After the configuration of Feed2toot, just launch the following command::
$ feed2toot -c /path/to/feed2toot.ini
Run Feed2toot on a regular basis
=================================
Feed2toot should be launche on a regular basis in order to efficiently send your new RSS entries to Mastodon. It is quite easy to achieve with adding a line to your user crontab, as described below::
@hourly feed2toot -c /path/to/feed2toot.ini
will execute feed2toot every hour. Or without the syntactic sugar in the global crontab file /etc/crontab::
In order to know what's going to be sent to Mastodon without actually doing it, use the **--dry-run** option::
$ feed2toot --dry-run -c /path/to/feed2toot.ini
Debug option
============
In order to increase the verbosity of what's Feed2toot is doing, use the **--debug** option followed by the level of verbosity see [the the available different levels](https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html)::
$ feed2toot --debug -c /path/to/feed2toot.ini
Populate the cache file without posting tweets
==============================================
Starting from 0.8, Feed2toot offers the **--populate-cache** command line option to populate the cache file without posting to Mastodon::
Starting from 0.8, Feed2toot offers the **--rss-sections** command line option to display the available section of the rss feed and exits::
$ feed2toot --rss-sections -c feed2toot.ini
The following sections are available in this RSS feed: ['title', 'comments', 'authors', 'link', 'author', 'summary', 'links', 'tags', id', 'author_detail', 'published'].
Using syslog
============
Feed2toot is able to send its log to syslog. You can use it with the following command::