dr.botzo/Module.py

231 lines
8.9 KiB
Python

"""
Module - dr.botzo modular functionality base class
Copyright (C) 2010 Brian S. Stephan
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
"""
import inspect
import re
import sys
from irclib import irclib
class Module(object):
"""Declare a base class used for creating classes that have real functionality."""
def __init__(self, config, server, modlist):
"""
Construct a feature module. Inheritors should not do anything special
here, instead they should implement register_handlers and do, or else this will
be a very uneventful affair.
Classes that are interested in allowing an indirect call to their do routine
should add themselves to modlist inside their __init__. This will allow other
modules to call do and see if anything can handle text they may have seen (such
as in recursive commands).
"""
self.config = config
self.server = server
self.modlist = modlist
self.register_handlers(server)
# add self to the object list
modlist.append(self)
# print what was loaded, for debugging
print("loaded " + self.__class__.__name__)
def register_handlers(self, server):
"""
Hook handler functions into the IRC library. This is called by __init__ and sets
up server.add_global_handlers. Classes inheriting from Module should implement this
and set up the appropriate handlers, e.g.:
server.add_global_handler('privmsg', self.on_privmsg)
Module.on_pubmsg and Module.on_privmsg are defined so far, the rest, you're on your
own.
"""
print "looks like someone forgot to implement register_handlers!"
def unregister_handlers(self):
"""
Unhook handler functions from the IRC library. Inverse of the above.
This is called by reload, to remove the soon-to-be old object from the server
global handlers (or whatever has been added via register_handlers). Classes
inheriting from Module should implement this, e.g.:
server.remove_global_handler('privmsg', self.on_privmsg)
"""
print "looks like someone forgot to implement unregister_handlers!"
def on_pubmsg(self, connection, event):
"""
Handle pubmsg events. Does some variable setup and initial sanity checking before
calling Module.do, which should be implemented by subclasses and what can be
ultimately responsible for the work.
Of course, you are free to reimplement on_pubmsg on your own too.
"""
nick = irclib.nm_to_n(event.source())
userhost = irclib.nm_to_uh(event.source())
replypath = event.target()
what = event.arguments()[0]
admin_unlocked = False
try:
if userhost == self.config.get('admin', 'userhost'):
admin_unlocked = True
except NoOptionError: pass
# only do commands if the bot has been addressed directly
addressed_pattern = '^' + connection.get_nickname() + '[:,]?\s+'
addressed_re = re.compile(addressed_pattern)
if not addressed_re.match(what):
return
else:
what = addressed_re.sub('', what)
if replypath is not None:
what = self.try_recursion(connection, event, nick, userhost, replypath, what, admin_unlocked)
# try reloading
self.reload(connection, event, nick, userhost, replypath, what, admin_unlocked)
self.do(connection, event, nick, userhost, replypath, what, admin_unlocked)
def on_privmsg(self, connection, event):
"""
Handle privmsg events. Does some variable setup and initial sanity checking before
calling Module.do, which should be implemented by subclasses and what can be
ultimately responsible for the work.
Of course, you are free to reimplement on_privmsg on your own too.
"""
nick = irclib.nm_to_n(event.source())
userhost = irclib.nm_to_uh(event.source())
replypath = nick
what = event.arguments()[0]
admin_unlocked = False
try:
if userhost == self.config.get('admin', 'userhost'):
admin_unlocked = True
except NoOptionError: pass
if replypath is not None:
what = self.try_recursion(connection, event, nick, userhost, replypath, what, admin_unlocked)
self.do(connection, event, nick, userhost, replypath, what, admin_unlocked)
def reload(self, connection, event, nick, userhost, replypath, what, admin_unlocked):
"""Reload this module's code and then create a new object of it, removing the old."""
whats = what.split(' ')
if whats[0] == 'reload' and admin_unlocked:
# re-read and re-compile module from source on disk
reload(sys.modules[self.__module__])
# find the class declaration for the current module
for name, obj in inspect.getmembers(sys.modules[self.__module__]):
if inspect.isclass(obj) and str(obj).find(self.__module__) > 0:
# remove existing object from in-memory stuff
self.modlist.remove(self)
self.unregister_handlers()
# create new object, like how we did initially
obj(self.config, self.server, self.modlist)
def reply(self, connection, replypath, replystr):
"""
Reply over IRC to replypath or return a string with the reply.
Utility method to do the proper type of reply (either to IRC, or as a return
to caller) depending on the target. Pretty simple, and included in the base
class for convenience. It should be the last step for callers:
return self.reply(connection, replypath, 'hello')
"""
if replypath is None:
return replystr
else:
connection.privmsg(replypath, replystr)
def try_recursion(self, connection, event, nick, userhost, replypath, what, admin_unlocked):
"""
Scan message for subcommands to execute and use as part of this command.
Upon seeing a line intended for this module, see if there are subcommands
that we should do what is basically a text replacement on. The intent is to
allow things like the following:
command arg1 [anothercommand arg1 arg2]
where the output of anothercommand is command's arg2..n. It's mostly for
amusement purposes, but maybe there are legitimate uses. This is intended to
be attempted after you've determined the line should be handled by your module.
"""
start_idx = what.find('[')
subcmd = what[start_idx+1:]
end_idx = subcmd.rfind(']')
subcmd = subcmd[:end_idx]
attempt = what
if start_idx == -1 or end_idx == -1:
# no nested commands at all if replypath is a real value, so don't do a damn thing
if replypath is not None:
return attempt
# no more replacements found, see if what we had is workable
else:
for module in self.modlist:
ret = module.do(connection, event, nick, userhost, None, attempt, admin_unlocked)
if ret is not None:
return ret
# if we got here, it's not workable. just return what we got
return attempt
else:
# we have a subcmd, see if there's another one nested
ret = self.try_recursion(connection, event, nick, userhost, None, subcmd, admin_unlocked)
if ret is not None:
blarg = attempt.replace('['+subcmd+']', ret)
if replypath is not None:
return blarg
else:
return self.try_recursion(connection, event, nick, userhost, None, blarg, admin_unlocked)
else:
return attempt
def do(self, connection, event, nick, userhost, replypath, what, admin_unlocked):
"""
Do the primary thing this module was intended to do.
Implement this method in your subclass to have a fairly-automatic hook into
IRC functionality. This is called by the default on_pubmsg and on_privmsg
"""
print "looks like someone forgot to implement do!"
# vi:tabstop=4:expandtab:autoindent
# kate: indent-mode python;indent-width 4;replace-tabs on;