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Top Forums Programming Wuhan Coronavirus Status for China - Rapid Prototype Blynk App with ESP8266 Post 303043594 by Neo on Saturday 1st of February 2020 12:07:24 PM
Old 02-01-2020
The mistake I made in this humanitarian crisis situation was to use Blynk to build a public service app to help others.

I will not make that mistake again.

In addition, I also read the Blynk privacy policy and according to their privacy policy, they can provide the data we use on the Blynk network to third parties, for example Google and FB-like behavioral analytics, where they can partner with data miners and other third parties and user our "behavioral exhaust" without our express written consent.

From Blynk Terms of Use (TOS) policy:

Quote:
By using the [Blynk] Service, you are granting us (and any service providers or Providers used by us) permission to access your account and those messages, data, information, text, graphics, audio, video or other material and content of any kind posted/uploaded/transmitted to or through the Service using your account, to process and submit said material to End Users.
That is a very "radical" TOS statement, to say the least.......

Update:

After looking into this, I found some promising iPhone apps which do not share your data with third parties (in contrast to Blynk) and will test the mosquitto broker to set up a private pub/sub network to send and receive messages to and from these ESP8266 and ESP32 devices.

Quote:
Eclipse Mosquitto is an open source (EPL/EDL licensed) message broker that implements the MQTT protocol versions 5.0, 3.1.1 and 3.1. Mosquitto is lightweight and is suitable for use on all devices from low power single board computers to full servers.

The MQTT protocol provides a lightweight method of carrying out messaging using a publish/subscribe model. This makes it suitable for Internet of Things messaging such as with low power sensors or mobile devices such as phones, embedded computers or microcontrollers.

The Mosquitto project also provides a C library for implementing MQTT clients, and the very popular mosquitto_pub and mosquitto_sub command line MQTT clients.
I have already set up a mosquitto broker on Ubuntu, the basic security authentication and can send a message from my ESP32 device to the remote Linux server. Will discuss this in another post.
This User Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
 

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App::Cmd::Tutorial(3pm) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   App::Cmd::Tutorial(3pm)

NAME
App::Cmd::Tutorial - getting started with App::Cmd VERSION
version 0.318 DESCRIPTION
App::Cmd is a set of tools designed to make it simple to write sophisticated command line programs. It handles commands with multiple subcommands, generates usage text, validates options, and lets you write your program as easy-to-test classes. An App::Cmd-based application is made up of three main parts: the script, the application class, and the command classes. The script is the actual executable file run at the command line. It can generally consist of just a few lines: #!/usr/bin/perl use YourApp; YourApp->run; All the work of argument parsing, validation, and dispatch is taken care of by your application class. The application class can also be pretty simple, and might look like this: package YourApp; use App::Cmd::Setup -app; 1; When a new application instance is created, it loads all of the command classes it can find, looking for modules under the Command namespace under its own name. In the above snippet, for example, YourApp will look for any module with a name starting with "YourApp::Command::". We can set up a simple command class like this: package YourApp::Command::initialize; use YourApp -command; 1; Now, a user can run this command, but he'll get an error: $ yourcmd initialize YourApp::Command::initialize does not implement mandatory method 'execute' Oops! This dies because we haven't told the command class what it should do when executed. This is easy, we just add some code: sub execute { my ($self, $opt, $args) = @_; print "Everything has been initialized. (Not really.) "; } Now it works: $ yourcmd initialize Everything has been initialized. (Not really.) The arguments to the execute method are the parsed options from the command line (that is, the switches) and the remaining arguments. With a properly configured command class, the following invocation: $ yourcmd reset -zB --new-seed xyzxy foo.db bar.db might result in the following data: $opt = { zero => 1, no_backup => 1, new_seed => 'xyzzy', }; $args = [ qw(foo.db bar.db) ]; Arguments are processed by Getopt::Long::Descriptive (GLD). To customize its argument processing, a command class can implement a few methods: "usage_desc" provides the usage format string; "opt_spec" provides the option specification list; "validate_args" is run after Getopt::Long::Descriptive, and is meant to validate the $args, which GLD ignores. The first two methods provide configuration passed to GLD's "describe_options" routine. To improve our command class, we might add the following code: sub usage_desc { "yourcmd %o [dbfile ...]" } sub opt_spec { return ( [ "skip-refs|R", "skip reference checks during init", ], [ "values|v=s@", "starting values", { default => [ 0, 1, 3 ] } ], ); } sub validate_args { my ($self, $opt, $args) = @_; # we need at least one argument beyond the options; die with that message # and the complete "usage" text describing switches, etc $self->usage_error("too few arguments") unless @$args; } TIPS
o Delay using large modules using autouse, Class::Autouse or "require" in your commands to save memory and make startup faster. Since only one of these commands will be run anyway, there's no need to preload the requirements for all of them. o To add a "--help" option to all your commands create a base class like: package MyApp::Command; use App::Cmd::Setup -command; sub opt_spec { my ( $class, $app ) = @_; return ( [ 'help' => "This usage screen" ], $class->options($app), ) } sub validate_args { my ( $self, $opt, $args ) = @_; if ( $opt->{help} ) { my ($command) = $self->command_names; $self->app->execute_command( $self->app->prepare_command("help", $command) ); exit; } $self->validate( $opt, $args ); } Where "options" and "validate" are "inner" methods which your command subclasses implement to provide command-specific options and validation. o Add a "description" method to your commands for more verbose output from the built-in "App::Cmd::Command::help|help" command. sub description { return "The initialize command prepares ..."; } o To let your users configure default values for options, put a sub like sub config { my $app = shift; $app->{config} ||= TheLovelyConfigModule->load_config_file(); } in your main app file, and then do something like: sub opt_spec { my ( $class, $app ) = @_; my ( $name ) = $class->command_names; return ( [ 'blort=s' => "That special option", { default => $app->config->{$name}{blort} || $fallback_default }, ], ); } Or better yet, put this logic in a superclass and process the return value from an "inner" method (see previous tip for an example). AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Ricardo Signes. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-05-05 App::Cmd::Tutorial(3pm)
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