Protocol::IRC::Client(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Protocol::IRC::Client(3pm) |
"Protocol::IRC::Client" - IRC protocol handling for a client
This mix-in class provides a layer of IRC message handling logic suitable for an IRC client. It builds upon Protocol::IRC to provide extra message processing useful to IRC clients, such as handling inbound server numerics.
It provides some of the methods required by "Protocol::IRC":
The following methods, inherited from Protocol::IRC, are notable here as being particularly useful for a client.
$irc->send_message( $message ) $irc->send_message( $command, { %args } ) $irc->send_message( $command, $prefix, @args )
See "send_message" in Protocol::IRC
$value = $irc->isupport( $key )
Returns an item of information from the server's "005 ISUPPORT" lines. Traditionally IRC servers use all-capital names for keys.
$info = $irc->server_info( $key )
Returns an item of information from the server's 004 line. $key should one of
If messages with a gating disposition are received, extra processing is applied. Messages whose gating effect is "more" are simply collected up by pushing the hints hash to an array. Added to this hash is the command name itself, so that in the case of multiple message types (for example "WHOIS" replies) the individual messages can still be identified.
When the effect of "done" or "fail" is eventually received, this collected array is passed as $data to a handler in one of the following places:
$client->on_gate_EFFECT_GATE( $message, $hints, $data )
$client->on_gate_EFFECT( 'GATE', $message, $hints, $data )
$client->on_gate( 'EFFECT, 'GATE', $message, $hints, $data )
$client->on_message_GATE( $message, $hints ) $client->on_message( 'GATE', $message, $hints )
For the following types of gate, the $data is further processed in the following way to provide extra hints fields.
The hints hash will contain an extra key, "who", which will be an ARRAY ref containing the lines of the WHO reply. Each line will be a HASH reference containing:
The hints hash will contain an extra key, "names", which will be an ARRAY ref containing the usernames in the channel. Each will be a HASH reference containing:
The hints hash will contain an extra key, "bans", which will be an ARRAY ref containing the ban lines. Each line will be a HASH reference containing:
The hints hash will contain an extra key, "motd", which will be an ARRAY ref containing the lines of the MOTD.
The hints hash will contain an extra key, "whois", which will be an ARRAY ref of entries that mostly relate to the received "RPL_WHOIS*" numerics.
Each "RPL_WHOIS*" reply will be stripped of the standard hints hash keys, leaving whatever remains. Added to this will be a key called "whois", whose value will be the command name, minus the leading "RPL_WHOIS", and converted to lowercase.
No additional keys.
$f = $client->next_gate_future( $gate, $target )
As an alternative to using the event handlers above, a client can instead obtain a Future that will succeed or fail the next time a result on a given gate is received for a given target. This is often more convenient to use in a client, as it represents the result of running a command.
If the gate completes successfully, then so will the future, yielding the same values as would be passed to the "on_gate_done_GATE" event; namely that
( $message, $hints, $data ) = $f->get
If the gate fails, then so will the future, containing the text message from the error numeric as its failure message, "irc_gate" as its category, and the full message and hints for it as the details.
The following messages are handled internally by "Protocol::IRC::Client".
This message takes a sub-verb as its second argument, and a list of capability names as its third. On receipt of a "CAP" message, the verb is extracted and set as the "verb" hint, and the list capabilities set as the keys of a hash given as the "caps" hint. These are then passed to an event called
$irc->on_message_cap_VERB( $message, \%hints )
or
$irc->on_message_cap( 'VERB', $message, \%hints )
These messages involve channel modes. The raw list of channel modes is parsed into an array containing one entry per affected piece of data. Each entry will contain at least a "type" key, indicating what sort of mode or mode change it is:
Every mode type then provides a "mode" key, containing the mode character itself, and a "sense" key which is an empty string, "+", or "-".
For "list" and "value" types, the "value" key gives the actual list entry or value being set.
For "occupant" types, a "flag" key gives the mode converted into an occupant flag (by the "prefix_mode2flag" method), "nick" and "nick_folded" store the user name affected.
"boolean" types do not create any extra keys.
The following methods actually send IRC commands. Each is named after the underlying IRC command it sends, using capital letters for methods that simply send that command.
Sends a "PRIVMSG" or "NOTICE" command.
For convenience, a single "target" argument may be provided which will be renamed to "targets". If "targets" is an ARRAY reference, it will be turned into a comma-separated string.
As this class is an abstract base class, a concrete implementation must provide the following methods to complete it and make it useable.
$f = $client->new_future
Returns a new Future instance or subclass thereof.
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
2018-06-23 | perl v5.26.2 |