-FILE
defaults to ~/.tt/peers
.
tt <command> -h
Downloaded timelines are stored in ~/.tt/cache/objects/<URL_ENCODED_URL>
, but
no attempt is made to preserve the previously-downloaded messages - each
download overrites the previous. One of the implications is that authors can
edit/delete history without you noticing.