Limnoria/docs/FAQ

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2004-02-18 13:13:24 +01:00
Q: Why does my bot not recognize me or tell me that I don't have the
"owner" capability?
A: Because you're not given it anything to recognize you from!
You'll need to identify with the bot ("help identify" to see how
that works) or add your hostmask to your user record ("help
addhostmask" to see how that works) for it to know that you're
you. You may wish to note that addhostmask can accept a password;
rather than identify, you can send the command "addhostmask
myOwnerUser [hostmask] myOwnerUserPassword" and the bot will add
your current hostmask to your owner user (of course, you should
change myOwnerUser and myOwnerUserPassword appropriately for your
bot).
Q: How do I make my Supybot op my users?
A: First, you'll have to make sure that your users register with the
bot. They can do this with the "register" command. After they do
so, you'll want to add the #channel,op capability to their user.
Use the "channel addcapability" command to do this. After that,
your users should be able to use the "op" command to get ops.
If you want your users to be auto-opped when they join the
channel, you'll need to load the Enforcer plugin and turn its
autoOp configuration variable on. Use the "config" command to do
so. Here's an example of how to do these steps:
<jemfinch|lambda> I'm going to make an example session for giving
you auto-ops, for our FAQ.
<dunk1> ah ok ;]
<jemfinch|lambda> First, I need you to register with supybot, using
the "register" command (remember to send it in
private).
<dunk1> done
<jemfinch|lambda> what name are you registered under?
<dunk1> dunk1
<jemfinch|lambda> ok, cool.
<jemfinch|lambda> @channel addcapability dunk1 op
<supybot> jemfinch|lambda: The operation succeeded.
<jemfinch|lambda> now use the "op" command to get ops.
<dunk1> @op
--- supybot gives channel operator status to dunk1
<dunk1> works!
<dunk1> ;]
<jemfinch|lambda> @load Enforcer
<supybot> jemfinch|lambda: The operation succeeded.
<jemfinch|lambda> @config supybot.plugins.Enforcer.autoOp.#supybot On
<supybot> jemfinch|lambda: The operation succeeded.
<jemfinch|lambda> ok, now cycle the channel (part and then rejoin)
<-- dunk1 (dunker@freebsd.nl) has left #supybot
--> dunk1 (dunker@freebsd.nl) has joined #supybot
--- supybot gives channel operator status to dunk1
<jemfinch|lambda> cool, thanks :)
Q: Can users with the "admin" capability change configuration
variables?
A: Currently, no. Since this is the first release of Supybot that
uses the registry, we wanted to stay on the conservative side and
require the "owner" capability for changing all
non-channel-related configuration variables. Feel free to make
your case to us as to why a certain configuration variable should
only require the "admin" capability instead of the "owner"
capability, and if we agree with you, we'll change it for the next
release.
Q: How do I make my Supybot connect to multiple servers?
A: You'll need to use the Relay plugin. As long as you don't call
the "relay join" command, it won't actually do any relaying between
channels (even if the bot is on the same channel on different
networks). In order to use the Relay plugin, you'll want to first
call the "relay start" command, followed by the "relay connect"
command. These commands are (unfortunately) not persistent at
this time, so you'll need to give them to the bot anytime you
start it up. We'll probably have this lack of persistence
rectified before the next release.
Q: Can Supybot do factoids?
A: Supybot most certainly can! In fact, we offer two full-fledged
factoids-related plugins!
Factoids (written by jemfinch) is Supybot's original
factoids-related plugin. It offers full integration with Supybot's
nested commands as well as a complete 1:n key to factoid ratio,
with lookup by individual number. Factoids also uses
a channel-specific database instead of a global database, although
in the future it will likely be a configuration option whether to
use channel-specific or global databases for such plugins.
MoobotFactoids (written by Strike) is much more full-featured,
offering users the ability to define factoids in a slightly more
user-friendly way, as well as parsing factoids to handle <reply>,
<action>, "see", and altnerations (defining a factoid "test" as
"<reply>(foo|bar|baz)" will make the bot send "foo" or "bar" or
"baz" to the channel (without the normal "test is " at the
beginning)). If you're accustomed to Moobot's factoids or
Blootbot's factoids, then this is the Factoids plugin for you.
Unfortunately, due to the more natural definition syntax (required
to be compatible with Moobot) you can't define Factoids with
nested commands; you'll have to evaluate the command first and
then copy the result into your factoid definition. MoobotFactoids
uses a global database, so the factoids are the same for all
channels.
In the future, we plan to have a compatibility plugin for Infobot,
but as of present we've not yet written one.
Q: Can I import my Infobot/Blootbot/Moobot factoids into Supybot?
A: As of present, we have no automated way to do so. Strike has
written a few scripts for importing a Moobot database into
MoobotFactoids, however, so you'll want to talk to him about
helping you with that. We're certainly happy to help you convert
such databases; if you can provide us with such a database
exported to a flat file, we can probably do the rest of the work
to write a script that imports it into a database for one of our
factoids-related plugins.
Q: I found a bug, what do I do?
A: Submit it on Sourceforge through our Sourceforge project page:
<http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=58965&atid=489447>. If
Sourceforge happens to be down when you try to submit your bug,
then post it in the "Supybot Developer Discussion" forum at our
forums at <http://forums.supybot.org/>. If that doesn't work,
email supybot-bugs@lists.sourceforge.net. If that doesn't work,
email jemfinch@supybot.org. If that doesn't work, find yourself
some carrier pigeons and ... hah! You thought I was serious!
Anyway, when you submit your bug, we'll need several things. If
the bug involved an uncaught exception, we need the traceback
(basically the stuff from "Uncaught exception in ..." to the next
log entry). We'd also like to see the commands that caused the
bug, or happened around the time you saw the bug. If the bug
involved a datase, we'd love to see the database. Remember, it's
always worse to send us too much information in a bug report than
too little.