10 KiB
TDLight
TDLight is a fork of TDLib, a cross-platform library for building Telegram clients. It can be easily used from almost any programming language.
Table of Contents
- Features
- TDLight extra features
- TDLight extra API functions
- TDLight recommended options
- Examples and documentation
- Dependencies
- Building
- Using in CMake C++ projects
- Using in Java projects
- Using in .NET projects
- Using with other programming languages
- License
Features
TDLib
has many advantages. Notably TDLib
is:
- Cross-platform:
TDLib
can be used on Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, illumos, Windows Phone, WebAssembly, watchOS, tvOS, Tizen, Cygwin. It should also work on other *nix systems with or without minimal effort. - Multilanguage:
TDLib
can be easily used with any programming language that is able to execute C functions. Additionally, it already has native Java (usingJNI
) bindings and .NET (usingC++/CLI
andC++/CX
) bindings. - Easy to use:
TDLib
takes care of all network implementation details, encryption and local data storage. - High-performance: in the Telegram Bot API, each
TDLib
instance handles more than 24000 active bots simultaneously. - Well-documented: all
TDLib
API methods and public interfaces are fully documented. - Consistent:
TDLib
guarantees that all updates are delivered in the right order. - Reliable:
TDLib
remains stable on slow and unreliable Internet connections. - Secure: all local data is encrypted using a user-provided encryption key.
- Fully-asynchronous: requests to
TDLib
don't block each other or anything else, responses are sent when they are available.
TDLight extra features
TDLight extra options
- disable_minithumbnails (true/false) This setting removes minithumbnails everywhere. It reduces memory usage because tdlib keeps them in RAM
- disable_document_filenames (true/false) If you don't care about having the original filenames of every file stored in RAM, you can disable them using this option. It reduces memory usage
- disable_notifications (true/false) In TDLib pending notification updates are stored in ram until you "read" them. This option disables completely notifications and keeps the pending notifications queue empty, reducing memory usage
- ignore_update_chat_last_message (true/false) If you don't care about have updateChatLastMessage updates enable this
- ignore_update_chat_read_inbox (true/false) If you don't care about have updateChatReadInbox updates enable this
- ignore_update_user_chat_action (true/false) If you don't care about have updateUserChatAction updates enable this
- ignore_server_deletes_and_reads (true/false) If you don't care about receiving read receipts and remote deletes from other users, enable this, it will reduce memory usage
- receive_access_hashes (true/false) Receive chats and users access hash as updates
- disable_auto_download (true/false) Forcefully ignore auto download settings of all sessions
TDLight extra API functions
TdApi.GetMemoryStatistics
This method is used to read the size of all the internal TDLib data structures. The output contains a string that can be parsed as a JSON.
TDLight recommended options
- Options:
- ignore_inline_thumbnails: true
- disable_top_chats: true
- ignore_platform_restrictions: true
- ignore_sensitive_content_restrictions: true
- Disable all the databases (messages_db, users_db, files_db)
Examples and documentation
See our Getting Started tutorial for a description of basic TDLib concepts.
Take a look at our examples.
See a TDLight build instructions generator for detailed instructions on how to build TDLib.
See description of our JSON, C++, Java and .NET interfaces.
See the td_api.tl scheme or the automatically generated HTML documentation
for a list of all available TDLib
methods and classes.
Dependencies
TDLib
depends on:
- C++14 compatible compiler (Clang 3.4+, GCC 4.9+, MSVC 19.0+ (Visual Studio 2015+), Intel C++ Compiler 17+)
- OpenSSL
- zlib
- gperf (build only)
- CMake (3.0.2+, build only)
- PHP (optional, for documentation generation)
Building
The simplest way to build TDLight
is to use our TDLight build instructions generator.
You need only to choose your programming language and target operating system to receive complete build instructions.
In general, you need to install all TDLib
dependencies, enter directory containing TDLib
sources and compile them using CMake:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ..
cmake --build .
To build TDLib
on low memory devices you can run SplitSource.php script
before compiling main TDLib
source code and compile only needed targets:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ..
cmake --build . --target prepare_cross_compiling
cd ..
php SplitSource.php
cd build
cmake --build . --target tdjson
cmake --build . --target tdjson_static
cd ..
php SplitSource.php --undo
In our tests clang 6.0 with libc++ required less than 500 MB of RAM per file and GCC 4.9/6.3 used less than 1 GB of RAM per file.
Using in CMake C++ projects
For C++ projects that use CMake, the best approach is to build TDLib
as part of your project or to install it system-wide.
There are several libraries that you could use in your CMake project:
- Td::TdJson, Td::TdJsonStatic — dynamic and static version of a JSON interface. This has a simple C interface, so it can be easily used with any programming language that is able to execute C functions. See td_json_client documentation for more information.
- Td::TdStatic — static library with C++ interface for general usage. See ClientManager and Client documentation for more information.
For example, part of your CMakeLists.txt may look like this:
add_subdirectory(td)
target_link_libraries(YourTarget PRIVATE Td::TdStatic)
Or you could install TDLib
and then reference it in your CMakeLists.txt like this:
find_package(Td 1.8.25 REQUIRED)
target_link_libraries(YourTarget PRIVATE Td::TdStatic)
See example/cpp/CMakeLists.txt.
Using in Java projects
TDLib
provides native Java interface through JNI. To enable it, specify option -DTD_ENABLE_JNI=ON
to CMake.
See example/java for example of using TDLib
from Java and detailed build and usage instructions.
Using in .NET projects
TDLib
provides native .NET interface through C++/CLI
and C++/CX
. To enable it, specify option -DTD_ENABLE_DOTNET=ON
to CMake.
.NET Core supports C++/CLI
only since version 3.1 and only on Windows, so if older .NET Core is used or portability is needed, then TDLib
JSON interface should be used through P/Invoke instead.
See example/csharp for example of using TDLib
from C# and detailed build and usage instructions.
See example/uwp for example of using TDLib
from C# UWP application and detailed build and usage instructions for Visual Studio Extension "TDLib for Universal Windows Platform".
When TDLib
is built with TD_ENABLE_DOTNET
option enabled, C++
documentation is removed from some files. You need to checkout these files to return C++
documentation back:
git checkout td/telegram/Client.h td/telegram/Log.h td/tl/TlObject.h
Using from other programming languages
TDLib
provides efficient native C++, Java, and .NET interfaces.
But for most use cases we suggest to use the JSON interface, which can be easily used with any programming language that is able to execute C functions.
See td_json_client documentation for detailed JSON interface description,
the td_api.tl scheme or the automatically generated HTML documentation for a list of
all available TDLib
methods and classes.
TDLib
JSON interface adheres to semantic versioning and versions with the same major version number are binary and backward compatible, but the underlying TDLib
API can be different for different minor and even patch versions.
If you need to support different TDLib
versions, then you can use a value of the version
option to find exact TDLib
version to use appropriate API methods.
See example/python/tdjson_example.py for an example of such usage.
License
TDLib
is licensed under the terms of the Boost Software License. See LICENSE_1_0.txt for more information.