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Cells Client provides an easy way to communicate with a Pydio Cells server instance from the command line (or from automation scripts). It uses the Cells SDK for Go and the REST API under the hood.

Cells Client a.k.a. cec works like standard command line tools like ls, scp, etc. Using the cec command, you can list, download and upload directly to your remote Cells server.

The v4 version of this tool is meant to be used with a remote Cells server that is also at version v4+, please rather use cells-client v2 if your server is older (but you really should update your Cells server!).

Usage

Use the cec --help command to know about available commands. You can also find the complete documentation for each command on our website

Below are a few interesting commands for manipulating files:

  • cec ls: List files and folders on the server, when no path is provided, it lists the workspaces that the current user can access.
  • cec scp: Upload/Download file to/from a remote server.
  • cec cp, cec mv and cec rm: Copy, move, rename and delete files within the server.
  • cec mkdir: Create a folder on the remote server
  • cec clear: Clear authentication tokens stored in your keychain.

For your convenience, here are a few examples, assuming that your client is connected to a server (see Section below for connecting) :

1/ Listing the content of the personal-files workspace

$ cec ls personal-files
+--------+--------------------------+
|  TYPE  |           NAME           |
+--------+--------------------------+
| Folder | personal-files           |
....
| Folder | recycle_bin              |
| File   | test_crud-1545206846.txt |
| File   | test_file2.txt           |
+--------+--------------------------+

2/ Showing details about a file

$ cec ls personal-files/P5021040.jpg -d
Listing: 1 results for personal-files/P5021040.jpg
+------+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------+------------+
| TYPE |                 UUID                 |            NAME             |  SIZE  |  MODIFIED  |
+------+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------+------------+
| File | 98bbd86c-acb9-4b56-a6f3-837609155ba6 | personal-files/P5021040.jpg | 3.1 MB | 5 days ago |
+------+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------+------------+

3/ Uploading a file to server

$ cec scp ./README.md cells://common-files/
Copying ./README.md to cells://common-files/
 ## Waiting for file to be indexed...
 ## File correctly indexed

4/ Download a file from server

$ cec scp cells://personal-files/IMG_9723.JPG ./
Copying cells://personal-files/IMG_9723.JPG to ./
Written 822601 bytes to file

Installation

Cells Client is a single self-contained binary file and is easy to install.

1 - Download cec

Grab the built version for your corresponding amd64 architectures:

2 - Make it executable

Give execution permissions to the binary file, typically on Linux: chmod u+x cec.

3 - Add it to the PATH (optional)

Add the command to your PATH environment variable, to makes it easy to call the command from anywhere in the system. On Linux, you can for instance add a symlink to the binary location (replace below with correct path):

sudo ln -s /path/to/your/binary/cec /usr/local/bin/cec

4 - Check for correct installation

To verify that cec is correctly installed, simply run for instance:

$ cec version
# Should output something like below
Cells Client
 Version: 	    4.0.0
 Git commit: 	f8ad2c9b23977e344da6fa241a297926b697d71c
 Timestamp: 	2023-10-11T17:09:07Z
 OS/Arch: 	    linux/amd64
 Go version: 	go1.21.3

Connecting To Cells

Cells Client requires an authenticated connection to the target Cells server. For a given user, read/write permissions are applied in the same way as what you see in the web interface.

Once a valid user is available, there are 2 options:

  • Go through an interactive configuration and persist necessary information on the client machine (Persistent Mode)
  • Pass the necessary connection information at each call (Non-Persistent Mode)

Persistent Mode

Connections can be configured and persisted locally on the client machine. As from version v2.2.0, you can configure multiple accounts on the client side and switch between them as necessary.
Last used connection is persisted locally in the main configuration file and will be re-used the next time you call the cec command.

To switch between accounts, simply call cec config use.

Calling the cec config add command offers various authentication mechanisms. For persistent mode, we advise to use the default OAuth Authorization Code flow.

cec config add oauth

You will be guided through a few steps to configure and persist your connection:

  • Enter your server address: the full URL to access your Cells instance, e.g.: https://files.example.com/
  • Choose OAuth2 process either by opening a browser or copy/pasting the URL in your browser to get a valid token
  • Test and validate the connection.

The token is saved locally and will be refreshed automatically as required. If a keyring mechanism is available on the machine, it is used to store sensitive information. You can verify this with the following command:

cec config check-keyring 

Supported keyring systems are MacOSX Keychain, Linux DBUS and Windows Credential Manager API.

Troubleshooting

When launching the Cells Client, following error is thrown:

2022/10/14 17:33:07 unexpected error during initialisation phase: exec: "dbus-launch": executable file not found in $PATH

This mostly happens when Cells Client cannot find the keyring it expects to store credentials. Under Debian/Ubuntu Linux, you can install necessary software with (even if you do not use GNOME):

sudo apt install dbus-launch libpam-gnome-keyring gnome-keyring-pkcs11

Non Persistent Mode

This mode can be useful to use the Cells Client in a CI/CD pipe or via cron jobs. In such case, we strongly advise you to create a Personal Access Token on the server and use this.

To create a token that is valid for user robot for 90 days, log via SSH into your server as pydio (a.k.a. as the user that runs the cells service) and execute:

$ cells admin user token -u robot -e 90d
✔ This token for robot will expire on Tuesday, 01-Jun-21 16:46:40 CEST.
✔ d-_-x3N8jg9VYegwf5KpKFTlYnQIzCrvbXHzS24uB7k.mibFBN2bGy3TUVzJvcrnUlI9UuM3-kzB1OekrPLLd4U
⚠ Make sure to secure it as it grants access to the user resources!

Note: if you have the Enterprise Edition, you can also manage Personal Access Token via the web GUI:

  • Go to Cells Admin Console >> Identity Management >> People
  • Edit the user you want to create a token for
  • Go to the Personal Access Token page.

Then use environment variables (or the corresponding command flags) to pass connection information:

export CEC_URL=https://files.example.com
export CEC_TOKEN=d-_-x3N8jg9VYegwf5KpKFTlYnQIzCrvbXHzS24uB7k.mibFBN2bGy3TUVzJvcrnUlI9UuM3-kzB1OekrPLLd4U

You can now directly talk to your server, for instance:

cec ls common-files 

Note that environment variables take the precedence as soon as you have the CEC_URL variable defined. In such case please insure you have the necessary variables defined depending on your target authentication mode.

Command Completion

Cells Client provides a handy feature that provides completion on commands and paths; both on local and remote machines.

NOTE: you must add cec to you local PATH if you want to configure the completion helper (see above).

Bash completion

To enable this feature, you must have bash-completion third party add-on installed on your workstation.

# on Debian / Ubuntu
sudo apt install bash-completion

# on RHEL / Rocky Linux
sudo dnf install bash-completion

# on MacOS (make sure to follow the instructions displayed by Homebrew)
brew install bash-completion

MacOS latest release changed the default shell to ZSH.

Then, to add the completion in a persistent manner:

# Linux users
cec completion bash | sudo tee /etc/bash_completion.d/cec
# MacOS users 
cec completion bash | sudo tee /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/cec

You can also only source the file in current session, the feature will be gone when you start a new shell.

source <(cec completion bash)

Note: if you want to use completion for remote paths while using scp sub command, you have to prefix the remote path with cells// rather than cells://; that is to omit the column character before the double slash. Typically:

cec scp ./README.md cells//com <press the tab key>
# Completes the path to
cec scp ./README.md cells//common-files/
...

Note: when you update the Cells Client, you also have to update the completion file, typically on Linux machines:

cec completion bash | sudo tee /etc/bash_completion.d/cec
source /etc/bash_completion.d/cec

Build from source

If you rather want to directly compile the source code on your workstation, you require:

  • Go language 1.21 or higher, with a correctly configured Go toolchain,
  • The necessary build utils (typically make, gcc, ...)
  • A git client

You can then retrieve the source code and use the Makefile to compile a binary for your OS:

git clone https://github.com/pydio/cells-client.git
cd ./cells-client
make dev

Cells Client uses the Go Modules mechanism to manage dependencies: you can check out the code anywhere in your local machine, it does not have to be within your GOPATH.

License

This project is licensed under the Apache V2 License - see the LICENSE file for details.