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PyLink Services Bot API
The goal of PyLink’s Services API is to make writing custom services
easier. It is able to automatically spawn service bots on connect,
handle rejoins on kill and kick, and expose a way for plugins to bind
commands to various services bots. It also handles U-line servprotect
modes when enabled and supported on a particular network (the
protect_services
option).
Basic service creation
Services can be registered and created using code similar to the following in a plugin:
from pylinkirc import utils, world
# Description is optional (though recommended), and usually around a sentence or two.
= "Optional description of servicenick, in sentence form."
desc
# First argument is the internal service name.
# utils.register_service() returns a utils.ServiceBot instance, which is also stored
# as world.services['myservice'].
= utils.register_service('myservice', desc=desc) myservice
utils.register_service()
passes its arguments directly
to the utils.ServiceBot
class constructor, which in turn
supports the following options:
name
- defines the service name (mandatory)default_help
- Determines whether the default HELP command should be used for the service. Defaults to True.default_list
- Determines whether the default LIST command should be used for the service. Defaults to True.default_nick
- Sets the default nick this service should use if the user doesn’t provide it. Defaults to the same as the service name.manipulatable
- Determines whether the bot is marked manipulatable. Only manipulatable clients can be force joined, etc. using PyLink commands. Defaults to False.desc
- Sets the command description of the service. This is shown in the default HELP command if enabled.
NOTE: It is convention for the service name in
utils.register_service('SERVICE')
to match your plugin
name, as the services API implicitly loads configuration options from
config blocks named SERVICE:
(which you may want to put
plugin options in as well).
Implementation note: if the spawn_service
option is
disabled (either globally or for your service bot),
register_service
will return the main PyLink
ServiceBot
instance
(i.e. world.services['pylink']
), which you can modify as
usual. unregister_service
calls to your service name will
be silently ignored as no ServiceBot
instance is actually
registered for that name. Altogether, this allows service-spawning
plugins to function normally regardless of the
spawn_service
value.
Getting the UID of a bot
To obtain the UID of a service bot on a specific network, use
myservice.uids.get(irc.name)
(where irc
is the
network object).
Removing services on unload
All plugins using the services API should have a die()
function that unregisters all service bots that they’ve created. A
simple example would be in the games
plugin:
def die(irc=None):
'games') utils.unregister_service(
Should your service bot define any persistent channels, you will also
want to clear them on unload via
myservice.clear_persistent_channels(None, 'your-namespace', ...)
Persistent channel joining
Since PyLink 2.0-alpha3, persistent channels are handled in a plugin
specific manner. For any service bot on any network, a plugin can
register a list of channels that the bot should join persistently
(i.e. through kicks and kills). Instead of removing channels from
service bots directly, plugins then “request” parts through the services
API, which succeed only if no other plugins still mark the channel as
persistent. This rework fixes edge-case desyncs
in earlier versions when multiple plugins change a service bot’s channel
list, and replaces the ServiceBot.extra_channels
attribute
(which is no longer supported).
Note: Autojoin channels defined in a network’s server block are always treated as persistent on that network.
Channel management methods
Channels, persistent and otherwise are managed through the following
functions implemented by ServiceBot
. While namespaces for
channel registrations can technically be any string, it is preferable to
keep them close (or equal) to your plugin name.
myservice.add_persistent_channel(irc, namespace, channel, try_join=True)
: Adds a persistent channel to the service bot on the given network and namespace.try_join
determines whether the service bot should try to join the channel immediately; you can disable this if you prefer to manage joins by yourself.
myservice.remove_persistent_channel(irc, namespace, channel, try_part=True, part_reason='')
: Removes a persistent channel from the service bot on the given network and namespace.try_part
determines whether a part should be requested from the channel immediately. (part_reason
is ignored if this is False)
myservice.get_persistent_channels(irc, namespace=None)
: Returns a set of persistent channels for the IRC network, optionally filtering by namespace is one is given. The channels defined in the network’s server block are also included because they are always treated as persistent.myservice.clear_persistent_channels(irc, namespace, try_part=True, part_reason='')
: Clears all the persistent channels defined by a namespace.irc
can also beNone
to clear persistent channels for all networks in this namespace.myservice.join(irc, channels, ignore_empty=True)
: Joins the given service bot to the given channel(s).channels
can be an iterable of channel names or the name of a single channel (typestr
).- The
ignore_empty
option sets whether we should skip joining empty channels and join them later when we see someone else join (if it is marked persistent). This option is automatically disabled on networks where we cannot monitor channels we’re not in (e.g. on Clientbot). - Before 2.0-alpha3, this function implicitly marks channels it receives to be persistent - this is no longer the case!
- The
myservice.part(irc, channels, reason='')
: Requests a part from the given channel(s) - that is, leave only if no other plugins still register it as a persistent channel.channels
can be an iterable of channel names or the name of a single channel (typestr
).
A note on dynamicness
As of PyLink 2.0-alpha3, persistent channels are also “dynamic” in the sense that PyLink service bots will part channels marked persistent when they become empty, and rejoin when they are recreated. This feature will hopefully be more fine-tunable in future releases.
Dynamic channels are disabled on networks with the visible-state-only
protocol capability (e.g. Clientbot), where it is impossible to
monitor the state of channels the bot is not in.
Service bots and commands
Commands for service bots and commands for the main PyLink bot have two main differences.
Commands for service bots are bound using
myservice.add_cmd(cmdfunc, 'cmdname')
instead ofutils.add_cmd(...)
Replies for service bot commands are sent using
myservice.reply(irc, text)
instead ofirc.reply(...)
Featured commands
Commands for service bots can also be marked as featured,
which shows it with its command arguments in the default
LIST
command. To mark a command as featured, enable the
featured
option when binding it:
e.g. myservice.add_cmd(cmdfunc, featured=True)
.
Command aliases
Since PyLink 2.0-alpha1, ServiceBot.add_cmd(...)
and
utils.add_cmd(...)
support assigning aliases to a command
by defining the aliases
argument. Command aliases do not
show in LIST
, allowing command listings to be much cleaner.
Instead, they are only mentioned when HELP
is called on an
alias command name or its parent.
Example:
=('abc',))
myservice.add_cmd(functwo, aliases=('command1', 'command2')) myservice.add_cmd(somefunc, aliases
Note: use (variable,)
to define a one length tuple to prevent it from being
parsed as a single string.