curitz is a CUrses-based Remote Interface To Zino, i.e. a terminal-based user interface to interact with a Zino server.
Split from internal project PyRitz on 2023-03-30.
There needs to be a file .ritz.tcl
, conventionally placed in your
home-directory.
Example .ritz.tcl
:
set Secret ZINO1SERVERTOKEN_A set User USERNAME_1 set Server my.zino.server.com set Port 8001 set _Secret(ALTERNATE) ZINO1SERVERTOKEN_B set _User(ALTERNATE) USERNAME_2 set _Server(ALTERNATE) alternative.zino.server.com set _Port(ALTERNATE) 8001
The top four lines configures the default server. Secret
and User
is
created by the admin of the zino server. Server
and Port
hopefully
needs no explanation.
Running curitz
without the -p
-argument would connect to
my.zino.server.com
, authenticated as USER_1
.
The bottom four lines are optional. They are an example of how to configure
alternative servers. Running curitz
with the /-
-argument would connect
to the alternative server:
$ curitz -p ALTERNATE
This would connect to alternative.zino.server.com
, authenticated as USER_2
.
curitz is available on PyPI. The quickest way to install it is therefore using
some variation of pip install
. We recommend installing it into your own
user environment in order to not interfere with system packages, like so:
pip install --user curitz
This should normally put the binary and library under .local
on Linux.
If you have the uv
tool available on your system, you can install and run
curitz directly by issuing the command:
uvx curitz
If installing directly from a clone of this source code repository, you can install curitz (again, we recommend installing to your own user environment):
pip install --user .
After installing (and assuming your PATH
environment variable is set
correctly), the terminal program curitz
will be available to run.
Run curitz -h
for info about the available arguments.
This library is testable with unittests. When testing it starts a Zino emulator that reponds correctly to requests as the real server would do.
If you have all currently supported pythons in your path, you can test them
all, with an HTML coverage report placed in htmlcov/
:
tox
To test on a specific python other than current, run:
tox -e py{version}
where version
is of the form "311" for Python 3.11.
Some minimal pre-commit hooks are included, install by running
pre-commit install
.
See the file .git-blame-ignore-revs for commits to ignore when running git blame. Use it like so:
git blame --ignore-revs-file .git-blame-ignore-revs FILE