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Hubot IRC Adapter

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Description

This is the IRC adapter for hubot. For discussion about this adapter, join #hubot-irc on irc.freenode.net. For convenience you can #hubot-irc using webchat.freenode.net/

Installation and Setup

To get your own hubot up and running we recommend following the Getting Started directions from the hubot wiki, they are summarized here:

% npm install -g yo generator-hubot
% mkdir myhubot
% cd myhubot
% yo hubot --adapter=irc
% HUBOT_IRC_SERVER=irc.freenode.net \
  HUBOT_IRC_ROOMS="#myhubot-irc" \
  HUBOT_IRC_NICK="myhubot" \
  HUBOT_IRC_UNFLOOD="true" \
  bin/hubot -a irc --name myhubot

Note: The default hubot configuration will use a redis based brain that assumes the redis server is already running. Either start your local redis server (usually with redis-start &) or remove the redis-brain.coffee script from the default hubot-scripts.json file.

Configuring the Adapter

The IRC adapter requires only the following environment variables.

And the following are optional.

IRC Server

This is the full hostname or IP address of the IRC server you want your hubot to connect to. Make a note of it.

IRC Rooms

This is a comma separated list of the IRC channels you want your hubot to join. They must include the #. Make a note of them. You can join private channels by simply appending the channel password to the room, e.g. #private password.

IRC Nick

This is the optional nick you want your hubot to join with. If omitted it will default to the name of your hubot.

IRC Port

This is the optional port of the IRC server you want your hubot to connect to. If omitted the default is 6667. Make a note of it if required.

IRC User & Password

This is the optional username and/or password of the IRC server you want your hubot to connect to. If the IRC server doesn't require a username/password, this can be omitted. Make a note of it if required.

IRC Nickserv Password

This is the optional Nickserv password if your hubot is using a nick registered with Nickserv on the IRC server. Make a note of it if required.

IRC Nickserv Username

This is the optional Nickserv username if your hubot is using a nick registered with Nickserv on the IRC server, e.g. /msg NickServ identify <username> <password>.

IRC Server Fake SSL

This is the optional flag if you want to accept self signed SSL certificated from a non trusted CA. You can set the variable to anything.

IRC Server Expired Certificate

This is the optional flag if you want to accept an expired SSL certificate.

IRC Unflood

This is the optional flag if you want to protect your hubot from flooding channels with messages. It will queue messages and slowly send. You can set the variable to any truthy value or a number; if a number is given we will interpret it as a wait time in milliseconds to use between sending messages.

IRC Debug

This is the optional flag which will display debug output. You can set the variable to anything.

IRC Use SSL

This is the optional flag if your hubot is connecting to an IRC server using SSL. You can set the variable to anything.

IRC Private

This is the optional flag if your hubot should ignore PRIVMSG and INVITE commands. You can set the variable to anything.

IRC SASL

SASL is a method that allows identification to services (NickServ) during the connection process, before anything else happens - therefore eliminating the need to /msg nickserv identify. Note: May be a requirement from some IRC hosts (freenode) when connecting from a public cloud provider (AWS).

Configuring the variables on Heroku

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_SERVER="..."

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_ROOMS="#foo,#bar"

Optional

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_NICK="..."

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_PORT=6767

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_USERNAME="..."

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_PASSWORD="..."

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_NICKSERV_PASSWORD="..."

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_SERVER_FAKE_SSL="true"

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_UNFLOOD="true"

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_DEBUG="true"

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_USESSL="true"

% heroku config:add HUBOT_IRC_USESASL="true"

Configuring the variables on UNIX

% export HUBOT_IRC_SERVER="..."

% export HUBOT_IRC_ROOMS="#foo,#bar"

Optional

% export HUBOT_IRC_NICK="..."

% export HUBOT_IRC_PORT=6767

% export HUBOT_IRC_USERNAME="..."

% export HUBOT_IRC_PASSWORD="..."

% export HUBOT_IRC_NICKSERV_PASSWORD="..."

% export HUBOT_IRC_SERVER_FAKE_SSL="true"

% export HUBOT_IRC_UNFLOOD="true" # Can optionally be passed a number (in milliseconds) that will be used as the delay between messages

% export HUBOT_IRC_DEBUG="true"

% export HUBOT_IRC_USESSL="true"

% export HUBOT_IRC_USESASL="true"

Configuring the variables on Windows

From Powershell:

setx HUBOT_IRC_SERVER "..." /m

setx HUBOT_IRC_ROOMS "#foo,#bar" /m

Testing Local Changes

gem install foreman
git clone https://github.com/github/hubot.git
cd hubot
# this next line makes a deployable version of the bot for heroku or local deployments
make package 
mv hubot/ ../testbot
cd ../testbot
- modify package.json to include the version of hubot-irc to test with either an official release or from your local repo
    for an example see this https://gist.github.com/3148311
- modify Procfile, change adapter (-a option) to "irc" and change the name (-n option) of the bot
- make sure you followed the usage section from above to set the environment variables (Non-Heroku section)
foreman start

...and that is it

Contribute

Here's the most direct way to get your work merged into the project.

  1. Fork the project
  2. Clone down your fork
  3. Create a feature branch
  4. Hack away and add tests, not necessarily in that order
  5. Make sure everything still passes by running tests
  6. If necessary, rebase your commits into logical chunks without errors
  7. Push the branch up to your fork
  8. Send a pull request for your branch

Copyright

Copyright © Hubot Irc Community Contributors. MIT License; see LICENSE for further details.