slack-cli
slack-cli copied to clipboard
Slack CLI for productive developers
========= slack-cli
⚠️ THIS PROJECT IS IN MAINTENANCE MODE. I have lost interest in Slack -- actually, the less I use Slack the better I feel. Thus I do not have the time nor the energy to make slack-cli compatible with the new Slack authentication mechanism. I will happily review and merge pull requests, though 🙂 If a contributor would like to step forward and start fixing issues, I could then transfer ownership of the project (after they have demonstrated proficiency and integrity).
Effectively interact with Slack <https://slack.com/>
_ from the command line: send messages, upload files, send command output, pipe content... all from the confort of your terminal.
Member of dozens of Slack teams? No worries, with slack-cli
you can easily switch from one team to another.
.. image:: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/regisb/slack-cli/master/docs/demo.png
Quickstart
::
$ pip install slack-cli
$ slack-cli -d general "Hello everyone!"
You will be asked to provide a Slack API token. It's easy, check out the Tokens
_ section for a quickstart.
Usage
::
$ slack-cli -h
usage: slack-cli [-h] [-t TOKEN] [-T TEAM] [-d DST] [-f FILE] [--pre] [--run]
[-u USER] [-s SRC] [-l LAST]
[messages [messages ...]]
Send, pipe, upload and receive Slack messages from the CLI
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t TOKEN, --token TOKEN
Explicitly specify Slack API token which will be
saved to /home/user/.config/slack-cli/slack_token.
-T TEAM, --team TEAM Team domain to interact with. This is the name that
appears in the Slack url: https://xxx.slack.com. Use
this option to interact with different teams. If
unspecified, default to the team that was last used.
Send messages:
-d DST, --dst DST Send message to a Slack channel, group or username
-f FILE, --file FILE Upload file
--pre Send as verbatim `message`
--run Run the message as a shell command and send both the
message and the command output
-u USER, --user USER Send message not as the current user, but as a bot
with the specified user name
messages Messages to send (messages can also be sent from
standard input)
Receive messages:
-s SRC, --src SRC Receive messages from a Slack channel, group or
username. This option can be specified multiple times.
When streaming, use 'all' to stream from all sources.
-l LAST, --last LAST Print the last N messages. If this option is not
specified, messages will be streamed from the
requested sources.
Sending messages
The destination argument may be any user, group or channel::
$ slack-cli -d general "Hello everyone!"
$ slack-cli -d slackbot "Hello!"
Send message with a different username::
$ slack-cli -d general -u terminator "I'll be back"
Update status
::
$ slack-cli -d general "/status :office: In the office"
$ slack-cli -d general "/status :house: At home"
$ slack-cli -d general "/status Just chillin'"
$ slack-cli -d general "/status clear"
Pipe content from stdin
::
$ cat /etc/hosts | slack-cli -d devteam
Usually you will want to format piped content as verbatim content with triple backticks ("\`\`\`"). This is achieved with the ``--pre`` option::
$ tail -f /var/log/nginx/access.log | slack-cli -d devteam --pre
Upload file
~~~~~~~~~~~
::
$ slack-cli -f /etc/nginx/sites-available/default.conf -d alice
Run command and send output
This is really convenient for showing both the result of a command and the command itself::
$ slack-cli -d john --run "git log -1"
will send to user john
::
$ git log -1
commit 013798f5c85043d31f0221a9a32b39298e97fb08
Author: Régis Behmo <[email protected]>
Date: Thu Jun 22 15:20:36 2017 +0200
Replace all commands by a single command
Our first 1.0 release!
Receiving messages
Stream to stdout
Stream the content of a channel::
$ slack-cli -s general
Monitor all conversations::
$ slack-cli -s all
Dump (backup) the content of a channel
::
$ slack-cli -s general --last 10000 > general.log
$ slack-cli -s myboss --last 10000 > covermyass.log
Authentication
Switch to a different team
Switch to a different team anytime with the ``-T`` flag::
$ slack-cli -T family -d general "I'll be home in an hour"
The new team will become the new default team.
Token management
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Note that the Slack token may optionally be stored in an environment variable (although it is not recommended `for security reasons <https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/369566/why-is-passing-the-secrets-via-environmental-variables-considered-extremely-ins>`_)::
$ export SLACK_TOKEN="slack_token_string"
The ``slack-cli`` configuration is stored in a generic configuration directory -- by default, this is ~/.config/slack-cli on Linux. You can check the path of this directory by running::
python3 -c "from slackcli.token import CONFIG_ROOT; print(CONFIG_ROOT)"
This directory can be modified by setting the ``SLACK_CLI_CONFIG_ROOT`` environment variable. For instance::
export SLACK_CLI_CONFIG_ROOT=~/slackcli
Bells and Whistles ᕕ(⌐■_■)ᕗ ♪♬
------------------------------
Autocomplete
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Channel, group and user names can be autocompleted from the command line for `bash` users. Add the following line to `~/.bashrc`::
eval "$(register-python-argcomplete slack-cli)"
Then, try autocompletion with::
$ slack -s gene<tab>
or::
$ slack -d <tab><tab>
Unfortunately, I did not manage to get autocompletion to work with ``zsh`` ¯\\_( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)_/¯ Please let me know if you have more success.
Colors
~~~~~~
Color output is activated by default in compatible terminals. To deactivate colors, define the ``SLACK_CLI_NO_COLOR`` environment variable::
export SLACK_CLI_NO_COLORS=1
Emojis
~~~~~~
Emoji short codes will be automatically replaced by their corresponding unicode value. For instance, ``:smile:`` will become 😄. However, **these characters will display properly only if your terminal supports them!** I stronly encourage you to download patched fonts from `Nerd Fonts <https://nerdfonts.com/>`_ and to configure your terminal to use them. For instance, in Ubuntu this is how I downloaded the DejaVuSansMono fonts::
wget -O ~/.fonts/DejaVuSansMono.zip https://github.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts/releases/download/v2.0.0/DejaVuSansMono.zip
cd ~/.fonts
unzip DejaVuSansMono.zip
fc-cache -vf ~/.fonts
If emojis are not your thing, you can disable them globally with the ``SLACK_CLI_NO_EMOJI`` environment variable::
export SLACK_CLI_NO_EMOJI=1
Tokens
~~~~~~
To generate a token, create a `new Slack App <https://api.slack.com/apps/new>`__ and add it to your workspace.
Grant API Permissions to your App, select all that apply (you probably want "chat:write"):
.. figure:: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/regisb/slack-cli/master/docs/permissions.gif
:alt: Create App and add OAuth Scopes
This is an example of how it could look like:
.. figure:: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/regisb/slack-cli/master/docs/scope_example.png
:alt: Example scopes
Now hit the green ``Install App to workspace`` button, and you will be presented with a token you can use for authentication.
.. figure:: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/regisb/slack-cli/master/docs/token.png
:alt: OAuth Access Token
Development
-----------
Contributions
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I am very much open to comments! Please don't be afraid to `raise issues <https://github.com/regisb/slack-cli/issues>`_ or `open pull requests <https://github.com/regisb/slack-cli/pulls>`_.
This work is licensed under the terms of the `MIT License <https://tldrlegal.com/license/mit-license>`_
Note that this project was initially a fork of `slacker-cli <https://github.com/juanpabloaj/slacker-cli/>`_ but the two projects have now considerably diverged.
Tests
~~~~~
Install the development requirements::
pip install -e .[development]
Run all tests::
make test
Format your code with `black <https://black.readthedocs.io/en/stable/>`__::
make format
Update emojis
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
::
python -c "from slackcli.emoji import Emojis; Emojis.download()"