Config.register Config::ArrayValue.new('linkbot.message_patterns',
:default => ['^<(\S+?)@(\S+?)>\s+(.*)$', '^\((\S+?)@(\S+?)\)\s+(.*)$'],
- :desc => "List of regexp which match linkbot messages; each regexp needs to have three captures, which in order are the nickname of the original speaker, network, and original message")
+ :desc => "List of regexp which match linkbot messages; each regexp needs to have three captures, which in order are the nickname of the original speaker, network, and original message",
+ :on_change => proc {|bot, v| bot.plugins['linkbot'].update_patterns})
# TODO use template strings instead of regexp for user friendliness
# Initialize the plugin
def initialize
super
-
+ update_patterns
+ end
+
+ def update_patterns
@message_patterns = @bot.config['linkbot.message_patterns'].map {|p|
Regexp.new(p)
}
end
# Main method
- def listen(m)
+ def message(m)
linkbots = @bot.config['linkbot.nicks']
return if linkbots.empty?
return unless linkbots.include?(m.sourcenick)
- return unless m.kind_of?(PrivMessage)
# Now we know that _m_ is a PRIVMSG from a linkbot. Let's split it
# in nick, network, message
- if @message_patterns.any? {|p| m.message.match p}
+ if @message_patterns.any? {|p| m.message =~ p}
# if the regexp doesn't contain all parts, the default values get used
new_nick = $1 || 'unknown_nick'
network = $2 || 'unknown_network'
message = $3 || 'unknown_message'
-
+ # strip any formatting codes in the new_nick. some people configure their linkbots
+ # to embed these codes in nicknames (such as to\B\Bm), to avoid triggering the
+ # person's highlight
+ new_nick.gsub!(/[#{Bold}#{Underline}#{Reverse}#{Italic}#{NormalText}]/, '')
debug "#{m.sourcenick} reports that #{new_nick} said #{message.inspect} on #{network}"
- # One way to pass the new message back to the bot is to create a PrivMessage
- # and delegate it to the plugins
- new_m = PrivMessage.new(@bot, m.server, m.server.user(new_nick), m.target, message)
- @bot.plugins.delegate "listen", new_m
- @bot.plugins.privmsg(new_m) if new_m.address?
-
- ## Another way is to create a data Hash with source, target and message keys
- ## and then letting the bot client :privmsg handler handle it
- ## Note that this will also create irclog entries for the fake PRIVMSG
- ## TODO we could probably add a :no_irc_log entry to the data passed to the
- ## @bot.client handlers, or something like that
- # data = {
- # :source => m.server.user(new_nick)
- # :target => m.target
- # :message => message
- # }
- # @bot.client[:privmsg].call(data)
+ begin
+ # Pass the new message back to the bot
+ fake_message(message, :from => m, :source => m.server.user(new_nick))
+ rescue RecurseTooDeep => e
+ error e
+ end
end
end
end