Welcome to "matrix-commander-rs", a Matrix CLI client. ─── On the first run use --login to log in, to authenticate. On the second run we suggest to use --verify to get verified. Manual verification is built-in and can be used to verify devices and users. Or combine both --login and --verify in the first run. On further runs "matrix-commander-rs" implements a simple Matrix CLI client that can send messages or files, listen to messages, operate on rooms, etc. ─── ─── This project is currently only a vision. The Python package "matrix-commander" exists. The vision is to have a compatible program in Rust. I cannot do it myself, but I can coordinate and merge your pull requests. Have a look at the repo "https://github.com/8go/matrix-commander-rs/". Please help! Please contribute code to make this vision a reality, and to one day have a feature-rich "matrix-commander-rs" crate. Safe! Usage: matrix-commander-rs [OPTIONS] Options: --contribute Please contribute -v, --version [] Print version number or check if a newer version exists on crates.io. Details:: If used without an argument such as '--version' it will print the version number. If 'check' is added ('--version check') then the program connects to https://crates.io and gets the version number of latest stable release. There is no "calling home" on every run, only a "check crates.io" upon request. Your privacy is protected. New release is neither downloaded, nor installed. It just informs you Possible values: - check: Check if there is a newer version available --usage Prints a very short help summary. Details:: See also --help, --manual and --readme -h, --help Prints short help displaying about one line per argument. Details:: See also --usage, --manual and --readme --manual Prints long help. Details:: This is like a man page. See also --usage, --help and --readme --readme Prints README.md file, the documenation in Markdown. Details:: The README.md file will be downloaded from Github. It is a Markdown file and it is best viewed with a Markdown viewer. See also --usage, --help and --manual -d, --debug... Overwrite the default log level. Details:: If not used, then the default log level set with environment variable 'RUST_LOG' will be used. If used, log level will be set to 'DEBUG' and debugging information will be printed. '-d' is a shortcut for '--log-level DEBUG'. If used once as in '-d' it will set and/or overwrite --log-level to '--log-level debug'. If used twice as in '-d -d' it will set and/or overwrite --log-level to '--log-level debug debug'. And third or futher occurance of '-d' will be ignored. See also '--log-level'. '-d' takes precedence over '--log-level'. Additionally, have a look also at the option '--verbose' --log-level ... Set the log level by overwriting the default log level. Details:: If not used, then the default log level set with environment variable 'RUST_LOG' will be used. If used with one value specified this value is assigned to the log level of matrix-commander-rs. If used with two values specified the first value is assigned to the log level of matrix-commander-rs. The second value is asigned to the lower level modules. More than two values should not be specified. --debug overwrites -log-level. See also '--debug' and '--verbose'. Alternatively you can use the RUST_LOG environment variable. An example use of RUST_LOG is to use neither --log-level nor --debug, and to set RUST_LOG="error,matrix_commander_rs=debug" which turns off debugging on all lower level modules and turns debugging on only for matrix-commander-rs Possible values: - none: None: not set, default - error: Error: Indicates to print only errors - warn: Warn: Indicates to print warnings and errors - info: Info: Indicates to to print info, warn and errors - debug: Debug: Indicates to to print debug and the rest - trace: Trace: Indicates to to print everything --verbose... Set the verbosity level. Details:: If not used, then verbosity will be set to low. If used once, verbosity will be high. If used more than once, verbosity will be very high. Verbosity only affects the debug information. So, if '--debug' is not used then '--verbose' will be ignored --plain Disable encryption for a specific action. Details:: By default encryption is turned on for all private rooms and DMs and turned off for all public rooms. E.g. Created DM or private room will have encryption enabled by default. To explicitly turn encryption off for a specific action use --plain. Currently --plain is supported by --room-create and --room-dm-create. See also --room-enable-encryption which sort of does the opposite for rooms. See also --visibility which allows setting the visibility of the room [possible values: true, false] -c, --credentials Specify path to a file containing credentials. Details:: At login (--login), information about homeserver, user, room id, etc. will be written to a credentials file. By default, this file is "credentials.json". On further runs the credentials file is read to permit logging into the correct Matrix account and sending messages to the preconfigured room. If this option is provided, the provided path to a file will be used as credentials file instead of the default one. E.g. ~/.local/share/matrix-commander-rs/credentials.json [default: /home/user/.local/share/matrix-commander-rs/credentials.json] -s, --store Specify a path to a directory to be used as "store" for encrypted messaging. Details:: Since encryption is always enabled, a store is always needed. If this option is provided, the provided directory name will be used as persistent storage directory instead of the default one. Preferably, for multiple executions of this program use the same store for the same device. The store directory can be shared between multiple different devices and users [default: /home/user/.local/share/matrix-commander-rs/store/] --login Login to and authenticate with the Matrix homeserver. Details:: This requires exactly one argument, the login method. Currently two choices are offered: 'password' and 'SSO'. Provide one of these methods. If you have chosen 'password', you will authenticate through your account password. You can optionally provide these additional arguments: --homeserver to specify the Matrix homeserver, --user-login to specify the log in user id, --password to specify the password, --device to specify a device name, --room-default to specify a default room for sending/listening. If you have chosen 'SSO', you will authenticate through Single Sign-On. A web-browser will be started and you authenticate on the webpage. You can optionally provide these additional arguments: --homeserver to specify the Matrix homeserver, --user-login to specify the log in user id, --device to specify a device name, --room-default to specify a default room for sending/listening. See all the extra arguments for further explanations. ----- SSO (Single Sign-On) starts a web browser and connects the user to a web page on the server for login. SSO will only work if the server supports it and if there is access to a browser. So, don't use SSO on headless homeservers where there is no browser installed or accessible [default: none] Possible values: - none: None: no login specified, don't login - password: Password: login with password - access-token: AccessToken: login with access-token - sso: SSO: login with SSO, single-sign on --verify Perform account verification. Details:: By default, no verification is performed. Verification is currently offered via Manual-Device, Manual-User, Emoji and Emoji-Req. Do verification in this order: 1) bottstrap first with -bootstrap, 2) perform both manual verifications, and 3) perform emoji verification. --verify emoji has been tested against Element in Firefox browser and against Element app on Android phone. Both has been working successfully in Sept 2024. In Element web page it was important NOT to click the device in the device list, but to click the underscored link "Verify" just above the device list. In the Element on cell phone case, accept the emojis first on the cell phone. Manual verification is simpler but does less. Try: '--bootstrap --password mypassword --verify manual-device' or '--bootstrap --password mypassword --verify manual-user'. Manual only verfies devices or users one-directionally. See https://docs.rs/matrix-sdk/0.7/matrix_sdk/encryption/identities/struct.Device.html#method.verify and https://docs.rs/matrix-sdk/0.7/matrix_sdk/encryption/identities/struct.UserIdentity.html#method.verify for more info on Manual verification. manual-device can only verify its own devices, not other users' devices. manual-user can trust other users. So, with manual-user also use the --user option to specify one or multiple users. With manual-user first trust yourself, by setting --user to yourself, or omitting -user in which case it will default to itself. One should first do 'manual-device' and 'manual-user' verification and then 'emoji' or 'emoji-req' verification. Both 'emoji' as well as 'emoji-req' perform emoji verification. With 'emoji' we send a request to some other client to request verification from their device. With 'emoji-req' we wait for some other client to request verification from us. If verification is desired, run this program in the foreground (not as a service) and without a pipe. While verification is optional it is highly recommended, and it is recommended to be done right after (or together with) the --login action. Verification is always interactive, i.e. it required keyboard input. Verification questions will be printed on stdout and the user has to respond via the keyboard to accept or reject verification. Once verification is complete, the program may be run as a service. Different Matrix clients (like Element app on cell phone, Element website in browser, other clients) have the "Verification" button hidden in different menus or GUI elements. Sometimes it is labelled "Not trusted", sometimes "Verify" or "Verify by emoji", sometimes "Verify With Other Device". Verification is best done as follows: Run 'matrix-commander-rs --verify emoji ...' and have the program waiting for inputs and for invitations. Find the appropriate "verify" button on your other client, click it, and thereby publish a "verification invitation". Once received by "matrix-commander-rs" it will print the emojis in the terminal. At this point both your client as well as "matrix-commander-rs" in the terminal show a set of emoji icons and names. Compare them visually. Confirm on both sides (Yes, They Match, Got it), finally click OK. You should see a green shield and also see that the matrix-commander-rs device is now green and verified. In the terminal you should see a text message indicating success. It has been tested with Element app on cell phone and Element webpage in browser. Verification is done one device at a time. 'emoji-req' is similar. You must specify a user with --user and a device with --device to specify to which device you want to send the verification request. On the other device you get a pop up and you must accept the verification request. 'emoji-req' currently seems to have problems, while it does work with Element web page in browser, 'emoji-req' does not seem to work with Element phone app [default: none] Possible values: - none: None: option not used, no verification done - manual-device: ManualDevice: manual device verification See also: https://docs.rs/matrix-sdk/0.7/matrix_sdk/encryption/identities/struct.Device.html#method.verify - manual-user: ManualUser: manual user verification See also: https://docs.rs/matrix-sdk/0.7/matrix_sdk/encryption/identities/struct.UserIdentity.html#method.verify - emoji: Emoji: verify via emojis as the recipient - emoji-req: Emoji: verify via emojis as the initiator --bootstrap Details:: By default, no bootstrapping is performed. Bootstrapping is useful for verification. --bootstrap creates cross signing keys. If you have trouble verifying with --verify manual-device or --verify manual-user, use --bootstrap before. Use --password to provide password. If --password is not given it will read password from command line (stdin). See also https://docs.rs/matrix-sdk/0.7.1/matrix_sdk/encryption/struct.CrossSigningStatus.html#fields --logout Logout this or all devices from the Matrix homeserver. Details:: This requires exactly one argument. Two choices are offered: 'me' and 'all'. Provide one of these choices. If you choose 'me', only the one device "matrix-commander-rs" is currently using will be logged out. If you choose 'all', all devices of the user used by "matrix-commander-rs" will be logged out. Using '--logout all' is equivalent to '--delete-device "*" --logout "me"' and requires a password (see --delete-device). --logout not only logs the user out from the homeserver thereby invalidates the access token, it also removes both the 'credentials' file as well as the 'store' directory. After a --logout, one must perform a new --login to use "matrix-commander-rs" again. You can perfectly use "matrix-commander-rs" without ever logging out. --logout is a cleanup if you have decided not to use this (or all) device(s) ever again [default: none] Possible values: - none: None: Log out nowhere, don't do anything, default - me: Me: Log out from the currently used device - all: All: Log out from all devices of the user --homeserver Specify a homeserver for use by certain actions. Details:: It is an optional argument. By default --homeserver is ignored and not used. It is used by '--login' action. If not provided for --login the user will be queried via keyboard --user-login Optional argument to specify the user for --login. Details:: This gives the otion to specify the user id for login. For '--login sso' the --user-login is not needed as user id can be obtained from server via SSO. For '--login password', if not provided it will be queried via keyboard. A full user id like '@john:example.com', a partial user name like '@john', and a short user name like 'john' can be given. --user-login is only used by --login and ignored by all other actions --password Specify a password for use by certain actions. Details:: It is an optional argument. By default --password is ignored and not used. It is used by '--login password' and '--delete-device' and --bootstrap actions. If not provided for --login, --delete-device or --bootstrap the user will be queried for the password via keyboard interactively --device Specify a device name, for use by certain actions. Details:: It is an optional argument. By default --device is ignored and not used. It is used by '--login' action. If not provided for --login the user will be queried via keyboard. If you want the default value specify ''. Multiple devices (with different device id) may have the same device name. In short, the same device name can be assigned to multiple different devices if desired Don't confuse this option with '--devices' --room-default Optionally specify a room as the default room for future actions. Details:: If not specified for --login, it will be queried via the keyboard. --login stores the specified room as default room in your credentials file. This option is only used in combination with --login. A default room is needed. Specify a valid room either with --room-default or provide it via keyboard --devices Print the list of devices. Details:: All device of this account will be printed, one device per line. Don't confuse this option with --device --timeout Set the timeout of the calls to the Matrix server. Details:: By default they are set to 60 seconds. Specify the timeout in seconds. Use 0 for infinite timeout [default: 60] -m, --message [...] Send one or more messages. Details:: Message data must not be binary data, it must be text. Input piped via stdin can additionally be specified with the special character '-'. If you want to feed a text message into the program via a pipe, via stdin, then specify the special character '-'. If your message is literally a single letter '-' then use an escaped '\-' or a quoted "\-". Depending on your shell, '-' might need to be escaped. If this is the case for your shell, use the escaped '\-' instead of '-' and '\\-' instead of '\-'. However, depending on which shell you are using and if you are quoting with double quotes or with single quotes, you may have to add backslashes to achieve the proper escape sequences. If you want to read the message from the keyboard use '-' and do not pipe anything into stdin, then a message will be requested and read from the keyboard. Keyboard input is limited to one line. The stdin indicator '-' may appear in any position, i.e. -m 'start' '-' 'end' will send 3 messages out of which the second one is read from stdin. The stdin indicator '-' may appear only once overall in all arguments. '-' reads everything that is in the pipe in one swoop and sends a single message. Similar to '-', another shortcut character is '_'. The special character '_' is used for streaming data via a pipe on stdin. With '_' the stdin pipe is read line-by-line and each line is treated as a separate message and sent right away. The program waits for pipe input until the pipe is closed. E.g. Imagine a tool that generates output sporadically 24x7. It can be piped, i.e. streamed, into matrix- commander, and matrix-commander stays active, sending all input instantly. If you want to send the literal letter '_' then escape it and send '\_'. '_' can be used only once. And either '-' or '_' can be used --markdown Specify the message format as MarkDown. Details:: There are 3 message formats for '--message'. Plain text, MarkDown, and Code. By default, if no command line options are specified, 'plain text' will be used. Use '--markdown' or '--code' to set the format to MarkDown or Code respectively. '--markdown' allows sending of text formatted in MarkDown language. '--code' allows sending of text as a Code block --code Specify the message format as Code. Details:: There are 3 message formats for '--message'. Plain text, MarkDown, and Code. By default, if no command line options are specified, 'plain text' will be used. Use '--markdown' or '--code' to set the format to MarkDown or Code respectively. '--markdown' allows sending of text formatted in MarkDown language. '--code' allows sending of text as a Code block --html Send message as format "HTML" Details:: If not specified, message will be sent as format "TEXT". E.g. that allows some text to be bold, etc. Only a subset of HTML tags are accepted by Matrix -r, --room [...] Optionally specify one or multiple rooms. Details:: Specify rooms via room ids or room aliases. '--room' is used by various options like '--message', '--file', some variants of '--listen', '--delete-device', etc. The default room is provided in the credentials file (specified at --login with --room-default). If a room (or multiple ones) is (or are) provided in the --room arguments, then it (or they) will be used instead of the one from the credentials file. The user must have access to the specified room in order to send messages there or listen on the room. Messages cannot be sent to arbitrary rooms. When specifying the room id some shells require the exclamation mark to be escaped with a backslash. Not all listen operations allow setting a room. Read more under the --listen options and similar. Most actions also support room aliases or local canonical short aliases instead of room ids. Using a room id is always faster than using a room alias -f, --file [...] Send one or multiple files (e.g. PDF, DOC, MP4). Details:: First files are sent, then text messages are sent. If you want to feed a file into "matrix-commander-rs" via a pipe, via stdin, then specify the special character '-' as stdin indicator. See description of '--message' to see how the stdin indicator '-' is handled. If you pipe a file into stdin, you can optionally use '--file-name' to attach a label and indirectly a MIME type to the piped data. E.g. if you pipe in a PNG file, you might want to specify additionally '--file-name image.png'. As such, the label 'image' will be given to the data and the MIME type 'png' will be attached to it. Furthermore, '-' can only be used once --notice Specify the message type as Notice. Details:: There are 3 message types for '--message'. Text, Notice, and Emote. By default, if no command line options are specified, 'Text' will be used. Use '--notice' or '--emote' to set the type to Notice or Emote respectively. '--notice' allows sending of text as a notice. '--emote' allows sending of text as an emote --emote Specify the message type as Emote. Details:: There are 3 message types for '--message'. Text, Notice, and Emote. By default, if no command line options are specified, 'Text' will be used. Use '--notice' or '--emote' to set the type to Notice or Emote respectively. '--notice' allows sending of text as a notice. '--emote' allows sending of text as an emote --sync Select synchronization choice. Details:: This option decides on whether the program synchronizes the state with the server before a 'send' action. Currently two choices are offered: 'full' and 'off'. Provide one of these choices. The default is 'full'. If you want to use the default, then there is no need to use this option. If you have chosen 'full', the full state, all state events will be synchronized between this program and the server before a 'send'. If you have chosen 'off', synchronization will be skipped entirely before the 'send' which will improve performance [default: full] Possible values: - off: Turns syncing off for sending operations to improve performance - full: full: the default value -l, --listen Listen to messages. Details:: The '--listen' option takes one argument. There are several choices: 'never', 'once', 'forever', 'tail', and 'all'. By default, --listen is set to 'never'. So, by default no listening will be done. Set it to 'forever' to listen for and print incoming messages to stdout. '--listen forever' will listen to all messages on all rooms forever. To stop listening 'forever', use Control-C on the keyboard or send a signal to the process or service. '--listen once' will get all the messages from all rooms that are currently queued up. So, with 'once' the program will start, print waiting messages (if any) and then stop. The timeout for 'once' is set to 10 seconds. So, be patient, it might take up to that amount of time. 'tail' reads and prints the last N messages from the specified rooms, then quits. The number N can be set with the '--tail' option. With 'tail' some messages read might be old, i.e. already read before, some might be new, i.e. never read before. It prints the messages and then the program stops. Messages are sorted, last-first. Look at '--tail' as that option is related to '--listen tail'. The option 'all' gets all messages available, old and new. Unlike 'once' and 'forever' that listen in ALL rooms, 'tail' and 'all' listen only to the room specified in the credentials file or the --room options [default: never] Possible values: - never: Never: Indicates to not listen, default - once: Once: Indicates to listen once in *all* rooms and then continue - forever: Forever: Indicates to listen forever in *all* rooms, until process is killed manually. This is the only option that remains in the event loop - tail: Tail: Indicates to get the last N messages from the specified romm(s) and then continue - all: All: Indicates to get *all* the messages from from the specified romm(s) and then continue --tail Get the last messages. Details:: The '--tail' option reads and prints up to the last N messages from the specified rooms, then quits. It takes one argument, an integer, which we call N here. If there are fewer than N messages in a room, it reads and prints up to N messages. It gets the last N messages in reverse order. It print the newest message first, and the oldest message last. If '--listen-self' is not set it will print less than N messages in many cases because N messages are obtained, but some of them are discarded by default if they are from the user itself. Look at '--listen' as this option is related to '--tail' [default: 0] -y, --listen-self Get your own messages. Details:: If set and listening, then program will listen to and print also the messages sent by its own user. By default messages from oneself are not printed --whoami Print your user name. Details:: Print the user id used by "matrix-commander-rs" (itself). One can get this information also by looking at the credentials file -o, --output Specify the output format. Details:: This option decides on how the output is presented. Currently offered choices are: 'text', 'json', 'json-max', and 'json-spec'. Provide one of these choices. The default is 'text'. If you want to use the default, then there is no need to use this option. If you have chosen 'text', the output will be formatted with the intention to be consumed by humans, i.e. readable text. If you have chosen 'json', the output will be formatted as JSON. The content of the JSON object matches the data provided by the matrix-nio SDK. In some occassions the output is enhanced by having a few extra data items added for convenience. In most cases the output will be processed by other programs rather than read by humans. Option 'json-max' is practically the same as 'json', but yet another additional field is added. The data item 'transport_response' which gives information on how the data was obtained and transported is also being added. For '--listen' a few more fields are added. In most cases the output will be processed by other programs rather than read by humans. Option 'json-spec' only prints information that adheres 1-to-1 to the Matrix Specification. Currently only the events on '--listen' and '--tail' provide data exactly as in the Matrix Specification. If no data is available that corresponds exactly with the Matrix Specification, no data will be printed. In short, currently '--json-spec' only provides outputs for '--listen' and '--tail' [default: text] Possible values: - text: Text: Indicates to print human readable text, default - json: Json: Indicates to print output in Json format - json-max: Json Max: Indicates to to print the maximum anount of output in Json format - json-spec: Json Spec: Indicates to to print output in Json format, but only data that is according to Matrix Specifications --file-name [...] Specify one or multiple file names for some actions. Details:: This is an optional argument. Use this option in combination with options like '--file'. to specify one or multiple file names. Ignored if used by itself without an appropriate corresponding action --get-room-info [...] Get room information. Details:: Get the room information such as room display name, room alias, room creator, etc. for one or multiple specified rooms. The included room 'display name' is also referred to as 'room name' or incorrectly even as room title. If one or more rooms are given, the room information of these rooms will be fetched. If no room is specified, nothing will be done. If you want the room information for the pre-configured default room specify the shortcut '-'. Rooms can be given via room id (e.g. '\!SomeRoomId:matrix.example.com'), canonical (full) room alias (e.g. '#SomeRoomAlias:matrix.example.com'), or short alias (e.g. 'SomeRoomAlias' or '#SomeRoomAlias'). As response room id, room display name, room canonical alias, room topic, room creator, and room encryption are printed. One line per room will be printed. Since either room id or room alias are accepted as input and both room id and room alias are given as output, one can hence use this option to map from room id to room alias as well as vice versa from room alias to room id. Do not confuse this option with the options '--get-display-name' and '--set-display-name', which get/set the user display name, not the room display name. The argument '--room-resolve-alias' can also be used to go the other direction, i.e. to find the room id given a room alias --room-create [...] Create one or multiple rooms. Details:: One or multiple room aliases can be specified. For each alias specified a room will be created. For each created room one line with room id, alias, name and topic will be printed to stdout. If you are not interested in an alias, provide an empty string like ''. The alias provided must be in canocial local form, i.e. if you want a final full alias like '#SomeRoomAlias:matrix.example.com' you must provide the string 'SomeRoomAlias'. The user must be permitted to create rooms. Combine --room-create with --name and --topic to add names and topics to the room(s) to be created. If the output is in JSON format, then the values that are not set and hence have default values are not shown in the JSON output. E.g. if no topic is given, then there will be no topic field in the JSON output. Room aliases have to be unique --visibility Set the visibility of the newly created room. Details:: Default room visibility is 'private'. To create a public room, use '--room-create --visibility public'. To create a private room, use '--room-create --visibility private' [default: private] --room-dm-create [...] Create one or multiple direct messaging (DM) rooms for given users. Details:: One or multiple users can be specified. For each user specified a DM room will be created. For each created DM room one line with room id, alias, name and topic will be printed to stdout. The given user(s) will receive an invitation to join the newly created room. The user must be permitted to create rooms. Combine --room-dm-create with --alias, --name and --topic to add aliases, names and topics to the room(s) to be created. Room aliases in --alias have to be unique --room-leave [...] Leave this room or these rooms. Details:: One or multiple room aliases can be specified. The room (or multiple ones) provided in the arguments will be left. You can run both commands '--room-leave' and '--room-forget' at the same time --room-forget [...] Forget one or multiple rooms. Details:: After leaving a room you should (most likely) forget the room. Forgetting a room removes the users' room history. One or multiple room aliases can be specified. The room (or multiple ones) provided in the arguments will be forgotten. If all users forget a room, the room can eventually be deleted on the server. You must leave a room first, before you can forget it You can run both commands '--room-leave' and '--room-forget' at the same time --room-invite [...] Invite one ore more users to join one or more rooms. Details:: Specify the user(s) as arguments to --user. Specify the rooms as arguments to this option, i.e. as arguments to --room-invite. The user must have permissions to invite users. Use the shortcut '-' to specify the pre-configured default room of 'matrix-commander-rs' as room --room-join [...] Join one or multiple rooms. Details:: One or multiple room aliases can be specified. The room (or multiple ones) provided in the arguments will be joined. The user must have permissions to join these rooms. Use the shortcut '-' to specify the pre-configured default room of 'matrix-commander-rs' as room. Note, no --user on this feature as the user is always the user of 'matrix-commander-rs' --room-ban [...] Ban one ore more users from one or more rooms. Details:: Specify the user(s) as arguments to --user. Specify the rooms as arguments to this option, i.e. as arguments to --room-ban. The user must have permissions to ban users. Use the shortcut '-' to specify the pre-configured default room of 'matrix-commander-rs' as room --room-unban [...] Unban one ore more users from one or more rooms. Details:: Specify the user(s) as arguments to --user. Specify the rooms as arguments to this option, i.e. as arguments to --room-unban. The user must have permissions to unban users. Use the shortcut '-' to specify the pre-configured default room of 'matrix-commander-rs' as room. Note, this is currently not implemented in the matrix-sdk API. This feature will currently return an error --room-kick [...] Kick one ore more users from one or more rooms. Details:: Specify the user(s) as arguments to --user. Specify the rooms as arguments to this option, i.e. as arguments to --room-kick. The user must have permissions to kick users. Use the shortcut '-' to specify the pre-configured default room of 'matrix-commander-rs' as room --room-resolve-alias [...] Resolves room aliases to room ids. Details:: Resolves a room alias to the corresponding room id, or multiple room aliases to their corresponding room ids. Provide one or multiple room aliases. A room alias looks like this: '#someRoomAlias:matrix.example.org'. Short aliases like 'someRoomAlias' or '#someRoomAlias' are also accepted. In case of a short alias, it will be automatically prefixed with '#' and the homeserver from the default room of matrix-commander-rs (as found in credentials file) will be automatically appended. Resolving an alias that does not exist results in an error. For each room alias one line will be printed to stdout with the result. It also prints the list of servers that know about the alias(es). The argument '--get-room-info' can be used to go the other direction, i.e. to find the room aliases given a room id --room-enable-encryption [...] Enable encryption for one or multiple rooms. Details:: Provide one or more room ids. For each room given encryption will be enabled. You must be member of the room in order to be able to enable encryption. Use shortcut '-' to enable encryption in the pre-configured default room. Enabling an already enabled room will do nothing and cause no error --alias [...] Provide one or more aliases. Details:: --alias is currently used in combination with --room-dm-create. It is ignored otherwise. Canonical short alias look like 'SomeRoomAlias'. Short aliases look like '#SomeRoomAlias'. And full aliases look like '#SomeRoomAlias:matrix.example.com'. If you are not interested in an alias, provide an empty string like ''. Remember that aliases must be unique. For --room-dm-create you must provide canonical short alias(es) --name [...] Specify one or multiple names. Details:: This option is only meaningful in combination with option --room-create. This option --name specifies the names to be used with the command --room-create --topic [...] Specify one or multiple topics. Details:: This option is only meaningful in combination with option --room-create. This option --topic specifies the topics to be used with the command --room-create --rooms Print the list of past and current rooms. Details:: All rooms that you are currently a member of (joined rooms), that you had been a member of in the past (left rooms), and rooms that you have been invited to (invited rooms) will be printed, one room per line. See also '--invited-rooms', '--joined-rooms', and '--left-rooms' --invited-rooms Print the list of invited rooms. Details:: All rooms that you are currently invited to will be printed, one room per line --joined-rooms Print the list of joined rooms. Details:: All rooms that you are currently a member of will be printed, one room per line --left-rooms Print the list of left rooms. Details:: All rooms that you have left in the past will be printed, one room per line --room-get-visibility [...] Get the visibility of one or more rooms. Details:: Provide one or more room ids as arguments. If the shortcut '-' is used, then the default room of 'matrix-commander-rs' (as found in credentials file) will be used. The shortcut '*' represents all the rooms of the user of 'matrix-commander-rs'. For each room the visibility will be printed. Currently, this is either the string 'private' or 'public'. As response one line per room will be printed --room-get-state [...] Get the state of one or more rooms. Details:: Provide one or more room ids as arguments. If the shortcut '-' is used, then the default room of 'matrix-commander-rs' (as found in credentials file) will be used. The shortcut '*' represents all the rooms of the user of 'matrix-commander-rs'. For each room part of the state will be printed. The state is a long list of events. As response one line per room will be printed to stdout. The line can be very long as the list of events can be very large. To get output into a human readable form pipe output through sed and jq or use the JSON output --joined-members [...] Print the list of joined members for one or multiple rooms. Details:: If you want to print the joined members of all rooms that you are member of, then use the special shortcut character '*'. If you want the members of the pre-configured default room, use shortcut '-' --delete-device [...] Delete one or multiple devices. Details:: By default devices belonging to itself, i.e. belonging to "matrix-commander-rs", will be deleted. If you want to delete the one device currently used for the connection, i.e. the device used by "matrix-commander-rs", then instead of the full device id you can just specify the shortcut 'me' such as '--delete-device me --password mypassword'. If you want to delete all devices of yourself, i.e. all devices owned by the user that "matrix-commander-rs" is using you can specify that with the shortcut '*'. Most shells require you to escape it or to quote it, ie. use '--delete-device "*" --password mypassword'. Removing your own device (e.g. 'me') or all devices (e.g. '*') will require you to manually remove your credentials file and store directory and to login anew in order to create a new device. If you are using '--delete-device me --password mypassword' consider using '--logout me' instead which is simpler (no password) and also automatically performs the removal of credentials and store. (See --logout.) If the devices belong to a different user, use the --user argument to specify the user, i.e. owner. Only exactly one user can be specified with the optional --user argument. Device deletion requires the user password. It must be specified with the --password argument. If the server uses only HTTP (and not HTTPS), then the password can be visible to attackers. Hence, if the server does not support HTTPS this operation is discouraged. If no --password is specified via the command line, the password is read from keyboard interactively -u, --user [...] Specify one or multiple users. Details:: This option is meaningful in combination with a) room actions like --room-invite, --room-ban, --room-unban, etc. and d) actions like --delete-device. In case of a) this option --user specifies the users to be used with room commands (like invite, ban, For d) this gives the option to delete the device of a different user. If --user is not set, it will default to itself, i.e. the user of the "matrix-commander-rs" account --get-avatar Get your own avatar. Details:: Get the avatar of itself, i.e. the 'matrix-commander-rs' user account. Spefify a file optionally with path to store the image. E.g. --get-avatar "./avatar.png" --set-avatar Set your own avatar. Details:: Set, i.e. upload, an image to be used as avatar for 'matrix-commander-rs' user account. Spefify a file optionally with path with the image. If the MIME type of the image cannot be determined, it will assume 'PNG' as default. E.g. --set-avatar "./avatar.jpg". It returns a line with the MRX URI of the new avatar --get-avatar-url Get your own avatar URL. Details:: Get the MXC URI of the avatar of itself, i.e. the 'matrix-commander-rs' user account --set-avatar-url Set your own avatar URL. Details:: Set the avatar MXC URI of the URL to be used as avatar for the 'matrix-commander-rs' user account. Spefify a MXC URI. E.g. --set-avatar-url "mxc://matrix.server.org/SomeStrangeStringOfYourMxcUri" --unset-avatar-url Remove your own avatar URL. Details:: Remove the avatar MXC URI to be used as avatar for the 'matrix-commander-rs' user account. In other words, remove the avatar of the 'matrix-commander-rs' user --get-display-name Get your own display name. Details:: Get the display name of itself, i.e. of the 'matrix-commander-rs' user account --set-display-name Set your own display name. Details:: Set the display name of the 'matrix-commander-rs' user account. Spefify a name --get-profile Get your own profile. Details:: Get the profile of itself, i.e. of the 'matrix-commander-rs' user account. This is getting both display name and avatar MXC URI in a call --media-upload [...] Upload one or multiple files (e.g. PDF, DOC, MP4) to the homeserver content repository. Details:: If you want to feed a file for upload into "matrix-commander-rs" via a pipe, via stdin, then specify the special character '-' as stdin indicator. See description of '--message' to see how the stdin indicator '-' is handled. Use --mime to optionally specify the MIME type of the file. If you give N arguments to --media-upload, you can give N arguments to --mime. See --mime. If you pipe a file into stdin, the MIME type cannot be guessed. It is hence more recommended that you specify a MIME type via '--mime' when using '-'. Furthermore, '-' can only be used once. Upon being stored in the homeserver's content repository, the data is assigned a Matrix MXC URI. For each file uploaded successfully, a single line with the MXC URI will be printed. The uploaded data will not by encrypted. If you want to upload encrypted data, encrypt the file before uploading it --media-download [...] Download one or multiple files from the homeserver content repository. Details:: You must provide one or multiple Matrix URIs (MXCs) which are strings like this 'mxc://example.com/SomeStrangeUriKey'. Alternatively, you can just provide the MXC id, i.e. the part after the last slash. If found they will be downloaded, decrypted, and stored in local files. If file names are specified with --file-name the downloads will be saved with these file names. If --file-name is not specified, then the file name 'mxc-' will be used. If a file name in --file-name contains the placeholder __mxc_id__, it will be replaced with the mxc-id. If a file name is specified as empty string '' in --file-name, then also the name 'mxc-' will be used. Be careful, existing files will be overwritten. Do not confuse --media-download with --download-media. See --download-media --mime [...] Specify the Mime type of certain input files. Details:: Specify '' if the Mime type should be guessed based on the filename. If input is from stdin (i.e. '-' and piped into 'matrix-commander-rs') then Mime type cannot be guessed. If not specified, and no filename available for guessing it will default to 'application/octet-stream'. Some example mime types are: 'image/jpeg', 'image/png', 'image/gif', 'text/plain', and 'application/pdf'. For a full list see 'https://docs.rs/mime/latest/mime/#constants' --media-delete [...] Delete one or multiple objects (e.g. files) from the content repository. Details:: You must provide one or multiple Matrix URIs (MXC) which are strings like this 'mxc://example.com/SomeStrangeUriKey'. Alternatively, you can just provide the MXC id, i.e. the part after the last slash. If found they will be deleted from the server database. In order to delete objects one must have server admin permissions. Having only room admin permissions is not sufficient and it will fail. Read https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/latest/usage/administration/admin_api/ for learning how to set server admin permissions on the server. Thumbnails will currently not be deleted. Deleting something that does not exist will be ignored and will not cause an error --media-mxc-to-http [...] Convert URIs to HTTP URLs. Details:: Convert one or more matrix content URIs to the corresponding HTTP URLs. The MXC URIs to provide look something like this 'mxc://example.com/SomeStrangeUriKey'. Alternatively, you can just provide the MXC id, i.e. the part after the last slash. The syntax of the provided MXC URIs will be verified. The existance of content for the XMC URI will not be checked --get-masterkey Get your own master key. Details:: Get the master key of itself, i.e. of the 'matrix-commander-rs' user account. Keep this key private and safe PS: Also have a look at scripts/matrix-commander-rs-tui.