Awesome
tdl
tdl
is a fairly simple JavaScript wrapper for TDLib (Telegram Database library),
a library to create Telegram clients or bots.
- Requirements
- Installation
- Getting started
- API
- Types
- Other JavaScript runtimes
- Troubleshooting
- Issue tracker
<a name="requirements"></a>
Requirements
- Node.js v16 or newer
- The tdjson shared library (
libtdjson.so
on Linux,libtdjson.dylib
on macOS,tdjson.dll
on Windows), of TDLib version 1.8.0 or newer - In rare cases, a C++ compiler and Python installed to build the node addon1
<a name="installation"></a>
Installation
- Install tdl:
npm install tdl
- Build TDLib or install pre-built TDLib libraries
(
npm install prebuilt-tdlib
) - If you use TypeScript, types for TDLib are installed separately, see the Types section
To use tdl
, you need to get TDLib first, which is dynamically loaded by tdl
.
The tdjson shared library should be present in the system search paths
(otherwise the path to libtdjson can be specified manually in tdl.configure
).
Tip: When building TDLib, the libraries can be installed into the system using
cmake --install .
(optionally specify the--prefix
option, the default is/usr/local
) after TDLib has been built successfully. This command may requiresudo
.
prebuilt-tdlib
Instead of building TDLib from source, you can possibly install pre-built TDLib
libraries distributed through the prebuilt-tdlib
npm package. An example of
using libraries from prebuilt-tdlib
is present in the section below. The
supported systems are x86_64 & arm64 GNU/Linux, x86_64 & arm64 macOS, and
x86_64 Windows. To install prebuilt-tdlib
for a specific TDLib version
instead of latest, for example v1.8.30, run npm i prebuilt-tdlib@td-1.8.30
.
The available versions of prebuilt-tdlib
can be found by running
npm info prebuilt-tdlib dist-tags
. See the README of prebuilt-tdlib for
additional information.
<a name="getting-started"></a>
Getting started
const tdl = require('tdl')
// If libtdjson is not present in the system search paths, the path to the
// libtdjson shared library can be set manually, e.g.:
// tdl.configure({ tdjson: '/usr/local/lib/libtdjson.dylib' })
// The library directory can be set separate from the library name,
// example to search for libtdjson in the directory of the current script:
// tdl.configure({ libdir: __dirname })
// Instead of building TDLib yourself, the aforementioned prebuilt-tdlib can be
// used as follows:
// const { getTdjson } = require('prebuilt-tdlib')
// tdl.configure({ tdjson: getTdjson() })
const client = tdl.createClient({
apiId: 2222, // Your api_id
apiHash: '0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef' // Your api_hash
})
// Passing apiId and apiHash is mandatory,
// these values can be obtained at https://my.telegram.org/
client.on('error', console.error)
// Aside of receiving responses to your requests, the server can push to you
// events called "updates" which can be received as follows:
client.on('update', update => {
console.log('Received update:', update)
})
async function main () {
// Log in to a Telegram account. By default, with no arguments, this function will
// ask for phone number etc. in the console. Instead of logging in as a user,
// it's also possible to log in as a bot using `client.loginAsBot('<TOKEN>')`.
await client.login()
// Invoke a TDLib method. The information regarding TDLib method list and
// documentation is below this code block.
const me = await client.invoke({ _: 'getMe' })
console.log('My user:', me)
// Invoke some other TDLib method.
const chats = await client.invoke({
_: 'getChats',
chat_list: { _: 'chatListMain' },
limit: 10
})
console.log('A part of my chat list:', chats)
// Close the instance so that TDLib exits gracefully and the JS runtime can
// finish the process.
await client.close()
}
main().catch(console.error)
Instead of using CommonJS (require('tdl')
), one can import tdl
in an
EcmaScript module through the interoperability with CommonJS:
import * as tdl from 'tdl'
. Or alternatively import specific functions
using import { createClient } from 'tdl'
.
The API list of TDLib methods, which are called using client.invoke
, can be found at, e.g.:
- https://core.telegram.org/tdlib/docs/annotated.html (possibly outdated)
- or in the td_api.tl file in the TDLib repository.
In the TDLib documentation, the bytes
type means a base64-encoded string.
int64
accepts either a number or a string, pass string for large numbers.
int32
, int53
, and double
are the number JS type.
If TypeScript types for TDLib are installed, note the types are annotated
with jsdoc comments, and the documentation can also be browsed directly in the
.d.ts
file or in the autocompletion menu of the editor.
See also https://core.telegram.org/tdlib/getting-started for some basic
information on how to use TDLib (tdl handles the authorization part with
client.login
). Note that the TDLib JSON interface actually sends a @type
field, but tdl renames it to _
.
Some short examples are available in the examples/ directory.
<a name="api"></a>
API
Note: A more exhaustive documentation is available in the TypeScript typings file.
tdl.configure(options: TDLibConfiguration) => void
Configure several parameters such as libtdjson filename or verbosity level. This
function should be called before tdl.createClient
or tdl.execute
. Can be
called multiple times.
The possible parameters are:
tdl.configure({
// Path to the library. By default, it is 'tdjson.dll' on Windows,
// 'libtdjson.dylib' on macOS, or 'libtdjson.so' otherwise.
tdjson: 'libtdjson.so',
// Path to the library directory. Defaults to the empty string.
libdir: '/usr/local/lib',
// Set the verbosity level of TDLib. Defaults to 1.
verbosityLevel: 1,
// Advanced options:
useOldTdjsonInterface: false,
receiveTimeout: 10,
})
Some examples:
tdl.configure({ tdjson: '/root/libtdjson.so', verbosityLevel: 5 })
tdl.configure({ libdir: '/usr/local/lib', tdjson: 'libtdjson.dylib.1.8.6' })
tdl.configure({ libdir: __dirname })
(use libtdjson from the directory of the current script, in CJS)tdl.configure({ tdjson: require('prebuilt-tdlib').getTdjson() })
(use libtdjson from prebuilt-tdlib)
The path concatenation of libdir
+ tdjson
is directly passed to
dlopen
(Unix) or LoadLibrary
(Windows). Check
documentation of your OS to find out where the shared library will be searched
for.
tdl.createClient(options: ClientOptions) => Client
Create a TDLib client.
const client = tdl.createClient({
apiId: 2222, // Your api_id
apiHash: '0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef' // Your api_hash
// ... other options ...
})
The options that can be passed here have the following interface:
type ClientOptions = {
apiId: number, // Can be obtained at https://my.telegram.org
apiHash: string, // Can be obtained at https://my.telegram.org
databaseDirectory: string, // Path, relative to cwd (defaults to '_td_database')
filesDirectory: string, // Path, relative to cwd (defaults to '_td_files')
databaseEncryptionKey: string, // Optional key for database encryption
useTestDc: boolean, // Use test telegram server (defaults to false)
tdlibParameters: Object, // Raw TDLib parameters
skipOldUpdates: boolean // Advanced option.
}
Of these fields, only apiId
and apiHash
are required. Any other field can be
omitted. They are more thoroughly described in the documentation comments
of TypeScript types.
The tdlibParameters
option is described in
https://core.telegram.org/tdlib/docs/classtd_1_1td__api_1_1tdlib_parameters.html.
By default, in tdl, tdlibParameters
is set to:
tdlibParameters: {
use_message_database: true,
use_secret_chats: false,
system_language_code: 'en',
application_version: '1.0',
device_model: 'Unknown device',
system_version: 'Unknown',
api_id: options.apiId,
api_hash: options.apiHash,
database_directory: options.databaseDirectory,
files_directory: options.filesDirectory,
use_test_dc: options.useTestDc
}
In a real application, you probably want to change device_model
and other
parameters.
client.login(arg?: LoginDetails | (() => LoginDetails)) => Promise<void>
Attach an update handler to log you in to your Telegram account.
await client.login()
By default, tdl
asks the user for the phone number, auth code, and 2FA
password (if needed) in the console. You can override the defaults with custom
functions that return promises, for example:
// Example
await client.login({
async getPhoneNumber(retry) {
if (retry) throw new Error('Invalid phone number')
return '+9996620001'
},
async getAuthCode(retry) {
if (retry) throw new Error('Invalid auth code')
return '22222'
},
async getPassword(passwordHint, retry) {
if (retry) throw new Error('Invalid password')
return 'mypassword'
},
async getName() {
return { firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Doe' }
}
})
getName
is called if the user is not signed up.
client.login
is a pretty basic function that supports only a subset of
authentication methods available on Telegram. It is possible (and advisable for
larger apps) not to use the client.login
helper and implement the
authorization process manually, handling authorizationStateWaitPhoneNumber
and
other updates.
This function accepts the following interface:
interface LoginDetails {
getPhoneNumber?: (retry?: boolean) => Promise<string>,
getEmailAddress?: () => Promise<string>,
getEmailCode?: () => Promise<string>,
confirmOnAnotherDevice?: (link: string) => void,
getAuthCode?: (retry?: boolean) => Promise<string>,
getPassword?: (passwordHint: string, retry?: boolean) => Promise<string>,
getName?: () => Promise<{ firstName: string, lastName?: string }>
}
declare function login(details?: LoginDetails | (() => LoginDetails)): Promise<void>
getEmailAddress
and getEmailCode
are called in TDLib >= v1.8.6 only.
client.loginAsBot(token: string | (() => string | Promise<string>)) => Promise<void>
Instead of logging in as a user, you can log in as a bot using a bot token.
await client.loginAsBot('YOUR_BOT_TOKEN') // Enter your token from @BotFather
client.on(event: string, callback: Function) => Client
Attach an event listener. The 'update'
event can be used to iterate through
received updates.
function onUpdate (update) {
console.log('New update:', update)
}
client.on('update', onUpdate)
client.on('error', console.error)
If an exception is thrown inside your event listener, it is emitted as the
'error'
event (other things like invalid client options or potential internal
errors can also be emitted as 'error
'). Ideally, you should always have a
listener on client.on('error')
, otherwise an unhandled promise rejection will
appear.
The other available event is 'close'
. After close
(the
authorizationStateClosed
update), it isn't possible to send requests and the
client should not be used anymore.
You may consider using reactive libraries like RxJS or most.js for convenient event processing.
client.addListener
is an alias for client.on
.
client.once(event: string, callback: Function) => Client
Attach a one-time listener.
client.off(event: string, listener: Function) => boolean
Remove an event listener.
function listener (u) {
console.log('New update:', u)
if (u?.authorization_state?._ === 'authorizationStateReady')
client.off('update', listener) // Removes the listener
}
client.on('update', listener)
The returned value indicates whether the listener has been successfully removed.
client.removeListener
is an alias for client.off
.
client.iterUpdates() => AsyncIterableIterator<Td.Update>
An alternative approach (added in tdl v8.0.0) to get updates is to use async
iterators instead of client.on('update', ...)
:
for await (const update of client.iterUpdates()) {
console.log('Received update:', update)
if (update._ === 'updateOption' && update.name === 'my_id') {
console.log(`My ID is ${update.value.value}!`)
break
}
}
client.invoke(query: Request) => Promise<Reponse>
Call a TDLib method asynchronously. If the request fails, the promise rejects
with TDLibError
containing the error code and error message.
For the information regarding TDLib API list, see the "Getting started" section of this README.
const chats = await client.invoke({
_: 'getChats',
chat_list: { _: 'chatListMain' },
limit: 4000
})
await client.invoke({
_: 'sendMessage',
chat_id: 123456789,
input_message_content: {
_: 'inputMessageText',
text: {
_: 'formattedText',
text: '👻'
}
}
})
client.close() => Promise<void>
Close the TDLib client.
await client.close()
tdl.execute(query: Request) => Td.error | Response
Call a TDLib method synchronously. This function can be used only with the methods marked as "can be called synchronously" in the TDLib documentation.
const res = tdl.execute({
_: 'getTextEntities',
text: '@telegram /test_command https://telegram.org telegram.me'
})
client.execute
is the same as tdl.execute
.
tdl.setLogMessageCallback(maxVerbosityLevel: number, cb: Function | null) => void
Set the callback that is called when a message is added to the TDLib log. This
corresponds to the td_set_log_message_callback
tdjson function. The callback
overrides the previously set callback.
<a name="types"></a>
Types
Tip: It is considerably more convenient to use
tdl
with TypeScript, which enables full autocompletion for the TDLib methods and objects along with the documentation.
While tdl
works with any TDLib version (above the requirement), the TypeScript
types have to be installed specifically for the TDLib version you use. This can
be done via a small tdl-install-types
utility, which downloads and generates
types for you. It can be called using npx tdl-install-types
without
any separate installation.
$ npx tdl-install-types [<options>] [<target>]
(Type "y" in case it asks to install the tdl-install-types
package.)
The utility can generate types given a tdjson library file (e.g. npx tdl-install-types ./libtdjson.so
), a TDLib git ref (examples: npx tdl-install-types v1.8.0
, npx tdl-install-types master
, npx tdl-install-types 2de39ffffe71dc41c538e66085658d21cecbae08
), or a td_api.tl file (npx tdl-install-types td_api.tl
). When called without arguments or with the prebuilt-tdlib
argument, it will generate types for the installed version of prebuilt-tdlib
.
By default, the types are generated into a tdlib-types.d.ts
file that you can
git-commit. The declaration file should be inside your project to work. When you
update the version of TDLib, don't forget to also update the types: it's
important to keep the types in sync with the interface TDLib actually uses.
$ # Various examples:
$ npx tdl-install-types libtdjson.so # generate types for this shared library in the cwd
$ npx tdl-install-types 0ada45c3618108a62806ce7d9ab435a18dac1aab # types for this TDLib commit
$ npx tdl-install-types # tries to use prebult-tdlib
$ npx tdl-install-types prebuilt-tdlib # same as the above one
$ npx tdl-install-types v1.8.0 # types for the git tag in the TDLib repository
See npx tdl-install-types --help
for additional information.
The types can be imported by using the tdlib-types
module name:
import type * as Td from 'tdlib-types'
// And use as: Td.message, Td.user, ...
That is, a package named tdlib-types
does not need to be installed separately.
Note that when using npx
, the version of tdl-install-types
might be cached
and outdated if you are not appending the @latest
tag
(npx tdl-install-types@latest --help
). You can also install the utility
globally or per-project as a dev dependency.
<a name="other-javascript-runtimes"></a>
Other JavaScript runtimes
Since bun is Node.js-compatible and supports Node-API, tdl
should work out of the box, however the stability may not be the best yet.
deno can also import tdl
through the node compatibility via
import * as tdl from 'npm:tdl'
. To use tdl in deno, you must ensure that your
deno version is 1.44.2 (2024-06-13) or greater. The Node-API implementation was
broken in older deno versions and can easily result in segfaults. There's a
small example in examples/deno-example.ts
.
tdl
depends on native libraries and cannot be used in the browser. However,
TDLib itself can possibly work in the browser by compiling it to WebAssembly.
There is an outdated official tdweb library, for example. Previously, tdl
implemented basic browser support as well, but the idea has been dropped.
<a name="troubleshooting"></a>
Troubleshooting
Some of the possible errors include:
<div align="right"><a name="not-found-error" href="#not-found-error">#</a></div>Dynamic Loading Error: Win32 error 126
(Windows)Dynamic Loading Error: dlopen(…) image not found
(macOS)…cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
(Linux)
The tdjson shared library or one of its dependencies (for example, libssl)
cannot be found. To troubleshoot dependency issues, try to run
ldd libtdjson.so
on Linux or otool -L libtdjson.dylib
on macOS. On Windows,
you can use an app like Dependency Walker.
Recheck the documentation of dlopen (Linux), dlopen (macOS), Dynamic-Link Library Search Order (Windows) to make sure the shared library is present in the search paths. By default, Linux does not search in the current working directory, while macOS does.
With prebuilt-tdlib
, everything should work out of the box (on supported
systems).
fatal error: napi.h: no such file or directory
error: no such file or directory: …/node-modules/node-addon-api
The path to the directory where you execute npm install
likely contains
spaces, which is not supported by gyp:
https://github.com/nodejs/node-gyp/issues/65#issuecomment-368820565.
No native build was found for platform=…
A pre-built node addon is not available for your system1, and the node addon has
not been built from source. gcc, g++, python3, make should be available on your
system to build the tdl's node addon; npm install
(or npm ci
or similar)
should be run to execute the building. Also note that, for example, when
building a Docker container, you can't generally just copy the node modules from
the host system.
tdjson is already loaded
If you use node:worker_threads
, there are some caveats. tdl
with the new
tdjson interface can be used in only one thread. With the old tdjson interface,
i.e. tdl.configure({ useOldTdjsonInterface: true })
, it is indeed possible to
use tdl
in multiple worker threads, however tdjson
and libdir
options of
tdl.configure
will be ignored on subsequent tdl initializations. You might
also want to set tdl.configure({ verbosityLevel: 'default' })
so the verbosity
level is set only once. The client should not be shared to other threads.
Error while reading RSA public key
You can get this error if libtdjson is dynamically linked against OpenSSL and some of the symbols got resolved into Node.js instead of the system OpenSSL.
Note that Node.js also uses OpenSSL (the distributed binaries are statically
linked against it) and exports the OpenSSL symbols. In the result, there are
two versions of OpenSSL in the same application. Then, using standard dlopen,
especially on Linux, most of the symbols will be resolved into libcrypto
inside the Node.js binary, not into the system libcrypto. It still can work
correctly if the versions are ABI-compatible, i.e. if TDLib is linked against an
OpenSSL version sufficiently similar to the version that Node.js uses
(node -p "process.versions.openssl"
).
tdl
tries to get around the symbol conflict issues by using RTLD_DEEPBIND
when available, so these issues should be rare in practice (unless you use
musl).
You can use lldb
or gdb
to check whether the symbols get resolved into
Node.js. For example, open lldb -- node index.js
and set these breakpoints:
break set -r EVP_ -s node
break set -r AES_ -s node
break set -r BIO_ -s node
break set -r RSA_ -s node
break set -r CRYPTO_ -s node
It's also possible to set breakpoints inside the system OpenSSL:
break set -r . -s libcrypto.so.1.1
break set -r . -s libssl.so.1.1
To solve this issue, try to link TDLib statically against OpenSSL (the
OPENSSL_USE_STATIC_LIBS
option in cmake) or link it against the OpenSSL
version that Node.js uses.
Another possible option is to rebuild Node.js from source, linking it dynamically against the same system OpenSSL. That way, there is only one instance of OpenSSL in the application. For example, using nvm, you can install Node.js v18 from source on GNU/Linux via this command:
$ nvm install -s 18 --shared-openssl --shared-openssl-includes=/usr/include/ --shared-openssl-libpath=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/
However, it's inconvenient for most users to rebuild Node.js.
Another hypothetical solution is to rebuild TDLib with the OpenSSL headers
distributed in Node.js (<path-to-node>/include/node/
) without linking it to
anything, simply leaving the undefined symbols. Using this option, there is also
only one OpenSSL. I haven't checked that this works or that Node exports all the
symbols needed for TDLib. With this option, TDLib also should be rebuilt every
time Node.js updates the OpenSSL dependency.
This issue doesn't apply to Electron because it doesn't export the OpenSSL symbols.
<div align="right"><a name="segfault-error" href="#segfault-error">#</a></div>- Segmentation fault
The cause of the segfault might be the same as above. If you get segmentation faults, open an issue.
<a name="issue-tracker"></a>
Issue tracker
Reporting bugs (besides feature requests and other stuff) is very welcome in the
tdl's GitHub issue tracker. However, while I can answer some questions on how to
use TDLib itself, I do not know the entirety of TDLib API, and it may be
better (and faster to get the response) to ask questions related to TDLib
specifics in the t.me/tdlibchat
group.
Footnotes
-
tdl
is packaged with pre-built addons for Windows (x86_64), GNU/Linux (x86_64, arm64; glibc >= 2.22), and macOS (x86_64, arm64; v10.14+). If a pre-built binary is not available for your system, then the node addon will be built using node-gyp, requiring Python and a C++ toolchain (C++14 is required) to be installed (on Windows, MSVS or Build Tools). Pass--build-from-source
to never use the pre-built binaries. arm64 binaries are not tested in the CI. Linux binaries are statically linked against libstdc++. ↩ ↩2