1POE::Component::IRC(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentationPOE::Component::IRC(3)
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6 POE::Component::IRC - A fully event-driven IRC client module
7
9 # A simple Rot13 'encryption' bot
10
11 use strict;
12 use warnings;
13 use POE qw(Component::IRC);
14
15 my $nickname = 'Flibble' . $$;
16 my $ircname = 'Flibble the Sailor Bot';
17 my $server = 'irc.perl.org';
18
19 my @channels = ('#Blah', '#Foo', '#Bar');
20
21 # We create a new PoCo-IRC object
22 my $irc = POE::Component::IRC->spawn(
23 nick => $nickname,
24 ircname => $ircname,
25 server => $server,
26 ) or die "Oh noooo! $!";
27
28 POE::Session->create(
29 package_states => [
30 main => [ qw(_default _start irc_001 irc_public) ],
31 ],
32 heap => { irc => $irc },
33 );
34
35 $poe_kernel->run();
36
37 sub _start {
38 my $heap = $_[HEAP];
39
40 # retrieve our component's object from the heap where we stashed it
41 my $irc = $heap->{irc};
42
43 $irc->yield( register => 'all' );
44 $irc->yield( connect => { } );
45 return;
46 }
47
48 sub irc_001 {
49 my $sender = $_[SENDER];
50
51 # Since this is an irc_* event, we can get the component's object by
52 # accessing the heap of the sender. Then we register and connect to the
53 # specified server.
54 my $irc = $sender->get_heap();
55
56 print "Connected to ", $irc->server_name(), "\n";
57
58 # we join our channels
59 $irc->yield( join => $_ ) for @channels;
60 return;
61 }
62
63 sub irc_public {
64 my ($sender, $who, $where, $what) = @_[SENDER, ARG0 .. ARG2];
65 my $nick = ( split /!/, $who )[0];
66 my $channel = $where->[0];
67
68 if ( my ($rot13) = $what =~ /^rot13 (.+)/ ) {
69 $rot13 =~ tr[a-zA-Z][n-za-mN-ZA-M];
70 $irc->yield( privmsg => $channel => "$nick: $rot13" );
71 }
72 return;
73 }
74
75 # We registered for all events, this will produce some debug info.
76 sub _default {
77 my ($event, $args) = @_[ARG0 .. $#_];
78 my @output = ( "$event: " );
79
80 for my $arg (@$args) {
81 if ( ref $arg eq 'ARRAY' ) {
82 push( @output, '[' . join(', ', @$arg ) . ']' );
83 }
84 else {
85 push ( @output, "'$arg'" );
86 }
87 }
88 print join ' ', @output, "\n";
89 return;
90 }
91
93 POE::Component::IRC is a POE component (who'd have guessed?) which acts
94 as an easily controllable IRC client for your other POE components and
95 sessions. You create an IRC component and tell it what events your
96 session cares about and where to connect to, and it sends back
97 interesting IRC events when they happen. You make the client do things
98 by sending it events. That's all there is to it. Cool, no?
99
100 [Note that using this module requires some familiarity with the details
101 of the IRC protocol. I'd advise you to read up on the gory details of
102 RFC 1459 (<http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1459.html>) before you get
103 started. Keep the list of server numeric codes handy while you program.
104 Needless to say, you'll also need a good working knowledge of POE, or
105 this document will be of very little use to you.]
106
107 The POE::Component::IRC distribution has a docs/ folder with a
108 collection of salient documentation including the pertinent RFCs.
109
110 POE::Component::IRC consists of a POE::Session that manages the IRC
111 connection and dispatches "irc_" prefixed events to interested sessions
112 and an object that can be used to access additional information using
113 methods.
114
115 Sessions register their interest in receiving "irc_" events by sending
116 "register" to the component. One would usually do this in your "_start"
117 handler. Your session will continue to receive events until you
118 "unregister". The component will continue to stay around until you tell
119 it not to with "shutdown".
120
121 The SYNOPSIS demonstrates a fairly basic bot.
122
123 See POE::Component::IRC::Cookbook for more examples.
124
125 Useful subclasses
126 Included with POE::Component::IRC are a number of useful subclasses. As
127 they are subclasses they support all the methods, etc. documented here
128 and have additional methods and quirks which are documented separately:
129
130 • POE::Component::IRC::State
131
132 POE::Component::IRC::State provides all the functionality of
133 POE::Component::IRC but also tracks IRC state entities such as
134 nicks and channels.
135
136 • POE::Component::IRC::Qnet
137
138 POE::Component::IRC::Qnet is POE::Component::IRC tweaked for use on
139 Quakenet IRC network.
140
141 • POE::Component::IRC::Qnet::State
142
143 POE::Component::IRC::Qnet::State is a tweaked version of
144 POE::Component::IRC::State for use on the Quakenet IRC network.
145
146 The Plugin system
147 As of 3.7, PoCo-IRC sports a plugin system. The documentation for it
148 can be read by looking at POE::Component::IRC::Plugin. That is not a
149 subclass, just a placeholder for documentation!
150
151 A number of useful plugins have made their way into the core
152 distribution:
153
154 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::DCC
155
156 Provides DCC support. Loaded by default.
157
158 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::AutoJoin
159
160 Keeps you on your favorite channels throughout reconnects and even
161 kicks.
162
163 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::Connector
164
165 Glues an irc bot to an IRC network, i.e. deals with maintaining
166 ircd connections.
167
168 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::BotTraffic
169
170 Under normal circumstances irc bots do not normal the msgs and
171 public msgs that they generate themselves. This plugin enables you
172 to handle those events.
173
174 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::BotAddressed
175
176 Generates "irc_bot_addressed" / "irc_bot_mentioned" /
177 "irc_bot_mentioned_action" events whenever your bot's name comes up
178 in channel discussion.
179
180 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::BotCommand
181
182 Provides an easy way to handle commands issued to your bot.
183
184 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::Console
185
186 See inside the component. See what events are being sent. Generate
187 irc commands manually. A TCP based console.
188
189 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::FollowTail
190
191 Follow the tail of an ever-growing file.
192
193 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::Logger
194
195 Log public and private messages to disk.
196
197 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::NickServID
198
199 Identify with NickServ when needed.
200
201 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::Proxy
202
203 A lightweight IRC proxy/bouncer.
204
205 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::CTCP
206
207 Automagically generates replies to ctcp version, time and userinfo
208 queries.
209
210 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::PlugMan
211
212 An experimental Plugin Manager plugin.
213
214 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::NickReclaim
215
216 Automagically deals with your nickname being in use and reclaiming
217 it.
218
219 • POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::CycleEmpty
220
221 Cycles (parts and rejoins) channels if they become empty and
222 opless, in order to gain ops.
223
225 Both constructors return an object. The object is also available within
226 'irc_' event handlers by using "$_[SENDER]->get_heap()". See also
227 "register" and "irc_registered".
228
229 "spawn"
230 Takes a number of arguments, all of which are optional. All the options
231 below may be supplied to the "connect" input event as well, except for
232 'alias', 'options', 'NoDNS', 'debug', and 'plugin_debug'.
233
234 • 'alias', a name (kernel alias) that this instance will be known by;
235
236 • 'options', a hashref containing POE::Session options;
237
238 • 'Server', the server name;
239
240 • 'Port', the remote port number;
241
242 • 'Password', an optional password for restricted servers;
243
244 • 'Nick', your client's IRC nickname;
245
246 • 'Username', your client's username;
247
248 • 'Ircname', some cute comment or something.
249
250 • 'Bitmode', an integer representing your initial user modes set in
251 the USER command. See RFC 2812. If you do not set this, 8 (+i) will
252 be used.
253
254 • 'UseSSL', set to some true value if you want to connect using SSL.
255
256 • 'SSLCert', set to a SSL Certificate(PAM encoded) to connect using a
257 client cert
258
259 • 'SSLKey', set to a SSL Key(PAM encoded) to connect using a client
260 cert
261
262 • 'SSLCtx', set to a SSL Context to configure the SSL Connection
263
264 The 'SSLCert' and 'SSLKey' both need to be specified. The 'SSLCtx'
265 takes precedence specified.
266
267 • 'Raw', set to some true value to enable the component to send
268 "irc_raw" and "irc_raw_out" events.
269
270 • 'LocalAddr', which local IP address on a multihomed box to connect
271 as;
272
273 • 'LocalPort', the local TCP port to open your socket on;
274
275 • 'NoDNS', set this to 1 to disable DNS lookups using PoCo-Client-
276 DNS. (See note below).
277
278 • 'Flood', when true, it disables the component's flood protection
279 algorithms, allowing it to send messages to an IRC server at full
280 speed. Disconnects and k-lines are some common side effects of
281 flooding IRC servers, so care should be used when enabling this
282 option. Default is false.
283
284 Two new attributes are 'Proxy' and 'ProxyPort' for sending your
285 =item * 'Proxy', IP address or server name of a proxy server to
286 use.
287
288 • 'ProxyPort', which tcp port on the proxy to connect to.
289
290 • 'NATAddr', what other clients see as your IP address.
291
292 • 'DCCPorts', an arrayref containing tcp ports that can be used for
293 DCC sends.
294
295 • 'Resolver', provide a POE::Component::Client::DNS object for the
296 component to use.
297
298 • 'msg_length', the maximum length of IRC messages, in bytes.
299 Default is 450. The IRC component shortens all messages longer than
300 this value minus the length of your current nickname. IRC only
301 allows raw protocol lines messages that are 512 bytes or shorter,
302 including the trailing "\r\n". This is most relevant to long
303 PRIVMSGs. The IRC component can't be sure how long your user@host
304 mask will be every time you send a message, considering that most
305 networks mangle the 'user' part and some even replace the whole
306 string (think FreeNode cloaks). If you have an unusually long
307 user@host mask you might want to decrease this value if you're
308 prone to sending long messages. Conversely, if you have an
309 unusually short one, you can increase this value if you want to be
310 able to send as long a message as possible. Be careful though,
311 increase it too much and the IRC server might disconnect you with a
312 "Request too long" message when you try to send a message that's
313 too long.
314
315 • 'debug', if set to a true value causes the IRC component to print
316 every message sent to and from the server, as well as print some
317 warnings when it receives malformed messages. This option will be
318 enabled if the "POCOIRC_DEBUG" environment variable is set to a
319 true value.
320
321 • 'plugin_debug', set to some true value to print plugin debug info,
322 default 0. Plugins are processed inside an eval. When you enable
323 this option, you will be notified when (and why) a plugin raises an
324 exception. This option will be enabled if the "POCOIRC_DEBUG"
325 environment variable is set to a true value.
326
327 • 'socks_proxy', specify a SOCKS4/SOCKS4a proxy to use.
328
329 • 'socks_port', the SOCKS port to use, defaults to 1080 if not
330 specified.
331
332 • 'socks_id', specify a SOCKS user_id. Default is none.
333
334 • 'useipv6', enable the use of IPv6 for connections.
335
336 • 'webirc', enable the use of WEBIRC to spoof host/IP. You must have
337 a WEBIRC password set up on the IRC server/network (so will only
338 work for servers which trust you to spoof the IP & host the
339 connection is from) - value should be a hashref containing keys
340 "pass", "user", "host" and "ip".
341
342 "spawn" will supply reasonable defaults for any of these attributes
343 which are missing, so don't feel obliged to write them all out.
344
345 If the component finds that POE::Component::Client::DNS is installed it
346 will use that to resolve the server name passed. Disable this behaviour
347 if you like, by passing: "NoDNS => 1".
348
349 IRC traffic through a proxy server. 'Proxy''s value should be the IP
350 address or server name of the proxy. 'ProxyPort''s value should be the
351 port on the proxy to connect to. "connect" will default to using the
352 actual IRC server's port if you provide a proxy but omit the proxy's
353 port. These are for HTTP Proxies. See 'socks_proxy' for SOCKS4 and
354 SOCKS4a support.
355
356 For those people who run bots behind firewalls and/or Network Address
357 Translation there are two additional attributes for DCC. 'DCCPorts', is
358 an arrayref of ports to use when initiating DCC connections.
359 'NATAddr', is the NAT'ed IP address that your bot is hidden behind,
360 this is sent whenever you do DCC.
361
362 SSL support requires POE::Component::SSLify, as well as an IRC server
363 that supports SSL connections. If you're missing
364 POE::Component::SSLify, specifying 'UseSSL' will do nothing. The
365 default is to not try to use SSL.
366
367 'Resolver', requires a POE::Component::Client::DNS object. Useful when
368 spawning multiple poco-irc sessions, saves the overhead of multiple dns
369 sessions.
370
371 'NoDNS' has different results depending on whether it is set with
372 "spawn" or "connect". Setting it with "spawn", disables the creation of
373 the POE::Component::Client::DNS completely. Setting it with "connect"
374 on the other hand allows the PoCo-Client-DNS session to be spawned, but
375 will disable any dns lookups using it.
376
377 SOCKS4 proxy support is provided by 'socks_proxy', 'socks_port' and
378 'socks_id' parameters. If something goes wrong with the SOCKS
379 connection you should get a warning on STDERR. This is fairly
380 experimental currently.
381
382 IPv6 support is available for connecting to IPv6 enabled ircds (it
383 won't work for DCC though). To enable it, specify 'useipv6'. Perl
384 >=5.14 or Socket6 (for older Perls) is required. If you that and
385 POE::Component::Client::DNS installed and specify a hostname that
386 resolves to an IPv6 address then IPv6 will be used. If you specify an
387 ipv6 'localaddr' then IPv6 will be used.
388
389 "new"
390 This method is deprecated. See the "spawn" method instead. The first
391 argument should be a name (kernel alias) which this new connection will
392 be known by. Optionally takes more arguments (see "spawn" as name/value
393 pairs. Returns a POE::Component::IRC object. :)
394
395 Note: Use of this method will generate a warning. There are currently
396 no plans to make it die() >;]
397
399 Information
400 "server"
401
402 Takes no arguments. Returns the server host we are currently connected
403 to (or trying to connect to).
404
405 "port"
406
407 Takes no arguments. Returns the server port we are currently connected
408 to (or trying to connect to).
409
410 "server_name"
411
412 Takes no arguments. Returns the name of the IRC server that the
413 component is currently connected to.
414
415 "server_version"
416
417 Takes no arguments. Returns the IRC server version.
418
419 "nick_name"
420
421 Takes no arguments. Returns a scalar containing the current nickname
422 that the bot is using.
423
424 "localaddr"
425
426 Takes no arguments. Returns the IP address being used.
427
428 "send_queue"
429
430 The component provides anti-flood throttling. This method takes no
431 arguments and returns a scalar representing the number of messages that
432 are queued up waiting for dispatch to the irc server.
433
434 "logged_in"
435
436 Takes no arguments. Returns true or false depending on whether the IRC
437 component is logged into an IRC network.
438
439 "connected"
440
441 Takes no arguments. Returns true or false depending on whether the
442 component's socket is currently connected.
443
444 "disconnect"
445
446 Takes no arguments. Terminates the socket connection disgracefully >;o]
447
448 "isupport"
449
450 Takes one argument, a server capability to query. Returns "undef" on
451 failure or a value representing the applicable capability. A full list
452 of capabilities is available at
453 <http://www.irc.org/tech_docs/005.html>.
454
455 "isupport_dump_keys"
456
457 Takes no arguments, returns a list of the available server capabilities
458 keys, which can be used with "isupport".
459
460 "resolver"
461
462 Returns a reference to the POE::Component::Client::DNS object that is
463 internally created by the component.
464
465 Events
466 "session_id"
467
468 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
469
470 Takes no arguments. Returns the ID of the component's session. Ideal
471 for posting events to the component.
472
473 $kernel->post($irc->session_id() => 'mode' => $channel => '+o' => $dude);
474
475 "session_alias"
476
477 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
478
479 Takes no arguments. Returns the session alias that has been set through
480 "spawn"'s 'alias' argument.
481
482 "raw_events"
483
484 With no arguments, returns true or false depending on whether "irc_raw"
485 and "irc_raw_out" events are being generated or not. Provide a true or
486 false argument to enable or disable this feature accordingly.
487
488 "yield"
489
490 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
491
492 This method provides an alternative object based means of posting
493 events to the component. First argument is the event to post, following
494 arguments are sent as arguments to the resultant post.
495
496 $irc->yield(mode => $channel => '+o' => $dude);
497
498 "call"
499
500 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
501
502 This method provides an alternative object based means of calling
503 events to the component. First argument is the event to call, following
504 arguments are sent as arguments to the resultant call.
505
506 $irc->call(mode => $channel => '+o' => $dude);
507
508 "delay"
509
510 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
511
512 This method provides a way of posting delayed events to the component.
513 The first argument is an arrayref consisting of the delayed command to
514 post and any command arguments. The second argument is the time in
515 seconds that one wishes to delay the command being posted.
516
517 my $alarm_id = $irc->delay( [ mode => $channel => '+o' => $dude ], 60 );
518
519 Returns an alarm ID that can be used with "delay_remove" to cancel the
520 delayed event. This will be undefined if something went wrong.
521
522 "delay_remove"
523
524 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
525
526 This method removes a previously scheduled delayed event from the
527 component. Takes one argument, the "alarm_id" that was returned by a
528 "delay" method call.
529
530 my $arrayref = $irc->delay_remove( $alarm_id );
531
532 Returns an arrayref that was originally requested to be delayed.
533
534 "send_event"
535
536 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
537
538 Sends an event through the component's event handling system. These
539 will get processed by plugins then by registered sessions. First
540 argument is the event name, followed by any parameters for that event.
541
542 "send_event_next"
543
544 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
545
546 This sends an event right after the one that's currently being
547 processed. Useful if you want to generate some event which is directly
548 related to another event so you want them to appear together. This
549 method can only be called when POE::Component::IRC is processing an
550 event, e.g. from one of your event handlers. Takes the same arguments
551 as "send_event".
552
553 "send_event_now"
554
555 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
556
557 This will send an event to be processed immediately. This means that if
558 an event is currently being processed and there are plugins or sessions
559 which will receive it after you do, then an event sent with
560 "send_event_now" will be received by those plugins/sessions before the
561 current event. Takes the same arguments as "send_event".
562
563 Plugins
564 "pipeline"
565
566 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
567
568 Returns the Object::Pluggable::Pipeline object.
569
570 "plugin_add"
571
572 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
573
574 Accepts two arguments:
575
576 The alias for the plugin
577 The actual plugin object
578 Any number of extra arguments
579
580 The alias is there for the user to refer to it, as it is possible to
581 have multiple plugins of the same kind active in one Object::Pluggable
582 object.
583
584 This method goes through the pipeline's "push()" method, which will
585 call "$plugin->plugin_register($pluggable, @args)".
586
587 Returns the number of plugins now in the pipeline if plugin was
588 initialized, "undef"/an empty list if not.
589
590 "plugin_del"
591
592 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
593
594 Accepts the following arguments:
595
596 The alias for the plugin or the plugin object itself
597 Any number of extra arguments
598
599 This method goes through the pipeline's "remove()" method, which will
600 call "$plugin->plugin_unregister($pluggable, @args)".
601
602 Returns the plugin object if the plugin was removed, "undef"/an empty
603 list if not.
604
605 "plugin_get"
606
607 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
608
609 Accepts the following arguments:
610
611 The alias for the plugin
612
613 This method goes through the pipeline's "get()" method.
614
615 Returns the plugin object if it was found, "undef"/an empty list if
616 not.
617
618 "plugin_list"
619
620 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
621
622 Takes no arguments.
623
624 Returns a hashref of plugin objects, keyed on alias, or an empty list
625 if there are no plugins loaded.
626
627 "plugin_order"
628
629 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
630
631 Takes no arguments.
632
633 Returns an arrayref of plugin objects, in the order which they are
634 encountered in the pipeline.
635
636 "plugin_register"
637
638 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
639
640 Accepts the following arguments:
641
642 The plugin object
643 The type of the hook (the hook types are specified with _pluggable_init()'s 'types')
644 The event name[s] to watch
645
646 The event names can be as many as possible, or an arrayref. They
647 correspond to the prefixed events and naturally, arbitrary events too.
648
649 You do not need to supply events with the prefix in front of them, just
650 the names.
651
652 It is possible to register for all events by specifying 'all' as an
653 event.
654
655 Returns 1 if everything checked out fine, "undef"/an empty list if
656 something is seriously wrong.
657
658 "plugin_unregister"
659
660 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
661
662 Accepts the following arguments:
663
664 The plugin object
665 The type of the hook (the hook types are specified with _pluggable_init()'s 'types')
666 The event name[s] to unwatch
667
668 The event names can be as many as possible, or an arrayref. They
669 correspond to the prefixed events and naturally, arbitrary events too.
670
671 You do not need to supply events with the prefix in front of them, just
672 the names.
673
674 It is possible to register for all events by specifying 'all' as an
675 event.
676
677 Returns 1 if all the event name[s] was unregistered, undef if some was
678 not found.
679
681 How to talk to your new IRC component... here's the events we'll
682 accept. These are events that are posted to the component, either via
683 "$poe_kernel->post()" or via the object method "yield".
684
685 So the following would be functionally equivalent:
686
687 sub irc_001 {
688 my ($kernel,$sender) = @_[KERNEL,SENDER];
689 my $irc = $sender->get_heap(); # obtain the poco's object
690
691 $irc->yield( privmsg => 'foo' => 'Howdy!' );
692 $kernel->post( $sender => privmsg => 'foo' => 'Howdy!' );
693 $kernel->post( $irc->session_id() => privmsg => 'foo' => 'Howdy!' );
694 $kernel->post( $irc->session_alias() => privmsg => 'foo' => 'Howdy!' );
695
696 return;
697 }
698
699 Important Commands
700 "register"
701
702 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
703
704 Takes N arguments: a list of event names that your session wants to
705 listen for, minus the "irc_" prefix. So, for instance, if you just want
706 a bot that keeps track of which people are on a channel, you'll need to
707 listen for JOINs, PARTs, QUITs, and KICKs to people on the channel
708 you're in. You'd tell POE::Component::IRC that you want those events by
709 saying this:
710
711 $kernel->post('my client', 'register', qw(join part quit kick));
712
713 Then, whenever people enter or leave a channel your bot is on (forcibly
714 or not), your session will receive events with names like "irc_join",
715 "irc_kick", etc., which you can use to update a list of people on the
716 channel.
717
718 Registering for 'all' will cause it to send all IRC-related events to
719 you; this is the easiest way to handle it. See the test script for an
720 example.
721
722 Registering will generate an "irc_registered" event that your session
723 can trap. "ARG0" is the components object. Useful if you want to bolt
724 PoCo-IRC's new features such as Plugins into a bot coded to the older
725 deprecated API. If you are using the new API, ignore this :)
726
727 Registering with multiple component sessions can be tricky, especially
728 if one wants to marry up sessions/objects, etc. Check the SIGNALS
729 section for an alternative method of registering with multiple poco-
730 ircs.
731
732 Starting with version 4.96, if you spawn the component from inside
733 another POE session, the component will automatically register that
734 session as wanting 'all' irc events. That session will receive an
735 "irc_registered" event indicating that the component is up and ready to
736 go.
737
738 "unregister"
739
740 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
741
742 Takes N arguments: a list of event names which you don't want to
743 receive. If you've previously done a "register" for a particular event
744 which you no longer care about, this event will tell the IRC connection
745 to stop sending them to you. (If you haven't, it just ignores you. No
746 big deal.)
747
748 If you have registered with 'all', attempting to unregister individual
749 events such as 'mode', etc. will not work. This is a 'feature'.
750
751 "connect"
752
753 Takes one argument: a hash reference of attributes for the new
754 connection, see "spawn" for details. This event tells the IRC client to
755 connect to a new/different server. If it has a connection already open,
756 it'll close it gracefully before reconnecting.
757
758 "ctcp" and "ctcpreply"
759
760 Sends a CTCP query or response to the nick(s) or channel(s) which you
761 specify. Takes 2 arguments: the nick or channel to send a message to
762 (use an array reference here to specify multiple recipients), and the
763 plain text of the message to send (the CTCP quoting will be handled for
764 you). The "/me" command in popular IRC clients is actually a CTCP
765 action.
766
767 # Doing a /me
768 $irc->yield(ctcp => $channel => 'ACTION dances.');
769
770 "join"
771
772 Tells your IRC client to join a single channel of your choice. Takes at
773 least one arg: the channel name (required) and the channel key
774 (optional, for password-protected channels).
775
776 "kick"
777
778 Tell the IRC server to forcibly evict a user from a particular channel.
779 Takes at least 2 arguments: a channel name, the nick of the user to
780 boot, and an optional witty message to show them as they sail out the
781 door.
782
783 "remove"
784
785 Tell the IRC server to forcibly evict a user from a particular channel.
786 Takes at least 2 arguments: a channel name, the nick of the user to
787 boot, and an optional witty message to show them as they sail out the
788 door. Similar to KICK but does an enforced PART instead. Not supported
789 by all servers.
790
791 "mode"
792
793 Request a mode change on a particular channel or user. Takes at least
794 one argument: the mode changes to effect, as a single string (e.g.
795 "#mychan +sm-p+o"), and any number of optional operands to the mode
796 changes (nicks, hostmasks, channel keys, whatever.) Or just pass them
797 all as one big string and it'll still work, whatever. I regret that I
798 haven't the patience now to write a detailed explanation, but serious
799 IRC users know the details anyhow.
800
801 "nick"
802
803 Allows you to change your nickname. Takes exactly one argument: the new
804 username that you'd like to be known as.
805
806 "nickserv"
807
808 Talks to NickServ, on networks which have it. Takes any number of
809 arguments.
810
811 "notice"
812
813 Sends a NOTICE message to the nick(s) or channel(s) which you specify.
814 Takes 2 arguments: the nick or channel to send a notice to (use an
815 array reference here to specify multiple recipients), and the text of
816 the notice to send.
817
818 "part"
819
820 Tell your IRC client to leave the channels which you pass to it. Takes
821 any number of arguments: channel names to depart from. If the last
822 argument doesn't begin with a channel name identifier or contains a
823 space character, it will be treated as a PART message and dealt with
824 accordingly.
825
826 "privmsg"
827
828 Sends a public or private message to the nick(s) or channel(s) which
829 you specify. Takes 2 arguments: the nick or channel to send a message
830 to (use an array reference here to specify multiple recipients), and
831 the text of the message to send.
832
833 Have a look at the constants in IRC::Utils if you would like to use
834 formatting and color codes in your messages.
835
836 $irc->yield('primvsg', '#mychannel', 'Hello there');
837
838 # same, but with a green Hello
839 use IRC::Utils qw(GREEN NORMAL);
840 $irc->yield('primvsg', '#mychannel', GREEN.'Hello'.NORMAL.' there');
841
842 "quit"
843
844 Tells the IRC server to disconnect you. Takes one optional argument:
845 some clever, witty string that other users in your channels will see as
846 you leave. You can expect to get an "irc_disconnected" event shortly
847 after sending this.
848
849 "shutdown"
850
851 By default, POE::Component::IRC sessions never go away. Even after
852 they're disconnected, they're still sitting around in the background,
853 waiting for you to call "connect" on them again to reconnect. (Whether
854 this behavior is the Right Thing is doubtful, but I don't want to break
855 backwards compatibility at this point.) You can send the IRC session a
856 "shutdown" event manually to make it delete itself.
857
858 If you are logged into an IRC server, "shutdown" first will send a quit
859 message and wait to be disconnected. It will wait for up to 5 seconds
860 before forcibly disconnecting from the IRC server. If you provide an
861 argument, that will be used as the QUIT message. If you provide two
862 arguments, the second one will be used as the timeout (in seconds).
863
864 Terminating multiple components can be tricky. Check the SIGNALS
865 section for a method of shutting down multiple poco-ircs.
866
867 "topic"
868
869 Retrieves or sets the topic for particular channel. If called with just
870 the channel name as an argument, it will ask the server to return the
871 current topic. If called with the channel name and a string, it will
872 set the channel topic to that string. Supply an empty string to unset a
873 channel topic.
874
875 "debug"
876
877 Takes one argument: 0 to turn debugging off or 1 to turn debugging on.
878 This flips the debugging flag in POE::Filter::IRCD,
879 POE::Filter::IRC::Compat, and POE::Component::IRC. This has the same
880 effect as setting Debug in "spawn" or "connect".
881
882 Not-So-Important Commands
883 "admin"
884
885 Asks your server who your friendly neighborhood server administrators
886 are. If you prefer, you can pass it a server name to query, instead of
887 asking the server you're currently on.
888
889 "away"
890
891 When sent with an argument (a message describig where you went), the
892 server will note that you're now away from your machine or otherwise
893 preoccupied, and pass your message along to anyone who tries to
894 communicate with you. When sent without arguments, it tells the server
895 that you're back and paying attention.
896
897 "cap"
898
899 Used to query/enable/disable IRC protocol capabilities. Takes any
900 number of arguments.
901
902 "dcc*"
903
904 See the DCC plugin (loaded by default) documentation for DCC-related
905 commands.
906
907 "info"
908
909 Basically the same as the "version" command, except that the server is
910 permitted to return any information about itself that it thinks is
911 relevant. There's some nice, specific standards-writing for ya, eh?
912
913 "invite"
914
915 Invites another user onto an invite-only channel. Takes 2 arguments:
916 the nick of the user you wish to admit, and the name of the channel to
917 invite them to.
918
919 "ison"
920
921 Asks the IRC server which users out of a list of nicknames are
922 currently online. Takes any number of arguments: a list of nicknames to
923 query the IRC server about.
924
925 "links"
926
927 Asks the server for a list of servers connected to the IRC network.
928 Takes two optional arguments, which I'm too lazy to document here, so
929 all you would-be linklooker writers should probably go dig up the RFC.
930
931 "list"
932
933 Asks the server for a list of visible channels and their topics. Takes
934 any number of optional arguments: names of channels to get topic
935 information for. If called without any channel names, it'll list every
936 visible channel on the IRC network. This is usually a really big list,
937 so don't do this often.
938
939 "motd"
940
941 Request the server's "Message of the Day", a document which typically
942 contains stuff like the server's acceptable use policy and admin
943 contact email addresses, et cetera. Normally you'll automatically
944 receive this when you log into a server, but if you want it again,
945 here's how to do it. If you'd like to get the MOTD for a server other
946 than the one you're logged into, pass it the server's hostname as an
947 argument; otherwise, no arguments.
948
949 "names"
950
951 Asks the server for a list of nicknames on particular channels. Takes
952 any number of arguments: names of channels to get lists of users for.
953 If called without any channel names, it'll tell you the nicks of
954 everyone on the IRC network. This is a really big list, so don't do
955 this much.
956
957 "quote"
958
959 Sends a raw line of text to the server. Takes one argument: a string of
960 a raw IRC command to send to the server. It is more optimal to use the
961 events this module supplies instead of writing raw IRC commands
962 yourself.
963
964 "stats"
965
966 Returns some information about a server. Kinda complicated and not
967 terribly commonly used, so look it up in the RFC if you're curious.
968 Takes as many arguments as you please.
969
970 "time"
971
972 Asks the server what time it thinks it is, which it will return in a
973 human-readable form. Takes one optional argument: a server name to
974 query. If not supplied, defaults to current server.
975
976 "trace"
977
978 If you pass a server name or nick along with this request, it asks the
979 server for the list of servers in between you and the thing you
980 mentioned. If sent with no arguments, it will show you all the servers
981 which are connected to your current server.
982
983 "users"
984
985 Asks the server how many users are logged into it. Defaults to the
986 server you're currently logged into; however, you can pass a server
987 name as the first argument to query some other machine instead.
988
989 "version"
990
991 Asks the server about the version of ircd that it's running. Takes one
992 optional argument: a server name to query. If not supplied, defaults to
993 current server.
994
995 "who"
996
997 Lists the logged-on users matching a particular channel name, hostname,
998 nickname, or what-have-you. Takes one optional argument: a string for
999 it to search for. Wildcards are allowed; in the absence of this
1000 argument, it will return everyone who's currently logged in (bad move).
1001 Tack an "o" on the end if you want to list only IRCops, as per the RFC.
1002
1003 "whois"
1004
1005 Queries the IRC server for detailed information about a particular
1006 user. Takes any number of arguments: nicknames or hostmasks to ask for
1007 information about. As of version 3.2, you will receive an "irc_whois"
1008 event in addition to the usual numeric responses. See below for
1009 details.
1010
1011 "whowas"
1012
1013 Asks the server for information about nickname which is no longer
1014 connected. Takes at least one argument: a nickname to look up (no
1015 wildcards allowed), the optional maximum number of history entries to
1016 return, and the optional server hostname to query. As of version 3.2,
1017 you will receive an "irc_whowas" event in addition to the usual numeric
1018 responses. See below for details.
1019
1020 "ping" and "pong"
1021
1022 Included for completeness sake. The component will deal with ponging to
1023 pings automatically. Don't worry about it.
1024
1025 Purely Esoteric Commands
1026 "die"
1027
1028 Tells the IRC server you're connect to, to terminate. Only useful for
1029 IRCops, thank goodness. Takes no arguments.
1030
1031 "locops"
1032
1033 Opers-only command. This one sends a message to all currently logged-on
1034 local-opers (+l). This option is specific to EFNet.
1035
1036 "oper"
1037
1038 In the exceedingly unlikely event that you happen to be an IRC
1039 operator, you can use this command to authenticate with your IRC
1040 server. Takes 2 arguments: your username and your password.
1041
1042 "operwall"
1043
1044 Opers-only command. This one sends a message to all currently logged-on
1045 global opers. This option is specific to EFNet.
1046
1047 "rehash"
1048
1049 Tells the IRC server you're connected to, to rehash its configuration
1050 files. Only useful for IRCops. Takes no arguments.
1051
1052 "restart"
1053
1054 Tells the IRC server you're connected to, to shut down and restart
1055 itself. Only useful for IRCops, thank goodness. Takes no arguments.
1056
1057 "sconnect"
1058
1059 Tells one IRC server (which you have operator status on) to connect to
1060 another. This is actually the CONNECT command, but I already had an
1061 event called "connect", so too bad. Takes the args you'd expect: a
1062 server to connect to, an optional port to connect on, and an optional
1063 remote server to connect with, instead of the one you're currently on.
1064
1065 "squit"
1066
1067 Operator-only command used to disconnect server links. Takes two
1068 arguments, the server to disconnect and a message explaining your
1069 action.
1070
1071 "summon"
1072
1073 Don't even ask.
1074
1075 "servlist"
1076
1077 Lists the currently connected services on the network that are visible
1078 to you. Takes two optional arguments, a mask for matching service
1079 names against, and a service type.
1080
1081 "squery"
1082
1083 Sends a message to a service. Takes the same arguments as "privmsg".
1084
1085 "userhost"
1086
1087 Asks the IRC server for information about particular nicknames. (The
1088 RFC doesn't define exactly what this is supposed to return.) Takes any
1089 number of arguments: the nicknames to look up.
1090
1091 "wallops"
1092
1093 Another opers-only command. This one sends a message to all currently
1094 logged-on opers (and +w users); sort of a mass PA system for the IRC
1095 server administrators. Takes one argument: some clever, witty message
1096 to send.
1097
1099 The events you will receive (or can ask to receive) from your running
1100 IRC component. Note that all incoming event names your session will
1101 receive are prefixed by "irc_", to inhibit event namespace pollution.
1102
1103 If you wish, you can ask the client to send you every event it
1104 generates. Simply register for the event name "all". This is a lot
1105 easier than writing a huge list of things you specifically want to
1106 listen for.
1107
1108 FIXME: I'd really like to classify these somewhat ("basic", "oper",
1109 "ctcp", "dcc", "raw" or some such), and I'd welcome suggestions for
1110 ways to make this easier on the user, if you can think of some.
1111
1112 In your event handlers, $_[SENDER] is the particular component session
1113 that sent you the event. "$_[SENDER]->get_heap()" will retrieve the
1114 component's object. Useful if you want on-the-fly access to the object
1115 and its methods.
1116
1117 Important Events
1118 "irc_registered"
1119
1120 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
1121
1122 Sent once to the requesting session on registration (see "register").
1123 "ARG0" is a reference tothe component's object.
1124
1125 "irc_shutdown"
1126
1127 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
1128
1129 Sent to all registered sessions when the component has been asked to
1130 "shutdown". "ARG0" will be the session ID of the requesting session.
1131
1132 "irc_connected"
1133
1134 The IRC component will send an "irc_connected" event as soon as it
1135 establishes a connection to an IRC server, before attempting to log in.
1136 "ARG0" is the server name.
1137
1138 NOTE: When you get an "irc_connected" event, this doesn't mean you can
1139 start sending commands to the server yet. Wait until you receive an
1140 "irc_001" event (the server welcome message) before actually sending
1141 anything back to the server.
1142
1143 "irc_ctcp"
1144
1145 "irc_ctcp" events are generated upon receipt of CTCP messages, in
1146 addition to the "irc_ctcp_*" events mentioned below. They are identical
1147 in every way to these, with one difference: instead of the * being in
1148 the method name, it is prepended to the argument list. For example, if
1149 someone types "/ctcp Flibble foo bar", an "irc_ctcp" event will be sent
1150 with 'foo' as "ARG0", and the rest as given below.
1151
1152 It is not recommended that you register for both "irc_ctcp" and
1153 "irc_ctcp_*" events, since they will both be fired and presumably cause
1154 duplication.
1155
1156 "irc_ctcp_*"
1157
1158 "irc_ctcp_whatever" events are generated upon receipt of CTCP messages.
1159 For instance, receiving a CTCP PING request generates an
1160 "irc_ctcp_ping" event, CTCP ACTION (produced by typing "/me" in most
1161 IRC clients) generates an "irc_ctcp_action" event, blah blah, so on and
1162 so forth. "ARG0" is the nick!hostmask of the sender. "ARG1" is the
1163 channel/recipient name(s). "ARG2" is the text of the CTCP message. On
1164 servers supporting the IDENTIFY-MSG feature (e.g. FreeNode), CTCP
1165 ACTIONs will have "ARG3", which will be 1 if the sender has identified
1166 with NickServ, 0 otherwise.
1167
1168 Note that DCCs are handled separately -- see the DCC plugin.
1169
1170 "irc_ctcpreply_*"
1171
1172 "irc_ctcpreply_whatever" messages are just like "irc_ctcp_whatever"
1173 messages, described above, except that they're generated when a
1174 response to one of your CTCP queries comes back. They have the same
1175 arguments and such as "irc_ctcp_*" events.
1176
1177 "irc_disconnected"
1178
1179 The counterpart to "irc_connected", sent whenever a socket connection
1180 to an IRC server closes down (whether intentionally or
1181 unintentionally). "ARG0" is the server name.
1182
1183 "irc_error"
1184
1185 You get this whenever the server sends you an ERROR message. Expect
1186 this to usually be accompanied by the sudden dropping of your
1187 connection. "ARG0" is the server's explanation of the error.
1188
1189 "irc_join"
1190
1191 Sent whenever someone joins a channel that you're on. "ARG0" is the
1192 person's nick!hostmask. "ARG1" is the channel name.
1193
1194 "irc_invite"
1195
1196 Sent whenever someone offers you an invitation to another channel.
1197 "ARG0" is the person's nick!hostmask. "ARG1" is the name of the channel
1198 they want you to join.
1199
1200 "irc_kick"
1201
1202 Sent whenever someone gets booted off a channel that you're on. "ARG0"
1203 is the kicker's nick!hostmask. "ARG1" is the channel name. "ARG2" is
1204 the nick of the unfortunate kickee. "ARG3" is the explanation string
1205 for the kick.
1206
1207 "irc_mode"
1208
1209 Sent whenever someone changes a channel mode in your presence, or when
1210 you change your own user mode. "ARG0" is the nick!hostmask of that
1211 someone. "ARG1" is the channel it affects (or your nick, if it's a user
1212 mode change). "ARG2" is the mode string (i.e., "+o-b"). The rest of the
1213 args ("ARG3 .. $#_") are the operands to the mode string (nicks,
1214 hostmasks, channel keys, whatever).
1215
1216 "irc_msg"
1217
1218 Sent whenever you receive a PRIVMSG command that was addressed to you
1219 privately. "ARG0" is the nick!hostmask of the sender. "ARG1" is an
1220 array reference containing the nick(s) of the recipients. "ARG2" is the
1221 text of the message. On servers supporting the IDENTIFY-MSG feature
1222 (e.g. FreeNode), there will be an additional argument, "ARG3", which
1223 will be 1 if the sender has identified with NickServ, 0 otherwise.
1224
1225 "irc_nick"
1226
1227 Sent whenever you, or someone around you, changes nicks. "ARG0" is the
1228 nick!hostmask of the changer. "ARG1" is the new nick that they changed
1229 to.
1230
1231 "irc_notice"
1232
1233 Sent whenever you receive a NOTICE command. "ARG0" is the nick!hostmask
1234 of the sender. "ARG1" is an array reference containing the nick(s) or
1235 channel name(s) of the recipients. "ARG2" is the text of the NOTICE
1236 message.
1237
1238 "irc_part"
1239
1240 Sent whenever someone leaves a channel that you're on. "ARG0" is the
1241 person's nick!hostmask. "ARG1" is the channel name. "ARG2" is the part
1242 message.
1243
1244 "irc_public"
1245
1246 Sent whenever you receive a PRIVMSG command that was sent to a channel.
1247 "ARG0" is the nick!hostmask of the sender. "ARG1" is an array reference
1248 containing the channel name(s) of the recipients. "ARG2" is the text of
1249 the message. On servers supporting the IDENTIFY-MSG feature (e.g.
1250 FreeNode), there will be an additional argument, "ARG3", which will be
1251 1 if the sender has identified with NickServ, 0 otherwise.
1252
1253 "irc_quit"
1254
1255 Sent whenever someone on a channel with you quits IRC (or gets KILLed).
1256 "ARG0" is the nick!hostmask of the person in question. "ARG1" is the
1257 clever, witty message they left behind on the way out.
1258
1259 "irc_socketerr"
1260
1261 Sent when a connection couldn't be established to the IRC server.
1262 "ARG0" is probably some vague and/or misleading reason for what failed.
1263
1264 "irc_topic"
1265
1266 Sent when a channel topic is set or unset. "ARG0" is the nick!hostmask
1267 of the sender. "ARG1" is the channel affected. "ARG2" will be either: a
1268 string if the topic is being set; or a zero-length string (i.e. '') if
1269 the topic is being unset. Note: replies to queries about what a channel
1270 topic *is* (i.e. TOPIC #channel), are returned as numerics, not with
1271 this event.
1272
1273 "irc_whois"
1274
1275 Sent in response to a WHOIS query. "ARG0" is a hashref, with the
1276 following keys:
1277
1278 • 'nick', the users nickname;
1279
1280 • 'user', the users username;
1281
1282 • 'host', their hostname;
1283
1284 • 'real', their real name;
1285
1286 • 'idle', their idle time in seconds;
1287
1288 • 'signon', the epoch time they signed on (will be undef if ircd does
1289 not support this);
1290
1291 • 'channels', an arrayref listing visible channels they are on, the
1292 channel is prefixed with '@','+','%' depending on whether they have
1293 +o +v or +h;
1294
1295 • 'server', their server (might not be useful on some networks);
1296
1297 • 'oper', whether they are an IRCop, contains the IRC operator string
1298 if they are, undef if they aren't.
1299
1300 • 'actually', some ircds report the user's actual ip address, that'll
1301 be here;
1302
1303 • 'identified'. if the user has identified with NICKSERV (ircu,
1304 seven, Plexus)
1305
1306 • 'modes', a string describing the user's modes (Rizon)
1307
1308 "irc_whowas"
1309
1310 Similar to the above, except some keys will be missing.
1311
1312 "irc_raw"
1313
1314 Enabled by passing "Raw => 1" to "spawn" or "connect", or by calling
1315 "raw_events" with a true argument. "ARG0" is the raw IRC string
1316 received by the component from the IRC server, before it has been
1317 mangled by filters and such like.
1318
1319 "irc_raw_out"
1320
1321 Enabled by passing "Raw => 1" to "spawn" or "connect", or by calling
1322 "raw_events" with a true argument. "ARG0" is the raw IRC string sent by
1323 the component to the the IRC server.
1324
1325 "irc_isupport"
1326
1327 Emitted by the first event after an "irc_005", to indicate that
1328 isupport information has been gathered. "ARG0" is the
1329 POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::ISupport object.
1330
1331 "irc_socks_failed"
1332
1333 Emitted whenever we fail to connect successfully to a SOCKS server or
1334 the SOCKS server is not actually a SOCKS server. "ARG0" will be some
1335 vague reason as to what went wrong. Hopefully.
1336
1337 "irc_socks_rejected"
1338
1339 Emitted whenever a SOCKS connection is rejected by a SOCKS server.
1340 "ARG0" is the SOCKS code, "ARG1" the SOCKS server address, "ARG2" the
1341 SOCKS port and "ARG3" the SOCKS user id (if defined).
1342
1343 "irc_plugin_add"
1344
1345 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
1346
1347 Emitted whenever a new plugin is added to the pipeline. "ARG0" is the
1348 plugin alias. "ARG1" is the plugin object.
1349
1350 "irc_plugin_del"
1351
1352 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
1353
1354 Emitted whenever a plugin is removed from the pipeline. "ARG0" is the
1355 plugin alias. "ARG1" is the plugin object.
1356
1357 "irc_plugin_error"
1358
1359 Inherited from Object::Pluggable
1360
1361 Emitted when an error occurs while executing a plugin handler. "ARG0"
1362 is the error message. "ARG1" is the plugin alias. "ARG2" is the plugin
1363 object.
1364
1365 Somewhat Less Important Events
1366 "irc_cap"
1367
1368 A reply from the server regarding protocol capabilities. "ARG0" is the
1369 CAP subcommand (e.g. 'LS'). "ARG1" is the result of the subcommand,
1370 unless this is a multi-part reply, in which case "ARG1" is '*' and
1371 "ARG2" contains the result.
1372
1373 "irc_dcc_*"
1374
1375 See the DCC plugin (loaded by default) documentation for DCC-related
1376 events.
1377
1378 "irc_ping"
1379
1380 An event sent whenever the server sends a PING query to the client.
1381 (Don't confuse this with a CTCP PING, which is another beast entirely.
1382 If unclear, read the RFC.) Note that POE::Component::IRC will
1383 automatically take care of sending the PONG response back to the server
1384 for you, although you can still register to catch the event for
1385 informational purposes.
1386
1387 "irc_snotice"
1388
1389 A weird, non-RFC-compliant message from an IRC server. Usually sent
1390 during to you during an authentication phase right after you connect,
1391 while the server does a hostname lookup or similar tasks. "ARG0" is the
1392 text of the server's message. "ARG1" is the target, which could be '*'
1393 or 'AUTH' or whatever. Servers vary as to whether these notices include
1394 a server name as the sender, or no sender at all. "ARG1" is the sender,
1395 if any.
1396
1397 "irc_delay_set"
1398
1399 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
1400
1401 Emitted on a successful addition of a delayed event using the "delay"
1402 method. "ARG0" will be the alarm_id which can be used later with
1403 "delay_remove". Subsequent parameters are the arguments that were
1404 passed to "delay".
1405
1406 "irc_delay_removed"
1407
1408 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
1409
1410 Emitted when a delayed command is successfully removed. "ARG0" will be
1411 the alarm_id that was removed. Subsequent parameters are the arguments
1412 that were passed to "delay".
1413
1414 All numeric events
1415 Most messages from IRC servers are identified only by three-digit
1416 numeric codes with undescriptive constant names like RPL_UMODEIS and
1417 ERR_NOTOPLEVEL. (Actually, the list of codes in the RFC is kind of out-
1418 of-date... the list in the back of Net::IRC::Event.pm is more complete,
1419 and different IRC networks have different and incompatible lists. Ack!)
1420 As an example, say you wanted to handle event 376 (RPL_ENDOFMOTD, which
1421 signals the end of the MOTD message). You'd register for '376', and
1422 listen for "irc_376" events. Simple, no? "ARG0" is the name of the
1423 server which sent the message. "ARG1" is the text of the message.
1424 "ARG2" is an array reference of the parsed message, so there is no need
1425 to parse "ARG1" yourself.
1426
1428 The component will handle a number of custom signals that you may send
1429 using POE::Kernel's "signal" method.
1430
1431 "POCOIRC_REGISTER"
1432 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
1433
1434 Registering with multiple PoCo-IRC components has been a pita. Well, no
1435 more, using the power of POE::Kernel signals.
1436
1437 If the component receives a "POCOIRC_REGISTER" signal it'll register
1438 the requesting session and trigger an "irc_registered" event. From that
1439 event one can get all the information necessary such as the poco-irc
1440 object and the SENDER session to do whatever one needs to build a poco-
1441 irc dispatch table.
1442
1443 The way the signal handler in PoCo-IRC is written also supports sending
1444 the "POCOIRC_REGISTER" to multiple sessions simultaneously, by sending
1445 the signal to the POE Kernel itself.
1446
1447 Pass the signal your session, session ID or alias, and the IRC events
1448 (as specified to "register").
1449
1450 To register with multiple PoCo-IRCs one can do the following in your
1451 session's _start handler:
1452
1453 sub _start {
1454 my ($kernel, $session) = @_[KERNEL, SESSION];
1455
1456 # Registering with multiple pocoircs for 'all' IRC events
1457 $kernel->signal($kernel, 'POCOIRC_REGISTER', $session->ID(), 'all');
1458
1459 return:
1460 }
1461
1462 Each poco-irc will send your session an "irc_registered" event:
1463
1464 sub irc_registered {
1465 my ($kernel, $sender, $heap, $irc_object) = @_[KERNEL, SENDER, HEAP, ARG0];
1466
1467 # Get the poco-irc session ID
1468 my $sender_id = $sender->ID();
1469
1470 # Or it's alias
1471 my $poco_alias = $irc_object->session_alias();
1472
1473 # Store it in our heap maybe
1474 $heap->{irc_objects}->{ $sender_id } = $irc_object;
1475
1476 # Make the poco connect
1477 $irc_object->yield(connect => { });
1478
1479 return;
1480 }
1481
1482 "POCOIRC_SHUTDOWN"
1483 Inherited from POE::Component::Syndicator
1484
1485 Telling multiple poco-ircs to shutdown was a pita as well. The same
1486 principle as with registering applies to shutdown too.
1487
1488 Send a "POCOIRC_SHUTDOWN" to the POE Kernel to terminate all the active
1489 poco-ircs simultaneously.
1490
1491 $poe_kernel->signal($poe_kernel, 'POCOIRC_SHUTDOWN');
1492
1493 Any additional parameters passed to the signal will become your quit
1494 messages on each IRC network.
1495
1497 This can be an issue. Take a look at IRC::Utils' section on it.
1498
1500 A few have turned up in the past and they are sure to again. Please use
1501 <http://rt.cpan.org/> to report any. Alternatively, email the current
1502 maintainer.
1503
1505 You can find the latest source on github:
1506 <http://github.com/bingos/poe-component-irc>
1507
1508 The project's developers usually hang out in the "#poe" IRC channel on
1509 irc.perl.org. Do drop us a line.
1510
1512 Chris "BinGOs" Williams <chris@bingosnet.co.uk>
1513
1514 Hinrik Örn Sigurðsson <hinrik.sig@gmail.com>
1515
1517 Dennis Taylor.
1518
1520 Copyright (c) Dennis Taylor, Chris Williams and Hinrik Örn Sigurðsson
1521
1522 This module may be used, modified, and distributed under the same terms
1523 as Perl itself. Please see the license that came with your Perl
1524 distribution for details.
1525
1527 The maddest of mad props go out to Rocco "dngor" Caputo
1528 <troc@netrus.net>, for inventing something as mind-bogglingly cool as
1529 POE, and to Kevin "oznoid" Lenzo <lenzo@cs.cmu.edu>, for being the
1530 attentive parent of our precocious little infobot on #perl.
1531
1532 Further props to a few of the studly bughunters who made this module
1533 not suck: Abys <abys@web1-2-3.com>, Addi <addi@umich.edu>, ResDev
1534 <ben@reser.org>, and Roderick <roderick@argon.org>. Woohoo!
1535
1536 Kudos to Apocalypse, <apocal@cpan.org>, for the plugin system and to
1537 Jeff 'japhy' Pinyan, <japhy@perlmonk.org>, for Pipeline.
1538
1539 Thanks to the merry band of POE pixies from #PoE @ irc.perl.org,
1540 including ( but not limited to ), ketas, ct, dec, integral, webfox,
1541 immute, perigrin, paulv, alias.
1542
1543 IP functions are shamelessly 'borrowed' from Net::IP by Manuel Valente
1544
1545 Check out the Changes file for further contributors.
1546
1548 RFC 1459 <http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1459.html>
1549
1550 <http://www.irchelp.org/>,
1551
1552 <http://poe.perl.org/>,
1553
1554 <http://www.infobot.org/>,
1555
1556 Some good examples reside in the POE cookbook which has a whole section
1557 devoted to IRC programming <http://poe.perl.org/?POE_Cookbook>.
1558
1559 The examples/ folder of this distribution.
1560
1561
1562
1563perl v5.32.1 2021-01-27 POE::Component::IRC(3)