/shellBotHeroku

Primary LanguageJavaScriptGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

shell-bot

This is a fully functional shellrunner Telegram bot. You tell it a command, it executes it and posts the live output. You can send input to the command by replying to the output messages.

How to Deploy on Heroku

  • Must follow this guide for automatic installing these useful softwares
rclone
folderclone
ffmpeg
youtube-dl
streamlink
aria2c
megatools
ngrok
qbittorrent-nox
rar & unrar
p7zip (support almost every archive type except rar)
  • Import this repo (do not fork, otherwise you will not be able to make it private)

First go to https://github.com/new and fill shell-bot in Repository name field. Then check Private (important) Then click on Create Repository Go to down and click on Import code and paste this :

https://github.com/magneto261290/shell-bot

Click on Begin Import Wait for importing to be finished

  • After importing has been done, go to your repo and edit README.md and config.json files
  • got to end of READMe.md file and replace your_repo_url with you shell-bot's repo URL and save file.
  • Now in config.json file, fill your Bot Token and Owner ID
  • now go to .config/rclone folder and put your rclone config file (for rclone)
  • go to accounts folder and upload your service accounts json file (for folderclone) Now its been all done, Now simply open your repo and click on Deploy to Heroku button.

READMe of official shell-bot

It's a fairly complex example, because it actually appears to the command as a terminal, interprets escape sequences and it will update messages if their lines get touched. This means interactive programs such as wget should work naturally, you should see the status bar update.

The bot also allows files to be uploaded or downloaded, and also has a simple text editor available for convenience.

Here's an example of the bot running git to clone a repository:

Basic tasks

Here's an example of the bot running alsamixer:

Alsamixer with keypad

This bot demonstrates a great part of Botgram's API.

Note: Due to the tight integration, running this bot on Windows is currently not supported.

Install

First install node-pty dependencies. For example, if you're in Ubuntu/Debian:

sudo apt install -y make python build-essential

If you're using fedora instead:

sudo dnf install -y python
sudo dnf group install -y "C Development Tools and Libraries" 

Before using this, you should have obtained an auth token for your bot, and know your personal user's numeric ID. If you don't know what this means, check out the blog post for a full step-by-step guide.

git clone https://github.com/botgram/shell-bot.git && cd shell-bot
npm install

To start the bot:

node server

The first time you run it, it will ask you some questions and create the configuration file automatically: config.json. You can also write it manually, see config.example.json.

When started it will print a Bot ready. message when it's up and running. For convenience, you might want to talk to the BotFather and set the command list to the contents of commands.txt.

Authorization

When first started, the bot will just accept messages coming from your user. This is for security reasons: you don't want arbitrary people to issue commands to your computer!

If you want to allow another user to use the bot, use /token and give that user the resulting link. If you want to use this bot on a group, /token will give you a message to forward into the group.

Proxy server

shell-bot obeys the https_proxy or all_proxy environment variable to use a proxy, and supports HTTP/HTTPS/SOCKS4/SOCKS4A/SOCKS5 proxies. Examples:

export https_proxy="http://168.63.76.32:3128"
node server

export https_proxy="socks://127.0.0.1:9050"
node server

Warning: For SOCKS proxies, you need to use an IP address (not a DNS hostname).

Deploy to heroku

Click this button to deploy to heroku Deploy