Awesome
pitaya-cli
Repo Deprecation Notice
As a part of the initiative to centralize pitaya related code in a single repo, Pitaya CLI is now maintained at the Pitaya main repo.
===========
A REPL cli client made in go for pitaya.
Installing
go install github.com/topfreegames/pitaya-cli/v2
Usage
For cli flags, run pitaya-cli --help
$ pitaya-cli
Pitaya REPL Client
>>> help
Commands:
clear clear the screen
connect connects to pitaya
disconnect disconnects from pitaya server
exit exit the program
help display help
notify makes a notify to pitaya server
push insert information of push return
request makes a request to pitaya server
sethandshake sets a handshake parameter
Protobuf
For connecting to a server that uses protobuf as serializer the server must implement two routes:
- Docs: responsible for returning all handlers and the protos used on input and output;
- Descriptors: The list of protos descriptions, this will be used by the CLI to encode/decode the messages.
To implement those routes you can use some functions provided by pitaya, here is a short example of both routes:
import (
// ...
"github.com/topfreegames/pitaya"
"github.com/topfreegames/pitaya/protos"
)
// Docs handler
func (c *MyHandler) Docs(ctx context.Context) (*protos.Doc, error) {
d, err := pitaya.Documentation(true)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to generate documentation for pitaya routes: %w", err)
}
doc, err := json.Marshal(d)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to encode documentation JSON: %w", err)
}
return &protos.Doc{Doc: string(doc)}, nil
}
// Descriptors route
func (c *MyHandler) Descriptors(ctx context.Context, names *protos.ProtoNames) (*protos.ProtoDescriptors, error) {
descriptors := make([][]byte, len(names.Name))
for i, protoName := range names.Name {
desc, err := pitaya.Descriptor(protoName)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to get descriptor for '%s': %w", protoName, err)
}
descriptors[i] = desc
}
return &protos.ProtoDescriptors{Desc: descriptors}, nil
}
When initilizing the CLI, you have to provide the docs route as the following:
pitaya-cli -docs connector.docsHandler.docs
NOTE: The descriptors handler is automatically discovered by the client. It must only follow the signature mentioned earlier.
A full example of running pitaya-cli with protobuf:
pitaya-cli -docs connector.docsHandler.docs
>>> push connector.playerHandler.matchfound protos.FindMatchPush
>>> connect localhost:30124
>>> request connector.playerHandler.create
>>> request connector.playerHandler.findmatch {"RoomType":"xxxx"}
Set handshake parameters
You can edit handshake parameters before connecting to the server.
You may pass the full handshake json:
Pitaya REPL Client
>>> sethandshake {"sys":{"clientVersion":"1.0.6", "clientBuildNumber":"999","platform":"ios"}}
Or edit one of three specific parameters:
Pitaya REPL Client
>>> sethandshake platform ios
>>> sethandshake buildNumber 999
>>> sethandshake version 1.0.6
Read commands from file
It's possible to add a list of sequential requests into a file and pitaya-cli will execute them in order.
For example: commands.txt
connect localhost:3250
request connector.playerHandler.create
request connector.playerHandler.findmatch {"RoomType":"xxxx"}
Then run: pitaya-cli --filename commands.txt