Yeah, it needs a name.
This bot runs on node.js, atop Alain Gilbert's ttapi library.
So far it only works on a stable (v0.4) build of node.js. If you want to get it working on node.js's HEAD branch, send patches! =)
Once you've got the code checked out to run a bot for yourself, create a config
file in the conf
directory. Any config settings in your config file will override
the settings found in common.js
. So you can easily run multiple bots from a single
checkout; just make multiple config files and override what you want in each one.
The main things you'll need to override are auth
and userid
. If you specify a
roomid
, the bot will automatically join that room on startup. If not, you can
use bot.ttapi.roomRegister
interactively on the REPL.
One of my bot's distinguishing features is its interactive console, or REPL. When the bot is up and running, it will give you a prompt where you can inspect the bot's running state and/or interact with it and even modify it on the fly.
Thanks to Alain Gilbert for providing the ttapi library; I never would have gotten off the ground without his work.
This bot is essentially a rewrite of Isaiah Greene's (aka thelonius) #sickness bot; he shared the code with me and we collaborated on that a bit before I started writing this one from scratch. We still plan on working together on this, probably just once it reaches feature parity with #sickness.
I'm Vineet Kumar (aka vin on turntable.fm), @vineet, [email protected].
If you're deploying a bot based on this code and/or working on a derivative, I'd love to hear about it! I'm also very open to collaborators working to improve and add to this code base also. Give me a shout, either here on github, twitter, email, or wherever. I'm all over the place.
Also, while I do want to help you understand and run my code, I can't be the one to help you with basic questions about github, nodejs, or Linux in general. There are plenty of great resources for all of these things on the web.