9c5c4b87d3
Fixes #71. |
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docs | ||
pydle | ||
tests | ||
.coveragerc | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
README.md | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.py | ||
tox.ini |
README.md
pydle
Python IRC library.
pydle is a compact, flexible and standards-abiding IRC library for Python 3.
Features
- Well-organized: Thanks to the modularized feature system, it's not hard to find what you're looking for in the well-organized source code.
- Standards-abiding: Based on RFC1459 with some small extension tweaks, with full support of optional extension standards:
- Callback-based: IRC is an asynchronous protocol and so should a library that implements it be. Callbacks are used to process events from the server.
- Modularised and extensible: Features on top of RFC1459 are implemented as seperate modules for a user to pick and choose, and write their own. Broad features are written to be as extensible as possible.
- Liberally licensed: The 3-clause BSD license ensures you can use it everywhere.
Basic Usage
python3 setup.py install
From there, you can import pydle
and subclass pydle.Client
for your own functionality.
Setting a nickname and starting a connection over TLS:
import pydle
# Simple echo bot.
class MyOwnBot(pydle.Client):
def on_connect(self):
self.join('#bottest')
def on_message(self, source, target, message):
self.message(target, message)
client = MyOwnBot('MyBot', realname='My Bot')
client.connect('irc.rizon.net', 6697, tls=True, tls_verify=False)
client.handle_forever()
But wait, I want to handle multiple clients!
No worries! Use pydle.ClientPool
like such:
pool = pydle.ClientPool()
for i in range(10):
client = MyOwnBot('MyBot' + str(i))
pool.connect(client, 'irc.rizon.net', 6697, tls=True, tls_verify=False)
# This will make sure all clients are treated in a fair way priority-wise.
pool.handle_forever()
Customization
If you want to customize bot features, you can subclass pydle.BasicClient
and one or more features from pydle.features
or your own feature classes, like such:
# Only support RFC1459 (+small features), CTCP and our own ACME extension to IRC.
class MyFeaturedBot(pydle.features.ctcp.CTCPSupport, acme.ACMESupport, rfc1459.RFC1459Support):
pass
To create your own features, just subclass from pydle.BasicClient
and start adding callbacks for IRC messages:
# Support custom ACME extension.
class ACMESupport(pydle.BasicClient):
def on_raw_999(self, source, params):
""" ACME's custom 999 numeric tells us to change our nickname. """
nickname = params[0]
self.set_nickname(nickname)
FAQ
Q: When constructing my own client class from several base classes, I get the following error: TypeError: Cannot create a consistent method resolution order (MRO) for bases X, Y, Z. What causes this and how can I solve it?
Pydle's use of class inheritance as a feature model may cause method resolution order conflicts if a feature inherits from a different feature, while a class inherits from both the original feature and the inheriting feature. To solve such problem, pydle offers a featurize
function that will automatically put all classes in the right order and create an appropriate base class:
# Purposely mis-ordered base classes, as SASLSupport inherits from CapabilityNegotiationSupport, but everything works fine.
MyBase = pydle.featurize(pydle.features.CapabilityNegotiationSupport, pydle.features.SASLSupport)
class Client(MyBase):
pass
Q: How do I...?
Stop! Read the documentation first. If you're still in need of support, join us on IRC! We hang at #kochira
on irc.freenode.net
. If someone is around, they'll most likely gladly help you.
License
Pydle is licensed under the 3-clause BSD license. See LICENSE.md for details.