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It's good to reference it from the main doc; and I'd rather copy it here in case the Gribble Wiki (or Sourceforge) goes down.
162 lines
7.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
162 lines
7.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _supybot-schedule:
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***************************************
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Event scheduling using supybot.schedule
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***************************************
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.. code-block:: python
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###
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# This is an example plugin that sends a message to a channel every 60 seconds,
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# includes commands to stop, start, and reset the spammer, and a command to
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# schedule a one-off event
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###
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# these are the default plugin modules
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import supybot.utils as utils
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from supybot.commands import *
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import supybot.plugins as plugins
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import supybot.ircutils as ircutils
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import supybot.callbacks as callbacks
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# these are the extra modules we'll be using
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import time
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import supybot.ircmsgs as ircmsgs
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import supybot.schedule as schedule
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class Spam(callbacks.Plugin):
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"""Add the help for "@plugin help Spam" here
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This should describe *how* to use this plugin."""
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def __init__(self, irc):
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# these two lines are required if you have a custom __init__()
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self.__parent = super(Spam, self)
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self.__parent.__init__(irc)
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# this is the channel we want to spam, and how frequently we want to do it.
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# It would be nicer to put it in a supybot config variable instead, but for
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# this demonstration, defining it in the plugin itself is fine.
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self.spamChannel = '#testytest'
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self.spamTime = 60
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# scheduler events are global, so we want to test to make sure the event doesn't
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# already exist. That is, even if the plugin is reloaded, the event sticks
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# around. That means that you also have to be a little careful with your
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# event names, especially if you have multiple plugins adding events. It also
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# means that events will stick around even if the plugin they originated in
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# is unloaded. I don't know how to delete them automatically on an unload, but
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# it's not normally an issue. Just make sure to stop the event before unloading
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# the plugin if that's what you want.
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try:
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schedule.removeEvent('mySpamEvent')
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except KeyError:
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pass
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# now that we know there's no event by that name scheduled, we can create one.
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# but first, we need to define a local helper function that will do the thing
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# that we want. You can put the full contents into here, but I prefer to use
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# separate methods, as it makes the code easier to get around in. We need
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# the helper function because when you add events, you can't include arguments.
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def myEventCaller():
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self.spamEvent(irc)
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# and now we can schedule the actual event
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# schedule.addPeriodicEvent(f, t, name=None, now=True)
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# f is the method, t is the time in seconds, name gives it a name and is optional
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# (but highly recommended, so that you can refer to the event in the future.
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# otherwise, it's easy to accumulate duplicate events), and 'now' specifies
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# whether to perform the action immediately, or to wait until time is up to
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# perform it for the first time. Default is True.
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schedule.addPeriodicEvent(myEventCaller, self.spamTime, 'mySpamEvent')
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self.irc = irc
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# make sure to have a capital letter or underscore or something, as it's not a method
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# that we want turned into an IRC command
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def spamEvent(self, irc):
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# we need to use queueMsg() rather than reply(), because when the event is
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# scheduled on loading the plugin (as opposed to scheduling it with one of the
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# commands that we'll define next), it recieves its irc object from __init__().
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# When the bot is started, the irc object that comes from __init__() doesn't
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# include a reply() method, because it's not loading in response to a command;
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# it's loading on the bot startup. If you don't want your event to be scheduled
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# automatically and so don't schedule it from __init__(), but only from an IRC
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# command, then it's safe to use irc.reply(), as there are no circumstances
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# under which the irc object won't have a reply() method.
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irc.queueMsg(ircmsgs.privmsg(self.spamChannel, 'I\'m spamming the channel!'))
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def start(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""takes no arguments
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A command to start the spammer."""
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# don't forget to redefine the event wrapper
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def myEventCaller():
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self.spamEvent(irc)
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try:
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schedule.addPeriodicEvent(myEventCaller, self.spamTime, 'mySpamEvent', False)
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except AssertionError:
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irc.reply('Error: the spammer was already running!')
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else:
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irc.reply('Spammer started!')
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start = wrap(start)
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def stop(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""takes no arguments
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A command to stop the spammer."""
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try:
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schedule.removeEvent('mySpamEvent')
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except KeyError:
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irc.reply('Error: the spammer wasn\'t running!')
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else:
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irc.reply('Spammer stopped.')
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stop = wrap(stop)
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def reset(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""takes no arguments
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Resets the spammer. Can be useful if something changes and you want the
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spam to reflect that. For example, if you defined the spamChannel as a
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supybot config, and changed it while the spammer was running, it would still
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keep going on the same channel until you reset it."""
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def myEventCaller():
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self.spamEvent(irc)
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try:
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schedule.removeEvent('mySpamEvent')
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except KeyError:
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irc.reply('Spammer wasn\'t running')
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schedule.addPeriodicEvent(myEventCaller, self.spamTime, 'mySpamEvent', False)
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irc.reply('Spammer reset sucessfully!')
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reset = wrap(reset)
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# Here's an example of a one-off event, scheduled by an IRC command
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def sayhi(self, irc, msg, args, delay):
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"""<time delay>
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Says hi after the specified delay"""
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def myEventCaller():
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self.Hello(irc)
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# for a one-off event, the time is an absolute time, not relative. So we need
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# to get the current time and add to it however long we want to wait
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t = time.time() + delay
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# since we don't specify a name, we won't be able to reference the events in
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# the future, but that's ok, because these are one-off events, so even if you
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# do call it multiple times, it'll just reply that same number of times and
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# then stop. But in some circumstances you might want to name them. Just
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# remember that it'll give an AssertionError if you try to create two events
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# with the same name
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schedule.addEvent(myEventCaller, t)
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irc.reply('"hi" scheduled for %d seconds from now!' % delay)
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sayhi = wrap(sayhi, ['positiveInt'])
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def Hello(self, irc):
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# since the irc object is coming from an IRC command, rather than from __init__(),
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# it's guaranteed to have a reply() method, so it's safe to use that. It
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# might be better to to use queueMsg() instead, regardless, but I don't know
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# enough about the supybot internals to say whether one is prefered over
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# the other
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irc.reply('hi!')
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Class = Spam
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This example comes from the Gribble Wiki:
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https://sourceforge.net/p/gribble/wiki/Supybot.schedule/history
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Copyright 2010, 2015, nanotube and quantumlemur
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licensed under the `Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/>`_
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and/or the `GNU Free Documentation License v 1.3 or later <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html>`_
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