Hace 12 años | Por painterman a linux-mag.com
Publicado hace 12 años por painterman a linux-mag.com

Aprende a acceder a tu Facebook a través de la línea de comandos: lee tus mensajes, mira quién está online y actualiza tu estado usando fbcmd. No había visto nada tan geek desde hacía tiempo... Maravilloso.

Comentarios

D

Just because you’re stuck at the command line all day long doesn’t mean that you can’t participate in the awesomeness of social networking. You can enjoy both with FBCMD, the command line Facebook applications. Back in February, I wrote Tweeting from the Command Line with Twyt, which, as you remember, was an article covering the command line Twitter client, Tywt. Now, you can have your Facebook and the convenience of the command line to satisfy your social networking addiction. And, better still is that at the command line, no one will ever suspect that you’re Facebooking. Power to the people! The command line-using people, that is.


The Basics

There are a few prerequisites for installing the command line Facebook application, FBCMD. PHP 5.x is a requirement, since the application is a single PHP file. You can install php5 via any method you wish but, in my experience, I had to install php5-cli, php5-gd, and php5-mysql to use this application. Your experience and mileage may vary.


Connect to the FBCMD and download the PHP file or grab it easily via curl.

$ curl -O https://github.com/dtompkins/fbcmd/raw/master/fbcmd_update.php


And, run the following two commands to complete this very simple installation.

$ sudo php fbcmd_update.php sudo

fbcmd update utility [version 2.91]

http://fbcmd.dtompkins.com/update

php fbcmd_update.php install

fbcmd update utility [version 2.91]

http://fbcmd.dtompkins.com/update

.....................

Update: COMPLETE!

fbcmd version: [none] --> [1.0-beta5-dev1]

Note: fbcmd_update.php is now at [/usr/local/lib/fbcmd/fbcmd_update.php]
so you can remove the old one at [/home/khess/fbcmd_update.php]

type fbcmd to begin


As the prompt suggests, type fbcmd and see what happens.

$ fbcmd

Welcome to fbcmd! [version 1.0-beta5-dev1]

This application needs to be authorized to access your facebook account.

Step 1: Allow basic (initial) access to your acount via this url:

https://www.facebook.com/dialog/oauth?client_id=42463270450&redirect_uri=http://www.facebook.com/connect/login_success.html

to launch this page, execute: fbcmd go access

Step 2: Generate an offline authorization code at this url:

http://www.facebook.com/code_gen.php?v=1.0&api_key=42463270450

to launch this page, execute: fbcmd go auth

obtain your authorization code (XXXXXX) and then execute: fbcmd auth XXXXXX


These messages explain the steps you need to take next to grant FBCMD access to your Facebook information.


Making the Facebook Connection

Perform the following connections from a Linux desktop system because some of these commands use Firefox (or your default browser) to initiate the connections and setup the application. Open a Terminal and type in the following commands.

fbcmd go access

Your Internet browser will open to Facebook and prompt you for login. If you see a link that reads, “Login with Command Line” or something similar, select that link and login to Facebook. If you don’t see that link, login to Facebook the way you normally do. Return to your Terminal window and issue the following command:

$ fbcmd go access


This command prompts another connection to Facebook, where you should see a six character code that you’ll need for the next step.

fbcmd auth XXXXXX

fbcmd [v1.0-beta5-dev1] AUTH Code accepted.
Welcome to FBCMD, Kenneth Hess!

most FBCMD commands require additional permissions.
to grant default permissions, execute: fbcmd addperm



As instructed, issue the command in the message.

$ fbcmd addperm

launching:
https://www.facebook.com/dialog/oauth?client_id=42463270450&redirect_uri=http://www.facebook.com/connect/login_success.html&scope=create_event,friends_about_me,friends_activities,friends_birthday,friends_checkins,friends_education_history,friends_events,friends_groups,friends_hometown,friends_interests,friends_likes,friends_location,friends_notes,friends_online_presence,friends_photo_video_tags,friends_photos,friends_relationship_details,friends_relationships,friends_religion_politics,friends_status,friends_videos,friends_website,friends_work_history,manage_friendlists,manage_pages,offline_access,publish_checkins,publish_stream,read_friendlists,read_mailbox,read_requests,read_stream,rsvp_event,user_about_me,user_activities,user_birthday,user_checkins,user_education_history,user_events,user_groups,user_hometown,user_interests,user_likes,user_location,user_notes,user_online_presence,user_photo_video_tags,user_photos,user_relationship_details,user_relationships,user_religion_politics,user_status,user_videos,user_website,user_work_history


Your FBCMD to Facebook connection is now complete and you’re ready to use FBCMD. To test that assertion, try the following command to see the permissions you granted the application.

$ fbcmd showperm
PERMISSION GRANTED?
ads_management 0
create_event 1
email 0
friends_about_me 1
friends_activities 1
friends_birthday 1
friends_checkins 1
friends_education_history 1
friends_events 1
friends_groups 1
...
user_videos 1
user_website 1
user_work_history 1
xmpp_login 0


A ’1′ means permission granted and a ’0′ means permission denied. You can change permissions at any time by issuing the addperm keyword and a permission. See the FBCMD Command Documentation for a complete listing of command keywords and syntax.

Using FBCMD

I can’t show you all of the FBCMD commands but I can show you a few of the fun ones. You can do almost anything with the command line interface that you can with the web interface. Your results may vary but generally speaking everything works pretty well. To see a list of your friends who are signed into Facebook, use fonline.

$ fbcmd fonline

NAME ONLINE_PRESENCE
Friend One idle
Friend Two idle
Friend Three idle
Friend Four idle
Friend Five active
Friend Six active
Friend Seven active



To see a list of messages that your friends have posted to your wall, use mywall.

$ fbcmd mywall
[#] NAME MESSAGE

[1] Friend One Hi , Hope you are good



You can read your Facebook messages with the inbox keyword.

$ fbcmd inbox
[#] FIELD VALUE

[1] subject [Hello]
:to/from Friend Four
:snippet Hi, what's up?



To check those annoying event invitations that people send you, use events.

$ fbcmd events
[#] START_TIME RSVP EVENT
[1] Wed May 25 02:00 not_replied Towel Day - Celebrating Douglas Adams
[2] Sat Jul 16 10:00 declined William Bernhardt Small-Group Seminar
(Level 3)



And, last but not least, you can update your status. You wouldn’t want anyone to miss any aspect of your fascinating existence or your latest video game scores.

$ fbcmd post "This is a test post from FBCMD"
POST_ID
1443542993_205008538849



If you’re a PHP programmer, I suggest that you expand and extend this application by contacting the primary developer. See the Contribute page for more information.

For those of you who love to use Facebook, you’re sure to love an easy to install, easy to use command line Facebook application like FBCMD. FBCMD has a lot of potential as an evolving command line application that I hope someone incorporates into a repository so that it’s even easier to install for those who don’t like to install applications. Those of us who like a challenge are in the minority. Most people just want something that works and works without hassle or strain. Make it so, Linux fans.

-------------
Kenneth Hess is a Linux evangelist and freelance technical writer on a variety of open source topics including Linux, SQL, databases, and web services. Ken can be reached via his website at http://www.kenhess.com. Practical Virtualization Solutions by Kenneth Hess and Amy Newman is available now.

painterman

#1 Registrarse es gratis, rápido e indoloro
#2 Gracias

painterman

Lo más gracioso de esto es que cuando miro el inbox me salen mensajes no leidos que no me aparecen en la página!!!

yonni

Hay que registrarse para ver el articulo completo...

D

Me gusta tirar de consola por diversión y por ahorrar recursos en máquinas que no me rinden mucho. La última vez que me compré un ordenador ni me acuerdo: generalmente fabrico "Frankensteins" a partir de piezas que otros desechan.

Así que cualquier cosa por consola es bienvenida, aunque en mi caso concreto, tampoco me resulta muy útil consultar el feisbuq así. Quizá en algún momento me quede con alguno de los comandos sueltos, para casos muy muy concretos.