184 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
184 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
json-rpc-shell(1)
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=================
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:doctype: manpage
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:manmanual: json-rpc-shell Manual
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:mansource: json-rpc-shell {release-version}
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Name
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----
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json-rpc-shell - a simple JSON-RPC 2.0 shell
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Synopsis
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--------
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*json-rpc-shell* [_OPTION_]... _ENDPOINT_
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Description
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-----------
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The _ENDPOINT_ must be either an HTTP or a WebSocket URL, with or without TLS
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(i.e. one of the _+++http+++://_, _+++https+++://_, _ws://_, _wss://_ schemas).
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*json-rpc-shell* will use it to send any JSON-RPC 2.0 requests you enter on its
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command line. The server's response will be parsed and validated, stripping it
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of the protocol's noisy envelope. At your option, it can then also be
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pretty-printed, rendered with adjustable syntax highlighting, or even piped
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through another program such as the *less*(1) pager or the *jq*(1) JSON
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processor.
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Usage
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~~~~~
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Three things may appear on the internal command line, in a sequence. The first
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one is always the name of the JSON-RPC method to call, as a bare word, separated
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from the rest by white space. Following that, you may enter three kinds of JSON
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values. If it is an object or an array, it constitutes the method parameters.
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If it is a string or a number, it is taken as the "id" to use for the request,
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which would be chosen for you automatically if left unspecified. Finally,
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a null value indicates that the request should be sent as a notification,
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lacking the ID completely. Booleans cannot be used for anything.
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The response to the method call may be piped through external commands, the same
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way you would do it in a Unix shell.
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Exit the program by pressing C-c or C-d. No special keywords are reserved for
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this action as they might conflict with method names.
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Options
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-------
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Controlling output
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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*-c*, *--compact-output*::
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Do not pretty-print responses. Normally, spaces and newlines are added
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where appropriate to improve readability.
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*--color*=_WHEN_::
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By default, when the output of the program is a terminal, JSON responses
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are syntax-highlighted. This corresponds to the _auto_ setting. You may
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also set this to _always_ or _never_. In either case, color is never
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applied when piping to another program.
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*-v*, *--verbose*::
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Print raw requests and responses, including the JSON-RPC 2.0 envelope.
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*-d*, *--debug*::
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Print even more information to help debug various issues.
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Protocol
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~~~~~~~~
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*-n*, *--null-as-id*::
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Normally, entering a null JSON value on the command line causes
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a notification to be sent. With this option, it is sent as the "id"
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field of a normal request, which is discouraged by the specification.
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*-t*, *--trust-all*::
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Trust all SSL/TLS certificates. Useful in case that the certificate is
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self-signed, or when the CA isn't in your CA store. Beware that this option
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is about as good as using plain unencrypted HTTP.
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*-o* _ORIGIN_, *--origin*=_ORIGIN_::
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Set the HTTP Origin header to _ORIGIN_. Some servers may need this.
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*-O*[__PATH__], *--openrpc*[**=**__PATH__]::
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Call "rpc.discover" upon start-up in order to pull in OpenRPC data for
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tab completion of method names. If a path is given, it is read from a file.
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Program information
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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*-h*, *--help*::
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Display a help message and exit.
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*-V*, *--version*::
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Output version information and exit.
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*--write-default-cfg*[**=**__PATH__]::
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Write a default configuration file, show its path and exit.
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Files
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-----
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_~/.config/json-rpc-shell/json-rpc-shell.conf_::
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The configuration file, in which you can configure color output and
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CA certificate paths. Use the *--write-default-cfg* option to create
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a new one for editing.
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_~/.local/share/json-rpc-shell/history_::
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All your past method invocations are stored here upon exit and loaded back
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on start-up.
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Notes
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-----
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Editing
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~~~~~~~
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While single-line editing on the command line may be satisfactory for simple
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requests, it is often convenient or even necessary to run a full text editor
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in order to construct complex objects or arrays, and may even be used to import
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data from elsewhere. You can launch an editor for the current request using
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the M-e key combination. Both *readline*(3) and *editline*(7) also support
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multiline editing natively, press either M-Enter or C-v C-j in order to insert
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newlines.
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WebSocket
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~~~~~~~~~
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The JSON-RPC 2.0 specification doesn't say almost anything about underlying
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transports. The way it's implemented here is that every request is sent as
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a single text message. If it has an "id" field, i.e., it's not just
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a notification, the client waits for a message from the server in response.
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Should any message arrive unexpectedly, you will receive a warning.
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There is no support so far for any protocol extensions, nor for specifying
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the higher-level protocol (the "Sec-Ws-Protocol" HTTP field).
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Bugs
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----
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The editline (libedit) frontend is more of a proof of concept that mostly seems
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to work but exhibits bugs that are not our fault.
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Examples
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--------
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Running some queries against json-rpc-test-server, included in the source
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distribution of this program (public services are hard to find):
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Methods without parameters
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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$ json-rpc-shell ws://localhost:1234
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json-rpc> ping
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"pong"
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json-rpc> date
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{
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"year": 2020,
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"month": 9,
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"day": 5,
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"hours": 2,
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"minutes": 23,
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"seconds": 51
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}
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Notification with a parameter
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Notifications never produce a response, not even when the method is not known
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to the server:
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$ json-rpc-shell ws://localhost:1234
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json-rpc> notify {"events": ["conquest", "war", "famine", "death"]} null
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[Notification]
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Piping in and out
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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GNU Readline always repeats the prompt, which makes this a bit less useful
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for invoking from other programs:
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$ echo 'ping | jq ascii_upcase' | json-rpc-shell ws://localhost:1234
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json-rpc> ping | jq ascii_upcase
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"PONG"
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Reporting bugs
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--------------
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Use https://git.janouch.name/p/json-rpc-shell to report bugs, request features,
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or submit pull requests.
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See also
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--------
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*jq*(1), *readline*(3) or *editline*(7)
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Specifications
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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https://www.jsonrpc.org/specification +
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https://www.json.org
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