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Slack CLI for productive developers

Project description

Effectively interact with Slack 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, slack-cli supports switching easily from one team to another.

Quickstart

$ pip install slack-cli
$ slack-cli -d general "Hello everyone!"

You will be asked to provide a Slack API token. It’s easy, just get one from the API token generator.

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
                        Explicitely 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"

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 <regis@behmo.com>
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):

$ export SLACK_TOKEN="slack_token_string"

Bonus stuff 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.

Changelog

v2.1.2 (2018-12-21)

  • CLI bash autocompletion

  • Fix default token saving on team change

v2.1.1 (2018-12-20)

  • Correctly print user and channel names

v2.1.0 (2018-12-07)

  • Faster search/stream

  • Stream from all channels (-s all)

  • Send messages as a different user (-u terminator)

v2.0.2 (2017-09-13)

  • Better error management

v2.0.1 (2017-09-09)

  • Simplify reading from stdin

v2.0.0 (2017-09-09)

  • Add support for multiple teams

  • Fix streaming issues

  • Improve printed message format

  • Simplify sending messages from stdin

v1.0.3 (2017-09-04):

  • Add “–last” flag to print an entire conversation

v1.0.2 (2017-08-31):

  • Fix token verification issue for users that don’t have a “general” channel

v1.0 (2017-07-06):

  • Refactor command line by reducing all commands to a single “slack-cli” command.

  • Interactive API token input.

  • Automatic token creation check.

Development

I am very much open to comments! Please don’t be afraid to raise issues or open pull requests.

This work is licensed under the terms of the MIT License

Note that this project was initially a fork of slacker-cli but the two projects have now considerably diverged.

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