PBot is a pragmatic IRCv3 Bot written in Perl
- Installation / Quick Start
- Features
- Documentation
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Support
- License
To get up-and-running quickly, check out the Quick Start guide.
PBot supports several features of the IRCv3 specification.
- client capability negotiation
- SASL authentication
- account-tag, account-notify, extended-join, message-tags, and more.
PBot has a powerful command interpreter with useful functionality, and tons of built-in commands.
For more information, see the Commands documentation.
You can pipe output from one command as input into another command, indefinitely.
<pragma-> !echo hello world | {sed s/world/everybody/} | {uc}
<PBot> HELLO EVERYBODY
You can insert the output from another command at any point within a command. This substitutes the command with its output at the point where the command was used.
<pragma-> !echo This is &{echo a demonstration} of command substitution
<PBot> This is a demonstration of command substitution
For example, suppose you want to make a Google Image Search command. The naive way would be to simply do:
<pragma-> !factadd img /call echo https://google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=$args
Unfortuately this would not support queries containing spaces or certain symbols. But
never fear! We can use command substitution and the uri_escape
function from the
func
command.
Note that you must escape the command substitution to insert it literally into the factoid otherwise it will be expanded first.
<pragma-> !factadd img /call echo https://google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=\&{func uri_escape $args}
<pragma-> !img spaces & stuff
<PBot> https://google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=spaces%20%26%20stuff
You can use factoids as variables and interpolate them within commands.
<pragma-> !factadd greeting "Hello, world"
<pragma-> !echo greeting is $greeting
<PBot> greeting is Hello, world
PBot variable interpolation supports expansion modifiers, which can be chained to combine their effects.
<pragma-> !echo $greeting:uc
<PBot> HELLO, WORLD
You can select a random item from a selection list and interpolate the value within commands.
<pragma-> !echo This is a %(neat|cool|awesome) bot.
<PBot> This is a cool bot.
You can invoke up to three commands inlined within a message. If the message is addressed to a nick, the output will also be addressed to them.
<pragma-> newuser13: Check the !{version} and the !{help} documentation.
<PBot> newuser13: PBot version 2696 2020-01-04
<PBot> newuser13: To learn all about me, see https://github.com/pragma-/pbot/tree/master/doc
You can execute multiple commands sequentially as one command.
<pragma-> !echo Test! ;;; me smiles. ;;; version
<PBot> Test! * PBot smiles. PBot version 2696 2020-01-04
Suppose you make a Plugin that provides a command that may potentially take a long time to complete?
Not a problem! You can use the cmdset
command to set the background-process
command metadata
and the command will now run as a background process, allowing PBot to carry on with its duties.
The familiar ps
and kill
commands can be used to list and kill the background processes.
You can also cmdset
the process-timeout
command metadata to set the timeout, in seconds, before the command is automatically killed. Otherwise the processmanager.default_timeout
registry value will be used.
By default, PBot replaces newlines in command output with spaces. This can be customized on a per-channel or global basis to instead preserve the newlines and output each line as a distinct message.
Output that is longer than the maximum length of an IRC message will be pasted, with all formatting preserved, to a web paste service. The IRC message itself will be truncated, with enough room to append the paste URL.
When preserve_newlines
is enabled, if there are more lines available than max_newlines
then
all of the lines will be pasted, with formatting preserved, to a web paste service. PBot will then
output up to max_newlines
lines as distinct messages and then output the URL to the paste.
Additional commands and functionality can be added to PBot in the following ways.
Factoids are a very special type of command. Anybody interacting with PBot can create, edit, delete and invoke factoids.
A simple factoid merely displays the text the creator sets.
<pragma-> !factadd hello /say Hello, $nick!
<PBot> hello added to global channel.
<pragma-> PBot, hello
<PBot> Hello, pragma-!
Significantly more complex factoids can be built by using $variables
, command-substitution,
command-piping, /code
invocation, command prefixes such as /say
, /me
, /msg
, and more!
PBot factoids include these advanced features:
- undo/redo history
- changelog history
- channel namespaces
factadd
andfactchange
commands accept a-url
option that sets the factoid contents from a paste website. In other words, you can edit a factoid's contents using your local editor, preserving line-breaks and indentation.- advanced
$variable
interpolation ($var:lc
to lowercase contents,$var:ucfirst
to uppercase first letter, etc) - factoid-based variable lists (e.g., add a factoid
colors
containing "red green blue" and then!echo $colors
will randomly pick one) - advanced argument processing (indexing, splicing, etc)
- metadata (e.g. owner, times used, last used date, locked, etc)
- special commands (
/say
,/me
,/msg
,/code
, etc) - and much, much more!
For more information, see the Factoids documentation.
Code factoids are a special type of factoid that executes its contents within a sandboxed virtual machine.
The contents of code factoids must begin with the /code
command:
/code <language> <code>
For example, the venerable rot13
function:
<pragma-> !factadd rot13 /code sh echo "$@" | tr a-zA-Z n-za-mN-ZA-M
<PBot> rot13 added to global channel.
<pragma-> !rot13 Pretty neat, huh?
<PBot> Cerggl arng, uhu?
Making a choose
command:
<pragma-> !factadd choose /code zsh _arr=($args); print $_arr[$((RANDOM % $#_arr + 1))]
<PBot> choose added to global channel.
Using the choose
command via an inlined command:
<pragma-> hmm, what should I have for dinner? !{choose chicken "roast beef" pizza meatloaf}
<PBot> pizza
You can even pipe output from other commands to Code Factoids.
<pragma-> !echo test | {rot13}
<PBot> grfg
For more information, see the Code Factoid documentation.
PBot can dynamically load and unload Perl modules to alter its behavior.
These are some of the plugins that PBot has; there are many more:
Plugin | Description |
---|---|
ActionTrigger | Lets admins set regular expression triggers to execute PBot commands or factoids. |
GoogleSearch | Performs Internet searches using the Google search engine. |
Quotegrabs | Grabs channel messages as quotes for posterity. Can grab messages from anywhere in the channel history. Can grab multiple messages at once! |
RemindMe | Lets people set up reminders. Lots of options. |
Weather | Fetches and shows weather data for a location. |
Wolfram | Queries Wolfram|Alpha for answers. |
Wttr | Advanced weather Plugin with tons of options. Uses wttr.in. |
UrlTitles | When a URL is seen in a channel, intelligently display its title. It will not display titles that are textually similiar to the URL, in order to maintain the channel signal-noise ratio. |
There are even a few games!
Plugin | Description |
---|---|
Battleship | The classic Battleship board game, simplified for IRC. Multiple players can compete at once on the same battlefield! |
Connect4 | The classic two-player Connect-4 game. |
Spinach | An advanced multiplayer Trivia game engine with a twist! A question is shown. Everybody privately submits a false answer. All false answers and the true answer is shown. Everybody tries to guess the true answer. Points are gained when people pick your false answer! |
Wordle | Guess a word by submitting words for clues about which letters belong to the word. |
WordMorph | Solve a path between two words by changing one letter at a time. |
Applets are external command-line executable programs and scripts that can be loaded as PBot commands.
Suppose you have the Qalculate! command-line program and you want to provide a PBot command for it. You can create a very simple shell script containing:
#!/bin/sh
qalc "$*"
And let's call it qalc.sh
and put it in PBot's applets/
directory.
Then you can load it with the load
command.
!load qalc qalc.sh
Now you have a Qalculate! calculator in PBot!
<pragma-> !qalc 2 * 2
<PBot> 2 * 2 = 4
These are just some of the applets PBot comes with; there are several more:
Applet | Description |
---|---|
C-to-English translator | Translates C code to natural English sentences. |
C precedence analyzer | Adds parentheses to C code to demonstrate precedence. |
C Jeopardy! game | C programming trivia game based on the Jeopardy! TV game show. |
C Standard citations | Cite specified sections/paragraphs from the C standard. |
Virtual machine | Executes arbitrary code and commands within a virtual machine. |
dict.org Dictionary | Interface to dict.org for definitions, translations, acronyms, etc. |
Urban Dictionary | Search Urban Dictionary for definitions. |
Manpages | Display a concise formatting of manual pages (designed for C functions) |
For more information, see the Applets documentation.
Functions are commands that accept input, manipulate it and then output the result. They are extremely useful with piping or command substituting.
For example, the uri_escape
function demonstrated in the Substitution section earlier
makes text safe for use in a URL.
<pragma-> uri_escape thing's & words
<PBot> thing%27s%20%26%20words
We also saw the sed
and uc
functions demonstrated in Piping. The sed
function
replaces text using a substitution regex. The uc
function uppercases the text.
<pragma-> echo Hello world! | {sed s/world/universe/} | {uc}
<PBot> HELLO UNIVERSE!
Here's a short list of the Functions that come with PBot.
Name | Description |
---|---|
uri_escape |
Percent-encodes unsafe URI characters. |
sed |
Performs sed-like regex substitution. |
grep |
Searches a string, using a regex, and prints the matching whole-word (e.g. echo pizza hamburger hotdog | {grep burger} outputs hamburger ). |
pluralize |
Intelligently makes a word or phrase plural. |
unquote |
Removes surrounding quotation marks. |
title |
Title-cases text. That is, lowercases the text then uppercases the first letter of each word. |
ucfirst |
Uppercases the first character of the text. |
uc |
Uppercases all characters. |
lc |
Lowercases all characters. |
Additional Functions can easily be added by making a very simple PBot Plugin.
For more information, see the Functions documentation.
PBot uses Plang as a scripting language. You can use the scripting language to construct advanced commands that are capable of interacting with PBot internal API functions.
PBot can integrate with a virtual machine to safely execute arbitrary user-submitted operating system commands or code.
PBot supports several shells and languages out of the box!
One of PBot's most powerful features, Code Factoids, would not be possible without this.
<pragma-> !sh echo Remember rot13? | tr a-zA-Z n-za-mN-ZA-M
<PBot> Erzrzore ebg13?
<nil> !go package main\nimport "fmt"\nfunc main() { fmt.Print("foo" == "foo"); }
<PBot> true
<pragma-> !python print('Hello there!')
<PBot> Hello there!
PBot has extensive support for the C programming language. For instance, the C programming language plugin is integrated with the GNU Debugger. It will print useful debugging information.
<pragma-> !cc char *p = 0; *p = 1;
<PBot> runtime error: store to null pointer of type 'char'
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault at
statement: *p = 1; <local variables: p = 0x0>
It can display the value of the most recent statement if there is no program output.
<pragma-> !cc sizeof (int)
<PBot> no output: sizeof(int) = 4
For more information about the C programming language plugin, see the cc
command in the Applets documentation.
For more information about the virtual machine, see the Virtual Machine documentation.
PBot has powerful yet simple user management functionality and commands.
- instead of generic access-levels, PBot uses fine-grained user capabilities, which can be grouped into roles such as Admin, ChanOp, Moderator, etc
- user accounts can be global or channel-specific
- users can be recognized by hostmask or required to login with password
- users can adjust their user-metadata with the
my
command - and much, much more!
For more information, see the Admin documentation.
mode
command can take wildcards, e.g.mode +ov foo* bar*
to op nicks beginning withfoo
and voice nicks beginning withbar
unban <nick>
andunmute <nick>
will remove all bans/mutes matching their current or previously seen hostmasks or accountsban
andmute
will intelligently set banmasks; supports timeoutsban
andmute
can take a comma-separate list of nicks. Will intelligently group them into multipleMODE +bbbb
commandskick
can take a comma-separated list of nicks; also accepts wildcards- and much, much more!
For more information, see the Admin documentation.
PBot can perform the typical channel management tasks.
- opping/deopping known users, etc
- channel-mode tracking/protection
- user hostmask/alias tracking
- ban-evasion detection
- flood detection
- silent join-flood enforcement
- whitelisting, blacklisting, etc
- spam/advertisement detection
- and much, much more!
For more information, see the Channels documentation and the Anti-abuse documentation
PBot's settings are contained in a central registry of key/value pairs grouped by sections.
These settings can easily be configured via several methods:
- PBot's command-line arguments
- simple built-in commands (
regset
,regunset
, etc) - editing the
$data_dir/registry
plain-text JSON file
For more information, see the Registry documentation.
Suppose you edit some PBot source file, be it a core file such as PBot/Core/Interpreter.pm or a Plugin such as PBot/Plugin/Wttr.pm. Or suppose there's a PBot update available. Most simple bots would require you to shut down the bot and restart it in order to see the modifications.
Not PBot! you can simply use the refresh
command to reload all modified
PBot core files and Plugins without bot restart.
You can also use the reload
command to reload any modified
configuration or data files.
See the PBot documentation for more information.
If you have a question, try the PBot FAQ!
For additional questions and support, feel free to join the #pbot
channel on the Libera.Chat IRC network (Web Chat).
PBot is licensed under the MIT license.