A WebSocket server for exposing Plover events and controlling Plover from an external program.
This plugin is available on GitHub
and PyPI (under the name plover-engine-server-2
).
Report all bugs on GitHub.
Download the latest version of Plover for your operating system from the releases page. Only versions 4.0.0.dev8 and higher are supported.
The same method can be used for updating and uninstalling the plugin.
To configure the plugin, create a file named plover_engine_server_config.json
inside Plover's configuration directory (same directory as plover.cfg
file).
Example content:
{
"host": "localhost",
"port": 8086,
"secretkey": "mysecretkey",
"ssl": {
"cert_path": "/path/to/cert.pem",
"key_path": "/path/to/key.pem"
}
}
All fields are optional, except if you have either specified a cert_path
or a key_path
. In that case you have to make sure that the path pair is properly set there. The default is included in the example above.
Search for occurrences of queue_message
in plover_engine_server/manager.py
,
or write an example program (or use the existing plover_engine_server/websocket/example_client.py
)
and observe its output.
Controlling Plover from other programs:
{"stroke": ["S-"]}
(note that invalid keys are silently dropped),
or {"translation": "abc"}
.Note: to avoid Plover being controlled by a malicious website, you should set some other than default key, and
add the secret key to the request header X-Secret-Token
.
If there's some error during the execution, it will be silently ignored and printed on stderr.
If the "force"
key is true
then the command will be executed even when the engine is turned off.
Note that {PLOVER:RESUME}
will have no effect in that case.
Because the Plover inner working is closely tied to the assumption
that strokes can only come from the keyboard, when {PLOVER:RESUME}
(or a command with similar effect,
such as {PLOVER:TOGGLE}
) is sent and the machine is
"Keyboard" then some characters before the cursor will be deleted.
To prevent this, set the "zero_last_stroke_length"
key to true
.
Note This should be used very sparingly because it may have unintended effects.