Quick Start
As a package
Using shoutrrr is easy! There is currently two ways of using it as a package.
Using the direct send command
url := "slack://token-a/token-b/token-c"
err := shoutrrr.Send(url, "Hello world (or slack channel) !")
Using a sender
url := "slack://token-a/token-b/token-c"
sender, err := shoutrrr.CreateSender(url)
sender.Send("Hello world (or slack channel) !", map[string]string { /* ... */ })
Using a sender with multiple URLs
urls := []string {
"slack://token-a/token-b/token-c"
"discord://token@channel"
}
sender, err := shoutrrr.CreateSender(urls...)
sender.Send("Hello world (or slack channel) !", map[string]string { /* ... */ })
Through the CLI
Start by running the build.sh
script.
You may then run send notifications using the shoutrrr executable:
$ shoutrrr send [OPTIONS] <URL> <Message [...]>
From a GitHub Actions workflow
You can also use Shoutrrr from a GitHub Actions workflow.
See this example and the action on GitHub
Marketplace:
name: Deploy
on:
push:
branches:
- main
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Some other steps needed for deploying
run: ...
- name: Shoutrrr
uses: containrrr/shoutrrr-action@v1
with:
url: ${{ secrets.SHOUTRRR_URL }}
title: Deployed ${{ github.sha }}
message: See changes at ${{ github.event.compare }}.
Documentation
For additional details, visit the full documentation.
Contributors ✨
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
- watchtower - process for automating Docker container base image updates that uses shoutrrr for notifications
- kured - kubernetes reboot daemon has adopted shoutrrr as their unified notification method starting with version 1.7.0.