luasocket/etc
2004-05-30 23:33:36 +00:00
..
b64.lua Bug feioso no UDP e possivelmente no TCP também. 2004-05-28 07:24:43 +00:00
check-links.lua Almost there. 2004-05-28 07:47:41 +00:00
dict.lua Changed require"luasocket" to require"socket". 2004-05-28 20:40:13 +00:00
eol.lua Almost there. 2004-05-28 07:47:41 +00:00
get.lua Fine tuning the "require" business. 2004-05-30 21:36:22 +00:00
qp.lua Bug feioso no UDP e possivelmente no TCP também. 2004-05-28 07:24:43 +00:00
README Updated with new dynamic linking scheme. 2004-05-30 23:33:36 +00:00
tftp.lua Adjusted a few inconsistencies with the manual. 2003-08-16 00:06:04 +00:00

This directory contains code that is more useful than the examples. This code
*is* supported.

    lua.lua and luasocket.lua

These are modules to suport dynamic loading of LuaSocket by the stand alone
Lua Interpreter with the use of the "require" function. For my Mac OS X
system, I place all files in /Users/diego/tec/luasocket
and set the following environment variables:

    LUA_PATH=/Users/diego/tec/luasocket/?.lua
    LUA_INIT=@/Users/diego/tec/luasocket/lua.lua
    LUA_FUNCNAME=?
    LUA_LIBNAME=/Users/diego/tec/luasocket/?.dylib

With that, I can run any luasocket application with the command line:

    lua -l socket <script>

Much nicer than having to build a new executable just to initialize
LuaSocket!


    tftp.lua                -- Trivial FTP client

This module implements file retrieval by the TFTP protocol. Its main use
is to test the UDP code, but someone might find it usefull.

    get.lua                 -- file retriever

This little  program is  a client  that uses  the FTP  and HTTP  code to
implement a  command line  file graber. Just  run 

	lua -l socket get.lua <remote-file> [<local-file>]

to download  a remote file (either  ftp:// or http://) to  the specified
local file.  The program  also prints  the download  throughput, elapsed
time, bytes already downloaded etc during download.

	check-links.lua			-- HTML link checker program

This little program scans a HTML file and checks for broken links. It is
similar to check-links.pl by Jamie Zawinski, but uses all facilities of
the LuaSocket library and the Lua language. It has not been thoroughly
tested, but it should work. Just run

	lua -l socket check-links.lua {<url>} > output

and open the result to see a list of broken links. 

Good luck,
Diego.