Usage
Once The Lounge is installed, a program called thelounge
is now available.
In this page:
- Client help
- Native app
- Command line help
- Using the correct system user
- Starting the server
- Specifying a different configuration file
- Installing additional themes
- Installing plugins
- Installing local packages
- Configuring The Lounge
Client help
To view available keybinds, autocompletion options, and commands, press the help button in the sidebar next to the settings cog.
This page also checks for The Lounge and package updates, and allows you to read the changelog for the currently installed version.
Native app
The Lounge is a progressive web app (PWA), and can be installed from any modern browser for a native-like experience without having a dedicated app.
An “Add The Lounge to home screen” button should show up in settings when The Lounge is running in private mode.
Push notifications are supported on all platforms except for iOS, due to Apple not supporting web push specification and all browsers being reskins of Safari.
Command line help
To get general information about the program and an overview of the available
commands, use the --help
(or -h
) option:
thelounge --help
To get specific help for a given command, run:
thelounge <command> --help
For example, to know how to use thelounge start
and the options available,
run:
thelounge start --help
If you need to check which version of The Lounge is installed, use:
thelounge --version
Using the correct system user
Note that all commands must be executed as the same user The Lounge will be run as.
If you installed The Lounge via the package manager on a unix like system and plan to run it as a system service, the user is called “thelounge”. So every command needs to be executed as sudo -u thelounge thelounge <command>
, where <command>
should be substituted with a subcommand like start
or add
Starting the server
To start the server, run the following command:
thelounge start
This will start a server and display something along the lines of:
The Lounge v3.0.0 (Node.js 8.9.2 on linux x64)
Configuration file: /etc/thelounge/config.js
Available at http://:::9000/ in private mode
There are currently no users. Create one with thelounge add <name>.
This tells us a few things:
- Since it is the first time The Lounge runs, a configuration file was created. Its location depends on how The Lounge was installed (see the installation page).
- The Lounge can now be accessed at http://localhost:9000/.
- It has started in private mode, which means only users who have an account can log in. There is no guest access.
- There are no user accounts as of yet, so in fact, no one can log in for now (see the user management page).
The process can be stopped at any time by hitting Ctrl+C. This will effectively close all connections to remote IRC servers that users are connected to.
Specifying a different configuration file
It can be useful to provide a different location for the configuration file. For example, you might want to store it on another partition, or you might want to run multiple instances with different configurations.
To do so, use the environment variable called THELOUNGE_HOME
. It will instruct
a location where The Lounge will look for the configuration file, the available
users, etc.
For example, to start a server with a configuration located at /tmp/config.js
,
run:
THELOUNGE_HOME=/tmp thelounge start
Installing additional themes
A list of all available themes can be found on the npm registry and installed with thelounge install
. For example, to install a theme called thelounge-theme-solarized
, run:
thelounge install thelounge-theme-solarized
The Lounge automatically loads the theme after installation and makes it available in the client settings.
Additionally, any theme can be used as the default one for all clients. See the theme
section on the configuration page for more information.
For local themes, see Installing local packages
Installing plugins
A list of some plugins can be found on the npm registry and installed with thelounge install
. For example, to install a plugin called thelounge-plugin-closepms
, run:
thelounge install thelounge-plugin-closepms
The Lounge automatically loads the plugin after installation and activates it.
For local plugins, see Installing local packages
Installing local packages
During development of packages or if uploading a package to the npm registry is undesired, packages can be installed from the local file system.
That’s done by adding a file: prefix to package name:
thelounge install file:~/path/to/package_dir
Configuring The Lounge
As shown above, The Lounge starts by default in private mode on port 9000.
To change the mode or port quickly, the --config
(or -c
) option can be used.
For example, to start The Lounge on port 9001, run:
thelounge start --config port=9001
Similarly, to start it in public mode, run:
thelounge start --config public=true
This option can be specified multiple times to match the requested configuration:
thelounge start -c port=9001 -c public=true
However, --config
is not limited to setting the port or mode. In fact, any
option available in the configuration file can be passed using --config
.
See the configuration page for a full list.
A few rules apply to the --config
option:
- Nested objects require using a dot-notation. For example:
thelounge start -c debug.raw=true
- Lists of values must be wrapped with
[]
. For example:thelounge start -c transports=[websocket,polling]
- If a value has a whitespace, it must be wrapped in quotes. For example:
thelounge start -c defaults.name="Cool Network"