Toxic is a Tox-based peer-to-peer messenger that provides end-to-end encrypted communications without the use of centralized servers. It supports text messaging, file sharing, 1-on-1 voice and video calls, private audio conferences, public and private text group chats, and a few built-in games you can play with your friends. Toxic requires no registration or setup, and is ready to use out of the box. Its interface is highly customizable to suit your preferences.
As Toxic uses a text-based user interface, interacting with it involves a combination of navigation hotkeys and slash commands. For example, to navigate between open windows, use the ctrl+o
and ctrl+p
key combinations. Or to add a contact using their Tox address, use the command /add {ADDRESS}
without the curly bracers. To see a full list of available commands and hotkeys, use the /help
command or refer to the manual.
Toxic also has a number of run options. For example, if you want to use a different profile than the default, you can run toxic with the --file my_profile.toxic
flag. Or to disable UDP/direct connections, use the --force-tcp
flag. To see all available options, run toxic with the --help
flag, or refer to the manual.
Running Toxic for the first time creates an empty file called toxic.conf in your home configuration directory (~/.config/tox
for Linux users). You can use it to customize many aspects of the user interface, enable auto-logging, customize sound notifications, customize hotkeys, use custom names for your contacts, change the time format, and much more. You can view the example config file here.
If your default prefix is /usr/local
and you receive the following:
error while loading shared libraries: libtoxcore.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
you can attempt to correct it by running sudo ldconfig
. If that doesn’t work, run:
echo '/usr/local/lib/' | sudo tee -a /etc/ld.so.conf.d/locallib.conf
sudo ldconfig