Create a stdin/stdout pipe easily over wifi or internet.
The magic part is that the program will find the other person over the local network or even the internet automatically, without needing to exchange IP addresses. Just a direct pipe to another peer.
In one terminal:
$ airpipe testshare
In another terminal:
$ echo "hello from another terminal" | airpipe testshare
on one side:
$ airpipe < file.tar.gz
and on the other:
$ airpipe > file.tar.gz
$ airpipe free-music < song.mp3
In the terminal to share:
$ script -f /tmp/log
and in another terminal:
$ tail -F /tmp/log | airpipe my-terminal
and then on the remote side just type
airpipe
This is actually what airpipe
does by default!
$ airpipe hello-ken
hey, how goes?
good thanks making some vegan pizza
ooo rad
$ arecord -f cd | airpipe chat | aplay -f cd
you could also use lower quality audio for slower connections:
$ arecord -r 8000 -f U8 | airpipe chat | aplay -r 8000 -f U8
(This example is Linux-only!)
In one terminal:
$ ffmpeg -f alsa -ac 2 -f x11grab -r 25 -i :0.0 -vcodec mpeg2video -ar 44100 -s wvga -y /tmp/video.mpg
In another:
$ airpipe screen < /tmp/video.mpg
- this code forked from @cblgh's paperslip!
- networking code provided by hyperswarm
ISC