2.7 KiB
Using the HTTP server
Configuration
The HTTP comes with a couple of additional variables:
supybot.servers.http.favicon
: Path to the file which is shown to browsers as favicon.supybot.servers.http.hosts4
: The IPv4 addresses where the bot will bind. In most of the cases, you will use 0.0.0.0 (everything) or 127.0.0.1 (restricted to local connections). Defaults to 0.0.0.0supybot.servers.http.hosts6
: The IPv6 addresses where the bot will bind. Defaults to empty.supybot.servers.http.keepAlive
: Determines weather the HTTP server will run even if has nothing to serve. Defaults to False, because the HTTPd might require to change the port, if it is already taken.supybot.servers.http.port
: The port the bot will bind. May not work if the number is below 1024. Defaults to 8080 (alternative HTTP port).
Using the server
At the root of the server, you will find a list of the plugins that have a Web interface, and a link to them. Each plugin has its own subdirectory(ies).
You may also want to have Apache in front of Supybot's HTTP server, if you want to use subdomains. Here is an example of configuration (I didn't test it with the rewrite, please notify me whether it works or not):
<VirtualHost 0.0.0.0:80>
stats.yourdomain.org
ServerName<Location />
http://localhost:8080/webstats/
ProxyPass force-proxy-request-1.0 1
SetEnv proxy-nokeepalive 1
SetEnvRewriteEngine On
^/webstats/(.*)$ /$1
RewriteRule</Location>
</VirtualHost>
It's also possible to use Nginx in front of Supybot's HTTP server.
Create a new site /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/bot
:
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name stats.yourdomain.org;
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8080/;
}
}
Templates
Among plugins which use the http server, some use the standard templates system which allows you to edit page templates in a standard way (for other plugins, check their documentation).
Templates are located in the data/web/
folder. There is a folder per plugin (and a generic folder, which holds generic pages), and
all file names end with .example, which
is the default template provided by the plugin. To customize it, rename
it to remove .example (for instance:
mv fooplugin/foopage.html.example fooplugin/foopage.html
)
and edit it (either do it intuitively or check the plugin documentation
to see how it handles its templates).