( Fork of https://github.com/umputun/rss2twitter )
The service publishes RSS updates to twitter. The reason is simple - I needed self-hosted thingy to post tweets on a feed change for my sites (podcasts and blogs). Tried several "cloud services" for this and lately switched to IFTTT. It worked, but slow and unreliable. Sometimes it took hours to get twit posted, sometimes I had to trigger it manually. In addition IFTTT can't have multiple twitter accounts defined for the same IFTTT account and I had to deal with multiple IFTTT accounts just to post to different twitter's timelines.
Install
cd app; go install ./...
Templates
--template
parameter (env $TEMPLATE
) defines output tweet's format with:
{{.Title}}
- title fo rss item (entry)
{{.Link}}
- rss link
{{.Text}}
- item description
default is {{.Title}} - {{.Link}}
Parameters
Application Options:
-r, --refresh= refresh interval (default: 30s) [$REFRESH]
-t, --timeout= rss feed timeout (default: 5s) [$TIMEOUT]
-f, --feed= rss feed url [$FEED]
--consumer-key= twitter consumer key [$TWI_CONSUMER_KEY]
--consumer-secret= twitter consumer secret [$TWI_CONSUMER_SECRET]
--access-token= twitter access token [$TWI_ACCESS_TOKEN]
--access-secret= twitter access secret [$TWI_ACCESS_SECRET]
--template= twitter message template (default: {{.Title}} - {{.Link}}) [$TEMPLATE]
--dry dry mode [$DRY]
--dbg debug mode [$DEBUG]
- refresh interval defines how often RSS feed will be checked and restricts the minimal time interval between two tweets.
- values for
refresh
and timeout
should be presented with units "d" (days), "h" (hours), "m" (minutes) os "s" (seconds)
dry
disables publishing to twitter and sends updates to logger only
getting the core out of rss2twitter
, I created rss2cmd. It's a simple program that monitors a RSS feed but,
instead of pushing to twitter, calls the command you tell it to.
Typical usage:
rss2cmd -f http://mysite.com/feed.xml -- ./myscript --blah
my script will receive post data in the form of environment variables. Every metadata, except the body, is
passed like that. The body, instead, is passed via stdin.