5.8 KiB
Common
First things first: Supybot requires at least Python 2.6. There isn’t any way to get around it. You can get it from Python homepage.
Recommended Software
The following libraries are not needed for running Limnoria, but enable extra features you may want. (Order by decreasing estimated usefulness)
charade – enables better encoding handling
pytz and python-dateutil
– enable additional features of the Time
plugin
python-gnupg – enables user authentication with GPG
To install them, run
pip install -r requirements.txt
or if you don’t have or want to use root,
`pip --install-option=--prefix=$HOME/.local install -r requirements.txt
For more information and help on how to use Supybot, checkout the documents under docs/, especially GETTING_STARTED and CONFIGURATION .
So what do you do? That depends on which operating system you’re running. We’ve split this document up to address the different methods, so find the section for your operating system and continue from there.
UNIX/Linux/BSD
If you’re installing Python using your distributor’s packages, you may need a python-dev or python3-dev package installed, too. If you don’t have a ‘/usr/lib/python2.x/distutils’ directory or ‘/usr/lib/python2.x/config/Makefile’ or with Python 3 ‘/usr/lib/python3.x/distutils’ or ‘/usr/lib/python3.x/config/Makefile’ (assuming ‘/usr/lib/python2.x’ or ‘/usr/lib/python3.x’ is where your Python libs are installed), then you will need a python-dev or python3-dev package.
First start by git cloning Limnoria and moving to the cloned repository.
git clone git://github.com/ProgVal/Limnoria.git
cd Limnoria
The rest depends on do you have root access and do you want to perform global or local install.
Global install
Run
python setup.py install
python
can be replaced with python2
(if
your distribution uses Python 3 by default) or python3
if
you want to use Python 3 version.
Now you have several new programs installed where Python scripts are normally installed on your system (‘/usr/bin’ or ‘/usr/local/bin’ are common on UNIX systems). The two that might be of particular interest to you, the new user, are ‘supybot’ and ‘supybot-wizard’. The former, ‘supybot’, is the script to run an actual bot; the latter, ‘supybot-wizard’, is an in-depth wizard that provides a nice user interface for creating a registry file for your bot.
Local install
Run
python setup.py install --user
python
can be replaced with python2
(if
your distribution uses Python 3 by default) or python3
if
you want to use Python 3 version.
and you will have new programs installed in ~/.local/bin. The two that might be of particular interest to you, the new user, are ‘supybot’ and ‘supybot-wizard’. The former, ‘supybot’, is the script to run an actual bot; the latter, ‘supybot-wizard’, is an in-depth wizard that provides a nice user interface for creating a registry file for your bot.
By default you must run the bot with full path to the binary unless you specify $PATH.
Run the following command to fix your PATH. We presume that you use bash and if you don’t, you most probably know how to do this with other shell.
echo 'PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
Upgrading
To upgrade, return to the cloned Limnoria repository and run:
git pull
and then install Limnoria normally. “python setup.py install” doesn’t affect config files of the bot any way.
If you don’t have the cloned Limnoria repository, clone it again using the installation instructions.
Upgrading to Python 3
Upgrading Python3 happens the same way, but if you want to move from 2 to 3 or 3 to 2, you must remove the build/ directory and the executable supybot* files first. The build/ directory is on same directory as this file and supybot* are usually in /usr/local/bin or ~/.local/bin
rm -rf build/
rm /usr/local/bin/supybot*
rm ~/.local/bin/supybot*
Windows
Note: If you are using an IPV6 connection, you will not be able to run Supybot under Windows (unless Python has fixed things). Current versions of Python for Windows are not built with IPV6 support. This isn’t expected to be fixed until Python 2.4, at the earliest.
Now that you have Python installed, open up a command prompt. The easiest way to do this is to open the run dialog (Programs -> run) and type “cmd” (for Windows 2000/XP/2003) or “command” (for Windows 9x). In order to reduce the amount of typing you need to do, I suggest adding Python’s directory to your path. If you installed Python using the default settings, you would then do the following in the command prompt (otherwise change the path to match your settings)::
set PATH=C:\Python2x\;%PATH%
You should now be able to type ‘python’ to start the Python interpreter. Exit by pressing CTRL-Z and then Return. Now that that’s setup, you’ll want to cd into the directory that was created when you unzipped Supybot; I’ll assume you unzipped it to ‘C:’ for these instructions. From ‘C:’, run
python setup.py install
This will install Supybot under ‘C:2x'. You will now have several new programs installed in ’C:2x'. The two that might be of particular interest to you, the new user, are ’supybot’ and ‘supybot-wizard’. The former, ‘supybot’, is the script to run an actual bot; the latter, ‘supybot-wizard’, is an in-depth wizard that provides a nice user interface for creating a registry file for your bot.