22 KiB
QuickStart
Installation
Installing Perl
PBot uses the Perl programming language. Perl is usually part of a base Linux install. If you do not have Perl installed, please see your system’s documentation to install it.
Some systems may ship with a minimal Perl installation. You may need
to complete the installation by, e.g.,
yum install perl-core
on RHEL/CentOS or
dnf install perl
on RHEL/CentOS 8 or Fedora.
If you do not have system administrator access, you can install Perl locally into your home directory using, .e.g., perlbrew, plenv, plx, etc.
Installing PBot
git (recommended)
The recommended way to install PBot is with git
. This
will allow you to easily update to the latest version of PBot via the
git update process by issuing the git pull
command. Also,
if you become interested in contributing improvements to PBot, you will
be able to submit them through git
.
The command to install with git
is:
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/pragma-/pbot.git
Download zip archive
Alternatively, you may download a ZIP archive.
If you want to use the Plang scripting language
within PBot, you’ll need to download the
Plang ZIP archive as well. Extract it into pbot/Plang
after you extract the PBot ZIP archive into pbot
.
Initial Setup
After git-cloning (or unpacking the ZIP archives) you should have a
directory named pbot/
(or pbot-master/
). It
should contain at least these directories and files:
Name | Description |
---|---|
Plang/ |
Plang scripting language |
applets/ |
External command-line executables invokable as PBot commands |
bin/ |
PBot executables (e.g., bin/pbot ) |
data/ |
Default data-directory |
doc/ |
Helpful documentation |
lib/ |
PBot source tree |
updates/ |
Migration scripts run automatically by PBot after updates that modify data structures |
cpanfile |
CPAN dependencies file |
There are a few one-time configuration things we must do to get PBot’s environment ready. Once the following steps are completed there is no need to do them again.
Installing CPAN modules
Some of PBot’s features depend on the availability of Perl modules
written by third parties. To use such PBot features, the modules listed
in the cpanfile
file need to be
installed.
This can be a lengthy process as each module may itself have a certain amount of dependencies and sub-dependencies. Perl is an extremely collaborative community! Fortunately, you only need to install the CPAN modules once.
You must have make
, perl
, a C compiler, a
C++ compiler, OpenSSL or LibreSSL or equivalent, libssl-dev, and other
such tools and libraries installed.
Installing cpanminus
The cpanminus tool is a fast and lightweight way to install CPAN modules.
There are several ways to install cpanminus. If you have
wget
instead of curl
, then replace
curl -L
in the following commands with
wget -O -
.
Option 1) Use your system package manager, e.g.:
$ apt install cpanminus
Option 2) Install to ~/perl5
(if you used, e.g.,
perlbrew to install Perl):
$ curl -L https://cpanmin.us | perl - App::cpanminus
Option 3) Download the cpanm
script directly to
~/bin
:
$ cd ~/bin
$ curl -L https://cpanmin.us/ -o cpanm
$ chmod +x cpanm
Installing and using local::lib
If you prefer to install the CPAN modules into ~/perl5
you can use local::lib
.
You may ignore this step if you installed Perl with, e.g., perlbrew or if you have system administrator privilege and prefer to install the CPAN modules to the system Perl location.
The following command will install and set-up local::lib in
~/perl5
:
$ cpanm --local-lib=~/perl5 local::lib && eval $(perl -I ~/perl5/lib/perl5/ -Mlocal::lib)
The local::lib set-up will be lost when you close your shell. To make
the set-up permanent, add the
eval $(perl -I ~/perl5/lib/perl5/ -Mlocal::lib)
command to
your .bashrc
or shell equivalent.
Using cpanminus
Ensure you have set your current working directory to where you have
git cloned or unzipped PBot. There should be a cpanfile
in the current directory,
along with lib/
and bin/
directories.
$ cd pbot (or pbot-master)
The CPAN modules may be installed with (assuming you do not need Windows support):
$ cpanm -n --installdeps . --with-all-features --without-feature=compiler_vm_win32
If you want to install the bare minimum CPAN modules required for PBot’s core functionality, you can use the following command. But be aware that several plugins and applets may not function.
$ cpanm -n --installdeps .
You may then choose to install the missing CPAN modules on a feature-by-feature basis using:
$ cpanm -n --installdeps . --with-feature=... --with-feature=...
where ...
is an optional PBot feature listed in PBot’s
cpanfile
.
re::engine::RE2
Perl’s native regular expression engine is susceptible to ReDoS attacks. To
prevent this, PBot uses the re::engine::RE2
module for
user-submitted regular expressions.
If you could not install it through CPAN, you must install it manually.
Clone data-directory
PBot uses a data-directory to store all its configuration settings and data. You must clone this data-directory for each instance of PBot you want to run, otherwise they will become quite confused with each other and things will break horribly.
Here we clone the data-directory for two PBot instances, naming them after the IRC network they will connect to:
$ cp -r data libera
$ cp -r data ircnet
Alternatively, you could name your new data directory after your bot’s nickname:
$ cp -r data coolbot
Configuration
PBot configuration is stored in a registry of key/value pairs grouped by sections. For more information, see the Registry documentation.
For initial first-time setup, you may configure registry settings via the PBot command-line options. We’ll show you how to do that soon! First, read on to see what settings you should configure.
Alternatively, you can edit the registry
file in your
cloned data-directory. See editing registry file for
more information.
Here is a table of basic initial settings you should configure:
Registry key | Description | Default value |
---|---|---|
irc.botnick | IRC nickname. This is the name people see when you talk. Required. | undefined |
irc.username | IRC username. This is the USER field of your
hostmask. |
pbot3 |
irc.realname | IRC gecos/realname. This is the general information or
real-name field, as seen in WHOIS . |
https://github.com/pragma-/pbot |
irc.server | IRC server address to connect. | irc.libera.chat |
irc.port | IRC server port. | 6667 (secure port: 6697) |
irc.identify_password | Password to authenticate with services or bots. | undefined |
irc.sasl | Whether to use the IRCv3 SASL authentication mechanism. | 0 (1 to enable) |
irc.tls | Whether to use TLS encryption. | 0 (1 to enable) |
general.trigger | Bot trigger. Can be a character class containing multiple trigger characters. Can be overridden per-channel. | [!] |
For a list of other available settings see this table in the Registry documentation.
Recommended settings for IRC Networks
Libera.Chat
The default settings are tailored for an insecure connection to the
Libera.Chat IRC network. To make the connection secure, set
irc.tls
to 1
. This will enable TLS encryption.
You may optionally set irc.tls_ca_path
or
irc.tls_ca_file
if necessary. Be sure to set
irc.port
to 6697
for the secure port.
It is strongly recommended that you register an account with NickServ and to enable SASL authentication. Register your channels with ChanServ. You may request a host cloak from Libera staff. This will protect your nickname, channels and IP address.
Once you register with NickServ, it is strongly recommended to enable
irc.sasl
. If you choose not to use IRCv3 SASL
authentication, then it is recommended to set these options:
Click to show recommended Libera.Chat settings with SASL disabled
Registry key | Description | Recommended value |
---|---|---|
irc.identify_password | Password to use to identify to NickServ | <password> |
irc.randomize_nick | Randomize IRC nickname when connecting to server. PBot will change
to irc.botnick when logged-in. This prevents users from
monitoring the botnick to catch its IP address before it is
identified. |
1 |
general.autojoin_wait_for_nickserv | Wait for NickServ login before auto-joining channels. This prevents PBot from joining channels before it is identified and cloaked. | 1 |
general.identify_command | Command to send to NickServ to identify. $nick will be
replaced with irc.botnick ; $password will be
replaced with irc.identify_password . If you wish to login
to a NickServ account different than the irc.botnick you
may replace the $nick text with a literal value. |
identify $nick $password |
IRCnet
IRCnet is one of the oldest IRC networks still running. It has no Services like NickServ and ChanServ. Instead, its nicknames and channels are protected by custom bots.
These settings may be useful:
Click to show recommended IRCnet settings
Registry key | Description | Default value | Recommended value |
---|---|---|---|
general.identify_nick | Who to /msg for login/identify/authentication. Defaults to NickServ, can be overridden to a custom bot. | NickServ | <service botnick> |
general.identify_command | Command to send to general.identify_nick to login. |
identify $nick $password |
<service bot command> |
general.op_nick | Who to /msg to request channel OP status. Defaults to ChanServ, can be overridden to a custom bot. | ChanServ | <service botnick> |
general.op_command | Command to send to general.op_nick to request channel
OP status. |
op $channel |
<service bot command> |
Other networks
Other networks are untested. They should be very similiar to either
Libera.Chat or IRCnet, and so one or both of the recommended settings
should suffice. If you have any issues, please report them here or by
sending pragma-
a message on the Libera.Chat network.
Starting PBot
The executable to start PBot is bin/pbot
. You may create
a symbolic link to the bin/pbot
executable in
$HOME/bin/
or in /usr/local/bin/
.
If you choose not to install the bin/pbot
file to your
PATH, remember to use ./bin/pbot
instead of
pbot
in the following examples.
Usage
$ pbot [directory overrides...] [registry overrides...]
rlwrap
It is recommended to use the rlwrap
program for
command-line history if you use the PBot STDIN interface.
$ rlwrap pbot [...]
Overriding directories
You may override PBot’s default directory locations via the command-line.
$ pbot data_dir=/path/to/data applets_dir=/path/to/applets
Overriding registry
You may override any of your Registry values via the command-line.
Any overrides made will be saved to the registry
file. You
do not need to use the override every time you launch PBot.
$ pbot irc.botnick=coolbot irc.server=irc.example.com irc.port=6667 [...]
First-time start-up
Using default settings
The default settings will connect to the Libera.Chat IRC network.
At minimum, the registry key irc.botnick
must be set
before PBot will connect to any IRC servers.
The following command will use the coolbot
data-directory that we cloned in the initial
setup, and set the irc.botnick
registry key to the same
name. It will automatically connect to the Libera.Chat IRC network.
$ pbot data_dir=coolbot irc.botnick=coolbot
Using custom settings
To connect to a specific IRC server or to configure additional settings, you may override the directory paths and override the registry values. Read on to the next section for examples.
Custom recommended settings
The following command is based on the Recommended settings for
IRC Networks section earlier in this document. The
irc.server
and irc.port
settings are omitted
because the default values will connect to the Libera.Chat IRC
network.
Replace the placeholders, marked X
, with values you want
to use. Note that this is just for the first-time start-up. Regular
subsequent start-up needs only data_dir
to be
overridden.
If you have registered your botnick with the NickServ service, update the
irc.identify_password
entry in theregistry
file in your bot’s data directory and then use this command:pbot data_dir=X irc.botnick=X irc.sasl=1
Otherwise, use this one:
pbot data_dir=X irc.botnick=X
Custom recommended IRCnet/other network settings
The following command is based on the Recommended settings for IRC Networks section earlier in this document.
Replace the placeholders, marked X
, with values you want
to use. Note that this is just for the first-time start-up. Regular
subsequent start-up needs only data_dir
to be
overridden.
If you want PBot to identify with a custom bot or service on IRCnet/other networks, use this command:
pbot data_dir=X irc.botnick=X irc.server=X irc.port=X general.identify_nick=X general.op_nick=X
Otherwise, use this one:
pbot data_dir=X irc.botnick=X irc.server=X irc.port=X
Regular start-up
After your initial start-up command, you only need to use the
data_dir
directory override when starting PBot. Any
previously used registry overrides have been saved to your
data-directory’s registry
file.
$ pbot data_dir=X
Additional configuration
Once you’ve launched PBot, you can type directly into its terminal to execute commands as the built-in PBot console admin user account. This will allow you to use admin commands to create new users or join channels.
Creating your bot owner admin account
To create your own fully privileged admin user account, use the useradd
command in the PBot
terminal console. Its usage is:
useradd <username> <hostmasks> [channels [capabilities [password]]]
Suppose your nick is Bob
and your hostmask is
Bob!~user@some.domain.com
. Use the following command:
useradd Bob Bob!~user@*.domain.com global botowner
This will create a user account named Bob
with the
botowner
user-capability that can
administrate all channels. Note the wildcard replacing some
in some.domain.com
. Now as long as your connected hostmask
matches your user account hostmask, you will be recognized.
It is very important that user account hostmasks are defined as strictly or as narrowly as possible to match only the person it is intended for. Ideally, the user would have a NickServ account, a user-cloak given by the staff of the IRC server or a unique DNS name.
In your own IRC client, connected using the hostmask we just added,
type the following command, in a private /query
or
/msg
:
my password
This will show you the randomly generated password that was assigned to your user account. You can change it – if you want to – with:
my password <new password>
Then you can login with:
login <password>
Now you can use /msg
in your own IRC client to
administrate PBot, instead of the terminal console.
Adding other users and admins
To add users to PBot, use the useradd
command. Its usage
is:
useradd <username> <hostmasks> [channels [capabilities [password]]]
The hostmasks
and channels
arguments can be
a comma-separated list of values.
If you omit the capabilities
argument, the user will be
a normal unprivileged user. See user-capabilities for more
information about user-capabilities.
If you omit the password
argument, a random password
will be generated. The user can use the my
command to view or change
it.
Users may view and change their own metadata by using the my
command, provided their
hostmask matches the user account.
my [key [value]]
For more information, see the Admin documentation.
Adding channels
To temporarily join channels, use the join
command.
join <channel>
To permanently add a channel to PBot, use the chanadd
command. PBot will automatically join permanently added channels.
chanadd <channel>
To configure a permanent channel’s settings, use the
chanset
command:
chanset <channel> [key [value]]
You can chanset
the following keys:
Name | Description | Default value |
---|---|---|
enabled | If set to false, PBot will not autojoin or respond to this channel. | 1 |
chanop | If set to true, PBot will perform OP duties in this channel. | 0 |
permop | If set to true, PBot will not de-OP itself in this channel. | 0 |
For more information, see the Channels documentation.
Further Reading
That should get you started. For further information about PBot, check out these topics.
Commands
PBot has several core built-in commands. You’ve seen some of them in this document, for setting up channels and admins. Additional commands can be added to PBot through Plugins and Factoids.
For more information, see the Commands documentation.
Factoids
Factoids are a very special type of command. Anybody interacting with PBot can create, edit, delete and invoke factoids.
In their most basic form, a factoid merely displays the text the creator sets.
<pragma-> !factadd hello /say Hello, $nick!
<PBot> hello added to global channel.
<pragma-> PBot, hello
<PBot> Hello, pragma-!
Significantly more complex factoids can be built by using
$variables
, command-substitution, command-piping,
/code
invocation, and more!
For more information, see the Factoids documentation.
Plugins
Plugins provide optional PBot features. The default plugins loaded by
PBot is set by the plugin_autoload
file in
your data-directory. To autoload additional plugins, add their name to
this file.
The plugins that come with PBot live in lib/PBot/Plugin/
. Additional
third-party plugins may be installed to
~/.pbot/PBot/Plugin/
.
You may manually load plugins using the plug
command.
plug <plugin>
You may unload plugins using the unplug
command.
unplug <plugin>
Plugins can be quickly reloaded by using the replug
command.
replug <plugin>
Currently loaded plugins may be listed with the pluglist
command.
<pragma-> !pluglist
<PBot> Loaded plugins: ActionTrigger, AntiAway, AntiKickAutoRejoin, AntiNickSpam, AntiRepeat,
AntiTwitter, AutoRejoin, Counter, Date, GoogleSearch, Quotegrabs, RemindMe, UrlTitles,
Weather
For more information, see the Plugins documentation.
Applets
Applets are external command-line executable programs and scripts that can be loaded as PBot commands.
Suppose you have the Qalculate! command-line program and you want to provide a PBot command for it. You can create a very simple shell script containing:
#!/bin/sh
qalc "$*"
And let’s call it qalc.sh
and put it in PBot’s
applets/
directory.
Then you can use the PBot load
command to load the
applets/qalc.sh
script as the qalc
command:
!load qalc qalc.sh
Now you have a Qalculate! calculator in PBot!
<pragma-> !qalc 2 * 2
<PBot> 2 * 2 = 4
For more information, see the Applets documentation.