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94 lines
3.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
94 lines
3.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
Sign in, Send a Message, and Disconnect
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=======================================
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.. note::
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If you have any issues working through this quickstart guide
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or the other tutorials here, please either send a message to the
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`mailing list <http://groups.google.com/group/sleekxmpp-discussion>`_
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or join the chat room at `sleek@conference.jabber.org
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<xmpp:sleek@conference.jabber.org?join>`_.
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A common use case for SleekXMPP is to send one-off messages from
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time to time. For example, one use case could be sending out a notice when
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a shell script finishes a task.
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We will create our one-shot bot based on the pattern explained in :ref:`echobot`. To
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start, we create a client class based on :class:`ClientXMPP <sleekxmpp.clientxmpp.ClientXMPP>` and
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register a handler for the :term:`session_start` event. We will also accept parameters
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for the JID that will receive our message, and the string content of the message.
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.. code-block:: python
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import sleekxmpp
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class SendMsgBot(sleekxmpp.ClientXMPP):
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def __init__(self, jid, password, recipient, msg):
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super(SendMsgBot, self).__init__(jid, password)
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self.recipient = recipient
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self.msg = msg
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self.add_event_handler('session_start', self.start)
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def start(self, event):
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self.send_presence()
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self.get_roster()
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Note that as in :ref:`echobot`, we need to include send an initial presence and request
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the roster. Next, we want to send our message, and to do that we will use :meth:`send_message <sleekxmpp.basexmpp.BaseXMPP.send_message>`.
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.. code-block:: python
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def start(self, event):
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self.send_presence()
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self.get_roster()
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self.send_message(mto=self.recipient, mbody=self.msg)
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Finally, we need to disconnect the client using :meth:`disconnect <sleekxmpp.xmlstream.XMLStream.disconnect>`.
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Now, sent stanzas are placed in a queue to pass them to the send thread. If we were to call
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:meth:`disconnect <sleekxmpp.xmlstream.XMLStream.disconnect>` without any parameters, then it is possible
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for the client to disconnect before the send queue is processed and the message is actually
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sent on the wire. To ensure that our message is processed, we use
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:meth:`disconnect(wait=True) <sleekxmpp.xmlstream.XMLStream.disconnect>`.
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.. code-block:: python
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def start(self, event):
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self.send_presence()
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self.get_roster()
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self.send_message(mto=self.recipient, mbody=self.msg)
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self.disconnect(wait=True)
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.. warning::
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If you happen to be adding stanzas to the send queue faster than the send thread
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can process them, then :meth:`disconnect(wait=True) <sleekxmpp.xmlstream.XMLStream.disconnect>`
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will block and not disconnect.
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Final Product
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-------------
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.. compound::
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The final step is to create a small runner script for initialising our ``SendMsgBot`` class and adding some
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basic configuration options. By following the basic boilerplate pattern in :ref:`echobot`, we arrive
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at the code below. To experiment with this example, you can use:
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.. code-block:: sh
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python send_client.py -d -j oneshot@example.com -t someone@example.net -m "This is a message"
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which will prompt for the password and then log in, send your message, and then disconnect. To test, open
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your regular IM client with the account you wish to send messages to. When you run the ``send_client.py``
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example and instruct it to send your IM client account a message, you should receive the message you
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gave. If the two JIDs you use also have a mutual presence subscription (they're on each other's buddy lists)
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then you will also see the ``SendMsgBot`` client come online and then go offline.
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.. include:: ../../examples/send_client.py
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:literal:
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