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README.md
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README.md
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@ -7,52 +7,12 @@ Shrlok listens in the background on a Unix socket for a small header followed by
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data and pushes this data in a directory with some basic treatment. For example,
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text pushed to Shrlok is put into a `pre` tag of an HTML page.
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The current expected format is described at the top of the `shrlok.py` module.
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Supported types:
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Usage
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-----
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- `txt`: put into a `pre` tag in an HTML page;
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- `raw`: put as is.
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See the `share.sh` script to see how data can be sent to the socket from the
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shell.
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Example: TODO
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### Packet format
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The current expected format is described at the top of the `shrlok.py` module,
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but here is the short version:
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1. A packet length, as ASCII digits for convenience, ended with a null byte;
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2. A JSON header, ended with a null byte;
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3. Data.
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The packet length counts the JSON header, its null byte and the data length, not
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itself nor its own null byte terminator.
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The header must contain the key "type" with a supported type value.
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Example:
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``` python
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28\0{"type":"txt"}\0hello shrlok!
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```
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Supported types are:
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- `txt`: the data will be put in `pre` tags into an HTML page;
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- `raw`: the data will be written without modifications.
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### Header options
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| Key | Value | Supported by |
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|-------|---------------------------------------|--------------|
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| name | file name (has precedence over `ext`) | raw |
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| ext | file extension | raw |
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| title | Web page title | txt |
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About
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-----
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I needed something to push stuff into the public folders of a Web server
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possibly from remote, and this is my own cute over-engineered solution that
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refuses to use TCP. Ask Kadaztrof what the name means because I don't know?
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@ -126,10 +126,10 @@ def write_content(data: bytes, name: str = "", extension: str = ""):
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os.chmod(output_file.name, 0o644)
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file_name = output_file.name
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if name:
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old_file_name = file_name
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file_name = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(old_file_name), name)
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new_file_name = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(file_name), name)
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try:
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os.rename(old_file_name, file_name)
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os.rename(file_name, name)
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file_name = new_file_name
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except OSError as exc:
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print(f"Failed to give required name to the file: {exc}")
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return None
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