.\" Linphone is an internet phone compatible with the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP: RFC3261 ) .TH "linphonecsh" "1" "3.0.0" "Simon MORLAT" "linphone, internet phone" .SH "NAME" .LP linphonecsh \- Sends a command to a linphonec running in daemon mode, and exits. .SH "SYNTAX" .LP linphonecsh \fIinit\fP <\fIoptional linphonec args\fP> .br linphonecsh \fIexit\fP .br linphonecsh \fIgeneric\fP <\fIlinphonec command line surrounded by quotes\fP> .br linphonecsh \fIregister\fP \fI--username\fP <\fIusername\fP> \fI--host\fP <\fIproxy\fP> \fI--password\fP <\fIpassword\fP> .br linphonecsh \fIunregister\fP .br linphonecsh \fIdial\fP <\fIsip address or number\fP> .br linphonecsh \fIstatus\fP <\fIdomain = one of 'register', 'hook', 'autoanswer'\fP> .br linphonecsh \fI\--help\fP .SH "DESCRIPTION" .LP Linphonecsh is a small utility to send basic commands to a linphonec (console mode linphone) process. Unlike linphonec, linphonecsh does not wait commands from standard input: it takes the command from its arguments and sends it using unix pipe to a linphonec process started in daemon mode. The motivation for this tool is for example to simply execute voip calls from scripts, web-servers, or javascript web pages. .br The very first thing to do before doing actions is to ask linphonecsh to spawn a linphonec daemon using .TP \fBlinphonecsh init\fR .br The resulting linphonec daemon does not read or write any configuration file. When the linphonec daemon is no more needed, the following commands makes it exit properly: .TP \fBlinphonecsh exit\fR .br .SH "FILES" .LP By default a linphonec started as a daemon by 'linphonecsh init' does not use a config file. .br .SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" .LP .SH "EXAMPLES" .LP .SH "AUTHORS" .LP .br Simon Morlat .SH "SEE ALSO" .LP linphonec(1) linphone(1)