7.9 KiB
Installing Limnoria on GNU/Linux and UNIX (FreeBSD, macOS, ...)
This is the "easy to follow" guide to installing Limnoria. The installation documentation provided with the supybot distribution is really quite good already, but since people keep coming to IRC, asking a repeating pattern of questions, we thought it would be a good idea to expand it a bit to make it a little more of a "foolproof guide".
This guide is for non-Windows operating systems. If you want to
install on Windows, check out the Windows install guide <use-install_windows>
.
Note
Limnoria is a modified version of Supybot.
Install
Install using your OS' package manager
On Debian (8.0 and above)
sudo aptitude install limnoria
If you have Debian 8.0 (Jessie), this command won't work unless you have Backports repositories configured.
On Ubuntu (16.10 and above)
sudo apt-get install limnoria
On Fedora (23 and above)
sudo dnf install limnoria
On CentOS and Red Hat Enterprise Linux
You have to first add the EPEL repository (EL7, EL6, EL5) before being able to install the package on CentOS / RHEL. Once you have, you can run the following command to install Limnoria:
sudo yum install limnoria
On FreeBSD
Port:
cd /usr/ports/irc/py-limnoria && sudo PYTHON_VERSION=3.5 make install clean
You can omit PYTHON_VERSION=3.5
if you want to build for
Python 2.7, or if you have DEFAULT_VERSIONS=python=3.5
in
/etc/make.conf.
Package:
sudo pkg install py27-limnoria
On Archlinux
You can install Limnoria from AUR.
On Gentoo
sudo emerge net-irc/limnoria
With Guix and GuixSD
guix package --install limnoria
Other operating systems (manual install)
If you followed the section above, skip this one.
Dependencies
The only mandatory dependency is Python 2.6 or greater. However, it is highly recommended you use Python 3.4 or greater.
You may also install chardet and feedparser, which are used by Limnoria if they are available.
The remaining of this guide will assume you have Python 3. If you
don't, replace python3
with python
in the
given commands
Install Python
Python will usually come by installed by default in your distribution. If not, grab the appropriate packages from the distribution's repository, or download it from http://python.org.
If you're installing Python using your distribution's packages, you may need a ''python-dev'' or ''python-devel'' package installed, too. To see if this is the case, open up a terminal, start python, and run:
import distutils
If it works, you're good to go. Otherwise, install the
python3-dev
or python3-devel
package and try
again.
You may also install "manually" by downloading the source archive from http://python.org, and compiling it. That is outside the scope of this guide, however.
Install Limnoria
In the next section of this guide we will use pip, which is a generic way of installing Python software.
There are some alternative install methods <alternative-install>
at the bottom of this guide, if you don't want to use
pip
.
Global installation (with root access)
If you do not have root access, skip this section.
If you are logged in as root, you can remove sudo
from
the install commands.
If you want to use the testing branch which might be more up-to date
BUT LESS TESTED, replace master
with testing
in the commands.
First, install Limnoria's optional dependencies (you can skip this step, but some features won't be available):
sudo python3 -m pip install -r https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ProgVal/Limnoria/master/requirements.txt --upgrade
Then Limnoria itself:
sudo python3 -m pip install limnoria --upgrade
If you have an error saying No module named pip
, install
pip
using your package manager (the package is usually
named python3-pip
).
Local installation (without root access)
If you have followed the previous section, skip this one.
Simply add --user
to the end of both commands. First we
install requirements (you can skip it, but some features won't be
available) and then Limnoria itself.:
python3 -m pip install -r https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ProgVal/Limnoria/master/requirements.txt --user --upgrade
python3 -m pip install limnoria --user --upgrade
You might need to add $HOME/.local/bin to your PATH.:
echo 'PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.$(echo $SHELL|cut -d/ -f3)rc
source ~/.$(echo $SHELL|cut -d/ -f3)rc
If you have an error saying No module named pip
, install
pip
using this guide: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/installing/
Configuration
We are now ready to configure Supybot. Supybot creates quite a few auxiliary files/directories to store its runtime data. It is thus recommended to create an empty directory from which you'll be running supybot, to keep all the data in a nice dedicated location. For example, you may create a 'runbot' directory inside your home directory.
Now you can cd to your 'runbot' directory, and from within it run
supybot-wizard
, which will walk you through a series of
questions to generate the bot config file.
One thing to make sure to do in the wizard, to make your life easier down the line, is to select y for the Would you like to add an owner user for your bot? question, and actually create the owner user. Remember that password, so that you can later ''identify'' with the bot on IRC and administer it.
Once you generate the config file, which will be named
yourbotnick.conf
(where "yourbotnick" is the nick you have
chosen for your bot in the wizard), it will be placed in your 'runbot'
directory. (As long as you leave the default answer to the ''Where would
you like to create these directories?'' question.)
Now to start the bot, run, still from within the 'runbot' directory:
supybot yourbotnick.conf
And watch the magic!
For a tutorial on using and managing the bot from here on, see the Supybook.
Alternative install methods
If you know what you are doing and you don't want to use pip, you can use one of these methods:
- Download a .deb or .rpm package at ProgVal's build repo.
- Use git to clone the Limnoria repository and follow the instructions in Limnoria's README.md.
- Click the "Download ZIP" button at the Limnoria repository.
Then, extract the zipball to some temporary directory, and
cd
to theLimnoria-master
directory which contains the extracted code.