01-main
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PURPOSE
The purpose of IRC::Client is to serve as a fully-functional IRC client that--unlike programs like HexChat or mIRC--provide a programmatic interface to IRC. So, for example, to send a message to a channel, instead of typing a message in a message box and pressing ENTER, a method is called and given a string.
Naturally, such an interface provides vast abilities to automate interactions with IRC or implement a human-friendly interface, such as HexChat or mIRC.
GOALS
An implementation must achieve these goals:
Ease of Use
For basic use, such as a bot that responds to triggers said in channel, the details of the IRC protocol must be as invisible as possible. Just as any user can install HexChat and join a channel and talk, similar usability has to be achieved by the implementation.
As an example, a HexChat user can glance at the user list or channel topic
without explicitly issuing NAMES
or TOPIC
IRC commands. The implementation
should thus provide similar simplicity and provide a userlist or topic
via a convenient method rather than explicit method to send the appropriate
commands and the requirement of listening for the server response events.
Client-Generated Events
The implementation must allow the users of the code to emit IRC and custom
events. For example, given plugins A and B, with A performing processing
first, plugin A can mark all NOTICE
IRC events as handled and emit them
as PRIVMSG
events instead. From the point of view of second plugin B, no
NOTICE
commands ever happen (as they arrive to it as PRIVMSG
).
Similarly, plugin A can choose to emit custom event FOOBAR
instead of
PRIVMSG
, to which plugin B can choose to respond to.
Possibility of Non-Blocking Code
The implementation must allow the user to perform responses to events in a non-blocking manner if they choose to.
DESIGN
The implementation consists of Core code responsible for maintaining the state of the connected client, parsing of server messages, and sending essential messages, as well as relating messages to and from plugins.
The implementation distribution may also include several plugins that may be commonly needed by users. Such plugins are not enabled by default and the user must request their inclusion with code.
Multi-Server Interface
The interface described in the rest of this document assumes a connection to a single server. Should the client be connected to multiple-servers at the time, issuing commands described will apply to every connected server. A server must be specified to issue a command to a single server. Plugin authors must keep this fact in mind, when writing plugins, as forgetting to handle multiple servers can result in unwanted behaviour.
The same reasoning applies to the .new
method: attributes, such as
nicknames, usernames, etc. given without associating them with a server will
apply to ALL connected servers. Configuration for individual servers is
given via :servers
named parameter as a list of Pairs
. The key
is the nickname of server and must be a valid method name. It's recommended
to choose something that won't end up an actual method on the Client Object.
It's guaranteed methods starting with s-
will always be safe to use. The
value is a list of pairs that can be accepted by the Client Object as named
parameters (except for :servers
) that specify the configuration for that
specific server, overriding any of the non-server-specific parameters already
set.
A possible .new
setup may look something like this:
my $irc = IRC::Client.new:
:nick<ZofBot ZofBot_ ZofBot__> # nicks to try to use on ALL servers,
:servers(
s-leliana => (
:server<irc.freenode.net>,
:channels<#perl #perl6 #perl7>
),
s-morrigan => (
:server<irc.perl.org>,
:channels<#perl #perl-help>
),
s-alistair => (
:nick<Party Party_ Party__> # nick override
:server<irc.perl6.pary>,
:channels<#perler>
),
),
Use of multiple servers is facilitated via server nicknames and using them as a method call to obtain the correct Client Object. For example:
$.irc.quit; # quits all servers
$.irc.s-leliana.quit; # quits only the s-leliana server
# send a message to #perl6 channel on s-morrigan server
$.irc.s-morrigan.send: where => '#perl6', text => 'hello';
The Message Object will also contain a .server
method value of which
is the nickname of the server from which the message arrived. In general,
the most common way to generate messages will be using .reply
on the Message
Object, making the multi-server paradigm completely transparent.
Client Object
Client Object represents a connected IRC client and is aware of and can manipulate its state, such as disconnecting, joining or parting a channel, or sending messages.
A Client Object must support the ability to connect to multiple servers. The client object provides these methods:
$.irc
(access from inside a plugin)
use IRC::Client::Plugin;
unit Plugin::Foo is IRC::Client::Plugin;
method irc-privmsg-me ($msg) {
$.irc.send:
where => '#perl6',
text => "$msg.nick() just sent me a secret! It's $msg.text()";
}
A plugin inherits from IRC::Client::Plugin
, which provides $.irc
attribute containing the Client Object, allowing the plugin to utilize all
of the methods it provides.
.new
my $irc = IRC::Client.new:
...
:plugins(
IRC::Client::Plugin::Factoid.new,
My::Plugin.new,
class :: is IRC::Client::Plugin {
method irc-privmsg-me ($msg) { $msg.repond: 'Go away!'; }
},
);
Not to be used inside plugins.
Creates a new IRC::Client
object. Along with the usual arguments like
nick, username, server address, etc, takes :plugins
argument that
lists the plugins to include. All messages will be propagated through plugins
in the order they are defined here.
.run
$irc.run;
Not to be used inside plugins.
Starts the client, connecting to the server and maintaining that connection
and not returning until an explicit .quit
is issued. If the connection
breaks, the client will attempt to reconnect.
.quit
$.irc.quit;
$.irc.quit: 'Reason';
Disconnects from the server. Takes an option string to be given to the server as the reson for quitting.
.part
$.irc.part: '#perl6';
$.irc.part: '#perl6', 'Leaving';
Exits a channel. Takes two positional strings: the channel to part and an optional parting message. Causes the client object to discard any state kept for this channel.
.join
$.irc.join '#perl6', '#perl7';
Attempts to joins channels given as positional arguments.
.send
$.irc.send: where => '#perl6', text => 'Hello, Perl 6!';
$.irc.send: where => 'Zoffix', text => 'Hi, Zoffie!';
$.irc.send: where => 'Zoffix', text => 'Notice me, senpai!', :notice;
Sends a message specified by text
argument
either to a user or a channel specified by :where
argument. If Bool
argument :notice
is set to true, will send a notice instead of regular
message.
Note that in IRC bots that respond to commands from other users a more
typical way to reply to those commands would be by calling
.reply
method on the Message Object, rather than using .send
method.
.nick
$.irc.nick: 'ZofBot', 'ZofBot_', 'ZofBot__';
Attempts to change the nick of the client. Takes one or more positional arguments that are a list of nicks to try.
.emit
$.irc.emit: $msg;
$.irc.emit: IRC::Client::Message::Privmsg.new:
nick => 'Zoffix',
text => 'Hello',
...;
...
method irc-privmsg ($msg) {
say "$msg.nick() said $msg.text()... or did they?";
}
Takes an object of any of IRC::Client::Message::*
subclass and emits it
as if it were a new event. That is, it will propagate through the plugin chain
starting at the first plugin, and not the one emiting the event, and the
plugins can't tell whether the message is self-generated or something that
came from the server.
.emit-custom
$.irc.emit-custom: 'my-event', 'just', 'some', :args;
Same idea as .emit
, except a custom event is emitted. The first positional
argument specifies the name of the event to emit. Any other arguments
given here will be passed as is to listener methods.
.channel
method irc-addressed ($msg) {
if $msg.text ~~ /'kick' \s+ $<nick>=\S+/ {
$msg.reply: "I don't see $<nick> up in here"
unless $.irc.channel($msg.channel).?has: ~$<nick>;
}
if $msg.text ~~ /'topic' \s+ $<channel>=\S+/ {
return $msg.reply: $_
?? "Channel $<channel> does not exist"
!! "Topic in $<channel> is $_.topic()"
given $.irc.channel: ~$<channel>;
}
}
Returns an IRC::Client::Channel
object for the channel given as positional
argument, or False
if no such channel seems to exist. Unless our client is
currently on that channel, that existence is
determined with LIST
IRC command, so there will be some false negatives,
such as when attempting to get an object for a channel with secret mode set.
The Client Object tracks state for any of the joined channels, so some information obtainable via the Channel Object will be cached and retrieved from that state, whenever possible. Otherwise, a request to the server will be generated. Return values will be empty (empty lists or empty strings) when requests fail. The channel object provides the following methods.
.has
$.irc.channel('#perl6').has: 'Zoffix';
Returns True
or False
indicating whether a user with the given nick is
present on the channel.
.topic
say "Topic of the channel is " ~ $.irc.channel('#perl6').topic;
Returns the TOPIC
of the channel.
.modes
say $.irc.channel('#perl6').modes;
# ('s', 'n', 't')
Returns a list of single-letter codes for currently active channel modes on the channel. Note, this does not include any bans.
.bans
say $.irc.channel('#perl6').bans;
# ('*!spammer@*', 'warezbot!*@*')
Returns a list of currently active ban masks on the channel.
.names
say $.irc.channel('#perl6').names;
# ('@Zoffix', '+zoffixs-helper', 'not-zoffix')
Returns a list of nicks present on the channel, each potentially prefixed with a channel membership prefix
Message Delivery
An event listener is defined by a method in a plugin class. The name
of the method starts with irc-
and followed by the lowercase name of the
event. User-defined events follow the same pattern, except they start with
irc-custom-
:
use IRC::Client::Plugin;
unit Plugin::Foo is IRC::Client::Plugin;
# Listen to PRIVMSG IRC events:
method irc-privmsg ($msg) {
return IRC_NEXT unless $msg.channel eq '#perl6';
$msg.reply: 'Nice to meet you!';
}
# Listen to custom client-generated events:
method irc-custom-my-event ($some, $random, :$args) {
return IRC_NEXT unless $random > 5;
$.irc.send: where => '#perl6', text => 'Custom event triggered!';
}
An event listener receives the event message in the form of an object. The object must provide all the relevant information about the source and content of the message.
The message object, where appropriate, must provide a means to send a reply
back to the originator of the message. For example, here's a potential
implementation of PRIVMSG
handler that receives the message object:
method irc-privmsg-channel ($msg) {
return IRC_NEXT unless $msg.channel eq '#perl6';
$msg.reply: 'Nice to meet you!';
}
A plugin can send messages and emit events at will:
method irc-connected {
Supply.interval(60).tap: {
$.irc.send: where => '#perl6', text => 'One minute passed!!';
};
Promise.in(60*60).then: {
$.irc.send:
where => 'Zoffix',
text => 'I lived for one hour already!',
:notice;
$.irc.emit-custom: 'MY-EVENT', 'One hour passed!';
}
}
Response Constants
Multiple plugins can listen to the same event. The event message will be
handed to each of the plugins in the sequence they are defined when the
Client Object is initialized. Each handler can use predefined response
constants to signal whether the handling of this particular event message
should stop or continue onto the next plugin. These response constants
are IRC_NEXT
and IRC_DONE
and are exported by IRC::Client::Plugin
.
IRC_NEXT
method irc-privmsg-channel ($msg) {
return IRC_NEXT unless $msg.channel eq '#perl6';
....
}
Signals that the message should continue to be passed on to any further plugins that subscribed to handle it.
IRC_DONE
method irc-privmsg-channel ($msg) {
return IRC_DONE if $msg.channel eq '#perl6';
}
# or just...
method irc-privmsg-channel ($msg) {}
Signals that the message has been handled and should NOT be passed on
to any further plugins. Note: you don't have to explicitly return this
value; anything other than returning IRC_NEXT
is the same as returning
IRC_DONE
.
Message Object Interface
The message object received by all non-custom events is an event-specific
subclass of IRC::Client::Message
. The subclass is named
IRC::Client::Message::$NAME
, where $NAME
is:
Named and Convenience events use their names without
irc-
part, with any-
changed to::
and with each word written inTitle Case
. e.g. message object forirc-privmsg-me
isIRC::Client::Message::Privmsg::Me
Numeric events always receive
IRC::Client::Message::Numeric
message object, regardless of the actual number of the event.
Along with event-specific methods
described under each event, the IRC::Client::Message
offers the following
methods:
.nick
say $msg.nick ~ " says hello";
Contains the nickname of the sender of the message.
.username
say $msg.nick ~ " has username " ~ $msg.username;
Contains the username of the sender of the message.
.host
say $msg.nick ~ " is connected from " ~ $msg.host;
Hostname of sender of the message.
.usermask
say $msg.usermask;
Nick, username, and host combined into a full usermask, e.g.
[email protected]
.reply
$msg.reply: 'I love you too'
if $msg.text ~~ /'I love you'/;
Replies back to a message. For example, if we received the message as a
private message to us, the reply will be a private message back to the
user. Same for notices. For in-channel messages, irc-addressed
and irc-to-me
will address the sender in return, while all other in-channel
events will not.
NOTE: this method is only available for these events:
irc-privmsg
irc-notice
irc-to-me
irc-addressed
irc-mentioned
irc-privmsg-channel
irc-privmsg-me
irc-notice-channel
irc-privmsg-me
Convenience Events
These sets of events do not have a corresponding IRC command defined by the protocol and instead are offered to make listening for a specific kind of events easier.
irc-to-me
# :[email protected] PRIVMSG zoffix2 :hello
# :[email protected] NOTICE zoffix2 :hello
# :[email protected] PRIVMSG #perl6 :zoffix2, hello
method irc-to-me ($msg) {
printf "%s told us `%s` using %s\n",
.nick, .text, .how given $msg;
}
Emitted when a user sends us a message as a private message, notice, or
addresses us in a channel. The .respond
method of the Message
Object is the most convenient way to respond back to the sender of the message.
The .how
method returns a Pair
where the key is the message type used
(PRIVMSG
or NOTICE
) and the value is the addressee of that message
(a channel or us).
irc-addressed
# :[email protected] PRIVMSG #perl6 :zoffix2, hello
method irc-addressed ($msg) {
printf "%s told us `%s` in channel %s\n",
.nick, .text, .channel given $msg;
}
Emitted when a user addresses us in a channel. Specifically, this means their message starts with our nickname, followed by optional comma or colon, followed by whitespace. That prefix will be stripped from the message.
irc-mentioned
# :[email protected] PRIVMSG #perl6 :Is zoffix2 a robot?
method irc-mentioned ($msg) {
printf "%s mentioned us in channel %s when they said %s\n",
.nick, .channel, .text given $msg;
}
Emitted when a user mentions us in a channel. Specifically, this means their message contains our nickname separated by a word boundary on each side.
irc-privmsg-channel
# :[email protected] PRIVMSG #perl6 :hello
method irc-privmsg-channel ($msg) {
printf "%s said `%s` to channel %s\n",
.nick, .text, .channel given $msg;
}
Emitted when a user sends a message to a channel.
irc-privmsg-me
# :[email protected] PRIVMSG zoffix2 :hey bruh
method irc-privmsg-me ($msg) {
printf "%s messaged us: %s\n", .nick, .text given $msg;
}
Emitted when a user sends us a private message.
irc-notice-channel
# :[email protected] NOTICE #perl6 :Notice me!
method irc-notice-channel ($msg) {
printf "%s sent a notice `%s` to channel %s\n",
.nick, .text, .channel given $msg;
}
Emitted when a user sends a notice to a channel.
irc-notice-me
# :[email protected] NOTICE zoffix2 :did you notice me?
method irc-notice-me ($msg) {
printf "%s sent us a notice: %s\n", .nick, .text given $msg;
}
Emitted when a user sends us a private notice.
irc-started
method irc-started {
$.do-some-sort-of-init-setup;
}
Emitted when the IRC client is started. Useful for doing setup work, like initializing database connections, etc. Note: this event will fire only once, even if the client reconnects to the server numerous times. Note that unlike most events, this event does not receive a Message Object. IMPORTANT: when this event fires, there's no guarantee we even started a connection to the server, let alone connected successfully.
irc-connected
method irc-connected {
$.do-some-sort-of-per-connection-setup;
}
Similar to irc-started
, except will be emitted every time a
successful connection to the server is made and we joined all
of the requested channels. That is, we'll wait to either receive the
full user list or error message for each of the channels we're joining.
Note that unlike most events, this event does not receive a Message Object.
irc-mode-channel
# :[email protected] MODE #perl6 +o zoffix2
# :[email protected] MODE #perl6 +bbb Foo!*@* Bar!*@* Ber!*@*
method irc-mode-channel ($msg) {
printf "Nick %s with usermask %s set mode(s) %s in channel %s\n",
.nick, .usermask, .modes, .channel given $msg;
}
Emitted when IRC MODE
command is received and it's being operated on a
channel, see irc-mode
event for details.
irc-mode-user
# :[email protected] MODE zoffix2 +w
method irc-mode-user ($msg) {
printf "Nick %s with usermask %s set mode(s) %s on user %s\n",
.nick, .usermask, .modes, .who given $msg;
}
Emitted when IRC MODE
command is received and it's being operated on a
user, see irc-mode
event for details.
irc-all
method irc-all ($msg) {
say "Received an event: $msg.perl()";
return IRC_NEXT;
}
Emitted for all events and is mostly useful for debugging. The type of the message object received will depend on the type of the event that generated the message. This event will be triggered AFTER all other event handlers in the current plugin are processed.
Numeric Events
Numeric IRC events can be subscribed to by defining a method with name
irc-
followed by the numeric code of the event (e.g. irc-001
). The
arguments of the event can be accessed via .args
method that returns a
list of strings:
method irc-004 ($msg) {
say "Here are the arguments of the RPL_MYINFO event:";
.say for $msg.args;
}
See this reference for a detailed list of numerics and their arguments available in the wild. Note: the client will emit an event for any received numeric with a 3-digit code, regardless of whether it is listed in that reference.
Named Events
irc-nick
# :[email protected] NICK not-zoffix
method irc-nick ($msg) {
printf "%s changed nickname to %s\n", .nick, .new-nick given $msg;
}
RFC 2812, 3.1.2. Emitted when a user changes their nickname.
irc-quit
# :[email protected] QUIT :Quit: Leaving
method irc-quit ($msg) {
printf "%s has quit (%s)\n", .nick, .reason given $msg;
}
RFC 2812, 3.1.7. Emitted when a user quits the server.
irc-join
# :[email protected] JOIN :#perl6
method irc-join ($msg) {
printf "%s joined channel %s\n", .nick, .channel given $msg;
}
RFC 2812, 3.2.1. Emitted when a user joins a channel.
irc-part
# :[email protected] PART #perl6 :Leaving
method irc-part ($msg) {
printf "%s left channel %s (%s)\n", .nick, .channel, .reason given $msg;
}
RFC 2812, 3.2.2. Emitted when a user leaves a channel.
irc-mode
# :[email protected] MODE #perl6 +o zoffix2
# :[email protected] MODE #perl6 +bbb Foo!*@* Bar!*@* Ber!*@*
# :[email protected] MODE zoffix2 +w
method irc-mode ($msg) {
if $msg.?channel {
# channel mode change
printf "%s set mode(s) %s in channel %s\n",
.nick, .modes, .channel given $msg;
}
else {
# user mode change
printf "%s set mode(s) %s on user %s\n",
.nick, .modes, .who given $msg;
}
}
RFC 2812, 3.1.5/RFC 2812, 3.2.3.
Emitted when IRC MODE
command is received. As the command is dual-purpose,
the message object will have either .channel
method available
(for channel mode changes) or .who
method (for user mode changes). See
also irc-mode-channel
and irc-mode-user
convenience events.
For channel modes, the .modes
method returns a list of Pair
where key
is the mode set and the value is the argument for that mode (i.e. "limit",
"user", or "banmask") or an empty string if the mode takes no arguments.
For user modes, the .modes
method returns a list of Str
of the modes
set.
The received message object will be one of the subclasses of
IRC::Client::Message::Mode
object: IRC::Client::Message::Mode::Channel
or IRC::Client::Message::Mode::User
.
irc-topic
# :[email protected] TOPIC #perl6 :meow
method irc-topic ($msg) {
printf "%s set topic of channel %s to %s\n",
.nick, .channel, .topic given $msg;
}
RFC 2812, 3.2.4. Emitted when a user changes the topic of a channel.
irc-invite
# :[email protected] INVITE zoffix2 :#perl6
method irc-invite ($msg) {
printf "%s invited us to channel %s\n", .nick, .channel given $msg;
}
RFC 2812, 3.2.7. Emitted when a user invites us to a channel.
irc-kick
# :[email protected] KICK #perl6 zoffix2 :go away
method irc-kick ($msg) {
printf "%s kicked %s out of %s (%s)\n",
.nick, .who, .channel, .reason given $msg;
}
RFC 2812, 3.2.8. Emitted when someone kicks a user out of a channel.
irc-privmsg
# :[email protected] PRIVMSG #perl6 :hello
# :[email protected] PRIVMSG zoffix2 :hey bruh
method irc-privmsg ($msg) {
if $msg.?channel {
# message sent to a channel
printf "%s said `%s` to channel %s\n",
.nick, .text, .channel given $msg;
}
else {
# private message
printf "%s messaged us: %s\n", .nick, .text given $msg;
}
}
RFC 2812, 3.3.1. Emitted when a user sends a message either to a channel or a private message to us. See Convenience Events section for a number of more convenient ways to listen to messages.
irc-notice
# :[email protected] NOTICE #perl6 :Notice me!
# :[email protected] NOTICE zoffix2 :did you notice me?
method irc-notice ($msg) {
if $msg.?channel {
# notice sent to a channel
printf "%s sent a notice `%s` to channel %s\n",
.nick, .text, .channel given $msg;
}
else {
# private notice
printf "%s sent us a notice: %s\n", .nick, .text given $msg;
}
}
RFC 2812, 3.3.2. Emitted when a user sends a notice either to a channel or a private notice to us. See Convenience Events section for a number of more convenient ways to listen to notices and messages.
Custom Events
There is support for custom events. A custom event is emitted by calling
.emit-custom
method on the Client Object and is subscribed to via
irc-custom-*
methods:
$.irc.emit-custom: 'my-event', 'just', 'some', :args;
...
method irc-custom-my-event ($just, $some, :$args) { }
No Message Object is involved in custom events.