mumble-ruby
forked from: http://www.github.com/perrym5/mumble-ruby
and: github.com/qwertos/mumble-ruby
ruby-portaudio github.com/dafoxia/ruby-portaudio
Mumble-Ruby is a headless client for the Mumble VOIP application. Mumble-Ruby provides the ability to write scripts and bots which interact with mumble servers through a simple DSL. Mumble-Ruby also has the ability to stream raw audio from a fifo pipe (mpd) to the mumble server. There is huge room for improvement in this library and I am willing to accept all sorts of pull requests so please do.
[sudo] gem install mumble-ruby
-
Ruby >= 2.1.0
-
OPUS Audio Codec
-
Murmur server > 1.2.4 – NOTE: mumble-ruby will not be able to stream audio to servers that don’t support OPUS anymore. I haven’t looked into backwards-compatability with CELT.
-
Merged changes for proper user/channel objects
-
Merged changes for recording feature
-
Added half-broken support for playing files (Something is wrong, wouldn’t recommend using it)
-
Bit of refactoring and renaming
-
Added OPUS support
-
Added more configuration options
-
Added image text messages
-
Added ssl cert auth
-
Fixed several bugs
# Configure all clients globally Mumble.configure do |conf| # sample rate of sound (48 khz recommended) conf.sample_rate = 48000 # bitrate of sound (32 kbit/s recommended) conf.bitrate = 32000 # directory to store user's ssl certs conf.ssl_cert_opts[:cert_dir] = File.expand_path("./") end # Create client instance for your server cli = Mumble::Client.new('localhost') do |conf| conf.username = 'Mumble Bot' conf.password = 'password123' # Overwrite global config conf.bitrate = 48000 end # => #<Mumble::Client:0x00000003064fe8 @host="localhost", @port=64738, @username="Mumble Bot", @password="password123", @channels={}, @users={}, @callbacks={}> # Set up some callbacks for when you recieve text messages # There are callbacks for every Mumble Protocol Message that a client can recieve # For a reference on those, see the linked PDF at the bottom of the README. cli.on_text_message do |msg| puts msg.message end # => [#<Proc:0x0000000346e5f8@(irb):2>] # Initiate the connection to the client cli.connect # => #<Thread:0x000000033d7388 run> # Mute and Deafen yourself after connecting cli.on_connected do cli.me.mute cli.me.deafen end # Join the channel titled "Chillen" (this will return a channel object for that channel) cli.join_channel('Chillen') # Get a list of channels cli.channels # Returns a hash of channel_id: Channel objects # Join Channel using ID cli.join_channel(0) # Join Channel using Channel object cli.join_channel(cli.channels[0]) cli.channels[0].join # Get a list of users cli.users # Returns a hash of session_id: UserState Messages # Text user cli.text_user('perrym5', "Hello there, I'm a robot!") # Text an image to a channel cli.text_channel_img('Chillen', '/path/to/image.jpg') # Start streaming from a FIFO queue of raw PCM data cli.player.stream_named_pipe('/tmp/mpd.fifo') # EXPERIMENTAL: Recording feature cli.recorder.start('/home/matt/record.wav') sleep(2) cli.recorder.stop # EXPERIMENTAL: Play wav files cli.player.play_file('/home/matt/record.wav') # Safely disconnect cli.disconnect # => nil
The documentation for Mumble’s control and voice protocol is a good reference for using this client as all of the callbacks are based on the types of messages the Mumble uses to accomplish its tasks. You can see it here.