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-rw-r--r--CMakeLists.txt19
-rw-r--r--README.adoc35
-rw-r--r--json-rpc-shell.adoc183
-rw-r--r--json-rpc-shell.c9
4 files changed, 212 insertions, 34 deletions
diff --git a/CMakeLists.txt b/CMakeLists.txt
index 53acd44..09b50a0 100644
--- a/CMakeLists.txt
+++ b/CMakeLists.txt
@@ -87,18 +87,20 @@ install (PROGRAMS json-format.pl DESTINATION ${CMAKE_INSTALL_BINDIR})
install (FILES LICENSE DESTINATION ${CMAKE_INSTALL_DOCDIR})
# Generate documentation from program help
-find_program (HELP2MAN_EXECUTABLE help2man)
-if (NOT HELP2MAN_EXECUTABLE)
- message (FATAL_ERROR "help2man not found")
-endif (NOT HELP2MAN_EXECUTABLE)
+find_program (ASCIIDOCTOR_EXECUTABLE asciidoctor)
+if (NOT ASCIIDOCTOR_EXECUTABLE)
+ message (FATAL_ERROR "asciidoctor not found")
+endif (NOT ASCIIDOCTOR_EXECUTABLE)
foreach (page ${PROJECT_NAME})
set (page_output "${PROJECT_BINARY_DIR}/${page}.1")
list (APPEND project_MAN_PAGES "${page_output}")
add_custom_command (OUTPUT ${page_output}
- COMMAND ${HELP2MAN_EXECUTABLE} -N
- "${PROJECT_BINARY_DIR}/${page}" -o ${page_output}
- DEPENDS ${page}
+ COMMAND ${ASCIIDOCTOR_EXECUTABLE} -b manpage
+ -a release-version=${project_VERSION}
+ "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/${page}.adoc"
+ -o "${page_output}"
+ DEPENDS ${page}.adoc
COMMENT "Generating man page for ${page}" VERBATIM)
endforeach (page)
@@ -111,7 +113,8 @@ foreach (page ${project_MAN_PAGES})
endforeach (page)
# CPack
-set (CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_SUMMARY "Shell for running JSON-RPC 2.0 queries")
+set (CPACK_PACKAGE_DESCRIPTION_SUMMARY
+ "A shell for running JSON-RPC 2.0 queries")
set (CPACK_PACKAGE_VENDOR "Premysl Eric Janouch")
set (CPACK_PACKAGE_CONTACT "Přemysl Eric Janouch <p@janouch.name>")
set (CPACK_RESOURCE_FILE_LICENSE "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/LICENSE")
diff --git a/README.adoc b/README.adoc
index 646c93a..649a66b 100644
--- a/README.adoc
+++ b/README.adoc
@@ -17,38 +17,28 @@ you get the following niceties:
- ability to pipe output through a shell command, so that you can view the
results in your favourite editor or redirect them to a file
- ability to edit the input line in your favourite editor as well with Alt+E
+ - WebSockets (RFC 6455) can also be used as a transport rather than HTTP
-Supported transports
---------------------
- - HTTP
- - HTTPS
- - WebSocket
- - WebSocket over TLS
-
-WebSockets
-~~~~~~~~~~
-The JSON-RPC 2.0 spec doesn't say almost anything about underlying transports.
-The way it's implemented here is that every request is sent as a single text
-message. If it has an "id" field, i.e. it's not just a notification, the
-client waits for a message from the server in response.
-
-There's no support so far for any protocol extensions, nor for specifying
-the higher-level protocol (the "Sec-Ws-Protocol" HTTP field).
+Documentation
+-------------
+See the link:json-rpc-shell.adoc[man page] for information about usage.
+The rest of this README will concern itself with externalities.
Packages
--------
Regular releases are sporadic. git master should be stable enough. You can get
a package with the latest development version from Archlinux's AUR.
-Building and Usage
-------------------
-Build dependencies: CMake, pkg-config, help2man,
+Building
+--------
+Build dependencies: CMake, pkg-config, asciidoctor,
liberty (included), http-parser (included) +
Runtime dependencies: libev, Jansson, cURL, openssl,
readline or libedit >= 2013-07-12,
Avoid libedit if you can, in general it works but at the moment history is
-acting up and I have no clue about fixing it.
+acting up and I have no clue about fixing it. Multiline editing is also
+misbehaving there.
$ git clone --recursive https://git.janouch.name/p/json-rpc-shell.git
$ mkdir json-rpc-shell/build
@@ -68,13 +58,12 @@ Or you can try telling CMake to make a package for you. For Debian it is:
Note that for versions of CMake before 2.8.9, you need to prefix `cpack` with
`fakeroot` or file ownership will end up wrong.
-Run the program with `--help` to obtain usage information.
-
Test server
-----------
If you install development packages for libmagic, an included test server will
be built but not installed which provides a trivial JSON-RPC 2.0 service with
-FastCGI, SCGI, and WebSocket interfaces. It responds to the `ping` method.
+FastCGI, SCGI, and WebSocket interfaces. It responds to `ping` and `date`
+methods and it can serve static files.
Contributing and Support
------------------------
diff --git a/json-rpc-shell.adoc b/json-rpc-shell.adoc
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..20b1f8c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/json-rpc-shell.adoc
@@ -0,0 +1,183 @@
+json-rpc-shell(1)
+=================
+:doctype: manpage
+:man manual: json-rpc-shell Manual
+:man source: json-rpc-shell {release-version}
+
+Name
+----
+json-rpc-shell - a simple JSON-RPC 2.0 shell
+
+Synopsis
+--------
+*json-rpc-shell* [_OPTION_]... _ENDPOINT_
+
+Description
+-----------
+The _ENDPOINT_ must be either an HTTP or a WebSocket URL, with or without TLS
+(i.e. one of the _http://_, _https://_, _ws://_, _wss://_ schemas).
+
+*json-rpc-shell* will use it to send any JSON-RPC 2.0 requests you enter on its
+command line. The server's response will be parsed and validated, stripping it
+of the protocol's noisy envelope. At your option, it can then also be
+pretty-printed, rendered with adjustable syntax highlighting, or even piped
+through another program such as the *less*(1) pager or the *jq*(1) JSON
+processor.
+
+Usage
+~~~~~
+Three things may appear on the internal command line, in a sequence. The first
+one must always be the name of the JSON-RPC method to call, as a bare word,
+separated from the rest by white space. Following that, you may enter two kinds
+of JSON values. If it is a string, a number, or a null value, it is taken as
+the "id" to use for the request. If it is an object or an array, it constitutes
+the method parameters. Booleans may appear in neither.
+
+The response to the method call may be piped through external commands, the same
+way you would do it in a Unix shell.
+
+Exit the program by pressing C-c or C-d. No special keywords are reserved for
+this action as they might conflict with method names.
+
+Options
+-------
+Controlling Output
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+*-p*, *--pretty*::
+ Pretty-print responses, adding spaces and newlines where appropriate
+ to improve readability.
+
+*--color* _WHEN_::
+ By default, when the output of the program is a terminal, JSON responses
+ are syntax-highlighted. This corresponds to the _auto_ setting. You may
+ also set this to _always_ or _never_. In either case, color is never
+ applied when piping to another program.
+
+*-v*, *--verbose*::
+ Print raw requests and responses, including the JSON-RPC 2.0 envelope.
+
+*-d*, *--debug*::
+ Print even more information to help debug various issues.
+
+Protocol
+~~~~~~~~
+*-a*, *--auto-id*::
+ Choose message IDs automatically, in an increasing sequence. Normally you
+ need to enter the ID on the command line manually, so as to distinguish
+ notifications from other requests. Even with this option enabled, you can
+ still specify the ID, if you wish.
+
+*-t*, *--trust-all*::
+ Trust all SSL/TLS certificates. Useful in case that the certificate is
+ self-signed, or when the CA isn't in your CA store. Beware that this option
+ is about as good as using plain unencrypted HTTP.
+
+*-o*, *--origin* _ORIGIN_::
+ Set the HTTP Origin header to _ORIGIN_. Some servers may need this.
+
+Program Information
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+*-h*, *--help*::
+ Display a help message and exit.
+
+*-V*, *--version*::
+ Output version information and exit.
+
+*--write-default-cfg*::
+ Write a default configuration file, show its path and exit.
+
+Files
+-----
+_~/.config/json-rpc-shell/json-rpc-shell.conf_::
+ The configuration file, in which you can configure color output and
+ CA certificate paths. Use the *--write-default-cfg* option to create
+ a new one for editing.
+
+_~/.local/share/json-rpc-shell/history_::
+ All your past method invocations are stored here upon exit and loaded back
+ on start-up.
+
+Notes
+-----
+Editing
+~~~~~~~
+While single-line editing on the command line may be satisfactory for simple
+requests, it is often convenient or even necessary to run a full text editor
+in order to construct complex objects or arrays, and may even be used to import
+data from elsewhere. You can launch an editor for the current request using
+the M-e key combination. Both *readline*(3) and *editline*(7) also support
+multiline editing natively, though you need to press C-v C-j in order to insert
+newlines.
+
+WebSockets
+~~~~~~~~~~
+The JSON-RPC 2.0 specification doesn't say almost anything about underlying
+transports. As far as the author is aware, he is the only person combining it
+with WebSockets. The way it's implemented here is that every request is sent as
+a single text message. If it has an "id" field, i.e. it's not just
+a notification, the client waits for a message from the server in response.
+Should any message arrive unexpectedly, you will receive a warning.
+
+There is no support so far for any protocol extensions, nor for specifying
+the higher-level protocol (the "Sec-Ws-Protocol" HTTP field).
+
+Bugs
+----
+The editline (libedit) frontend is more of a proof of concept that mostly seems
+to work but exhibits bugs that are not our fault.
+
+Examples
+--------
+Running some queries against json-rpc-test-server, included in the source
+distribution of this program (public services are hard to find):
+
+Pretty-printing and Manual IDs
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+```
+$ json-rpc-shell -p ws://localhost:1234
+json-rpc> date 1
+{
+ "year": 2020,
+ "month": 9,
+ "day": 5,
+ "hours": 2,
+ "minutes": 23,
+ "seconds": 51
+}
+```
+
+Notification With a Parameter
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Notifications never produce a response, not even when the method is not known
+to the server:
+
+```
+$ json-rpc-shell ws://localhost:1234
+json-rpc> notify {"events": ["conquest", "war", "famine", "death"]}
+[Notification]
+```
+
+Piping In and Out
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+GNU Readline always repeats the prompt, which makes this a bit less useful
+for invoking from other programs:
+
+```
+$ echo 'ping | jq ascii_upcase' | json-rpc-shell -a ws://localhost:1234
+json-rpc> ping | jq ascii_upcase
+"PONG"
+```
+
+Reporting Bugs
+--------------
+Use https://git.janouch.name/p/json-rpc-shell to report bugs, request features,
+or submit pull requests.
+
+See Also
+--------
+*jq*(1), *readline*(3) or *editline*(7)
+
+Specifications
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+https://www.jsonrpc.org/specification +
+https://www.json.org
diff --git a/json-rpc-shell.c b/json-rpc-shell.c
index dcd0a5e..10105cd 100644
--- a/json-rpc-shell.c
+++ b/json-rpc-shell.c
@@ -3339,13 +3339,16 @@ parse_program_arguments (struct app_context *ctx, int argc, char **argv,
static const struct opt opts[] =
{
{ 'd', "debug", NULL, 0, "run in debug mode" },
- { 'h', "help", NULL, 0, "display this help and exit" },
+ { 'h', "help", NULL, 0, "display this help message and exit" },
{ 'V', "version", NULL, 0, "output version information and exit" },
+ // TODO: consider making this the default and instead adding
+ // an option to accept JSON null as an id.
{ 'a', "auto-id", NULL, 0, "automatic `id' fields" },
{ 'o', "origin", "O", 0, "set the HTTP Origin header" },
+ // TODO: consider inverting this to -c/--compact-output
{ 'p', "pretty", NULL, 0, "pretty-print the responses" },
{ 't', "trust-all", NULL, 0, "don't care about SSL/TLS certificates" },
- { 'v', "verbose", NULL, 0, "print the request before sending" },
+ { 'v', "verbose", NULL, 0, "print raw requests and responses" },
{ 'c', "color", "WHEN", OPT_LONG_ONLY,
"colorize output: never, always, or auto" },
{ 'w', "write-default-cfg", "FILENAME",
@@ -3355,7 +3358,7 @@ parse_program_arguments (struct app_context *ctx, int argc, char **argv,
};
struct opt_handler oh = opt_handler_make (argc, argv, opts,
- "ENDPOINT", "Simple JSON-RPC shell.");
+ "ENDPOINT", "A simple JSON-RPC 2.0 shell.");
int c;
while ((c = opt_handler_get (&oh)) != -1)