About OAuth configuration
-If you want to use an OAuth-enabled service (like twitter), you should configure bti to use the
-consumer key and secret shipped with the source code (check the oath.keys file).
+If you want to use an OAuth-enabled service (like twitter), you should
+configure bti to use the consumer key and secret shipped with the source
+code (check the oath.keys file).
-For example, you should add the following two lines to your ~/.bti configuration
-file:
+For example, you should add the following two lines to your ~/.bti
+configuration file:
---8<-------------------
# Consumer key
consumer_secret=fnIGGU0T12mMWKjmThUdSeKN32NLWfmnwapwubVQ
---8<-------------------
-The next time that you run bti, you will be told to visit an URL that will
-provide you a PIN number. You should then input that number in the bti prompt,
-and you will be given two new configuration values
+The next time that you run bti, you will be told to visit an URL that
+will provide you a PIN number. You should then input that number in the
+bti prompt, and you will be given two new configuration values
(access_token_secret and access_token_key) that you need to add to your
bti configuration file to authenticate requests from bti.