POE::Component::IRC::CUsernContributed Perl DocuPOE::Component::IRC::Common(3)NAMEPOE::Component::IRC::Common - Provides a set of common functions for
the POE::Component::IRC suite
SYNOPSIS
use strict;
use warnings;
use POE::Component::IRC::Common qw( :ALL );
my $nickname = '^Lame|BOT[moo]';
my $uppercase_nick = u_irc( $nickname );
my $lowercase_nick = l_irc( $nickname );
my $mode_line = 'ov+b-i Bob sue stalin*!*@*';
my $hashref = parse_mode_line( $mode_line );
my $banmask = 'stalin*';
my $full_banmask = parse_ban_mask( $banmask );
if ( matches_mask( $full_banmask, 'stalin!joe@kremlin.ru' ) ) {
print "EEK!";
}
if ( has_color($message) ) {
print 'COLOR CODE ALERT!";
}
my $results_hashref = matches_mask_array( \@masks, \@items_to_match_against );
my $nick = parse_user( 'stalin!joe@kremlin.ru' );
my ($nick, $user, $host) = parse_user( 'stalin!joe@kremlin.ru' );
DESCRIPTIONPOE::Component::IRC::Common provides a set of common functions for the
POE::Component::IRC suite. There are included functions for uppercase
and lowercase nicknames/channelnames and for parsing mode lines and ban
masks.
CONSTANTS
Use the following constants to add formatting and mIRC color codes to
IRC messages.
Normal text:
NORMAL
Formatting:
BOLD
UNDERLINE
REVERSE
ITALIC
FIXED
Colors:
WHITE
BLACK
DARK_BLUE
DARK_GREEN
RED
BROWN
PURPLE
ORANGE
YELLOW
LIGHT_GREEN
TEAL
CYAN
LIGHT_BLUE
MAGENTA
DARK_GREY
LIGHT_GREY
Individual formatting codes can be cancelled with their corresponding
constant, but you can also cancel all of them at once with "NORMAL". To
cancel the effect of previous color codes, you must use "NORMAL". which
of course has the side effect of cancelling the effect of all previous
formatting codes as well.
$irc->yield('This word is ' . YELLOW . 'yellow' . NORMAL
. ' while this word is ' . BOLD . 'bold' . BOLD);
$irc->yield(UNDERLINE . BOLD . 'This sentence is both underlined and bold.'
. NORMAL);
FUNCTIONS
"u_irc"
Takes one mandatory parameter, a string to convert to IRC uppercase,
and one optional parameter, the casemapping of the ircd ( which can be
'rfc1459', 'strict-rfc1459' or 'ascii'. Default is 'rfc1459' ). Returns
the IRC uppercase equivalent of the passed string.
"l_irc"
Takes one mandatory parameter, a string to convert to IRC lowercase,
and one optional parameter, the casemapping of the ircd ( which can be
'rfc1459', 'strict-rfc1459' or 'ascii'. Default is 'rfc1459' ). Returns
the IRC lowercase equivalent of the passed string.
"parse_mode_line"
Takes a list representing an IRC mode line. Returns a hashref. If the
modeline couldn't be parsed the hashref will be empty. On success the
following keys will be available in the hashref:
'modes', an arrayref of normalised modes;
'args', an arrayref of applicable arguments to the modes;
Example:
my $hashref = parse_mode_line( 'ov+b-i', 'Bob', 'sue', 'stalin*!*@*' );
# $hashref will be:
{
modes => [ '+o', '+v', '+b', '-i' ],
args => [ 'Bob', 'sue', 'stalin*!*@*' ],
}
"parse_ban_mask"
Takes one parameter, a string representing an IRC ban mask. Returns a
normalised full banmask.
Example:
$fullbanmask = parse_ban_mask( 'stalin*' );
# $fullbanmask will be: 'stalin*!*@*';
"matches_mask"
Takes two parameters, a string representing an IRC mask ( it'll be
processed with parse_ban_mask() to ensure that it is normalised ) and
something to match against the IRC mask, such as a nick!user@hostname
string. Returns a true value if they match, a false value otherwise.
Optionally, one may pass the casemapping (see "u_irc"), as this
function uses "u_irc" internally.
"matches_mask_array"
Takes two array references, the first being a list of strings
representing IRC masks, the second a list of somethings to test against
the masks. Returns an empty hashref if there are no matches. Otherwise,
the keys will be the masks matched, each value being an arrayref of the
strings that matched it. Optionally, one may pass the casemapping (see
"u_irc"), as this function uses "u_irc" internally.
"parse_user"
Takes one parameter, a string representing a user in the form
nick!user@hostname. In a scalar context it returns just the nickname.
In a list context it returns a list consisting of the nick, user and
hostname, respectively.
"has_color"
Takes one parameter, a string of IRC text. Returns 1 if it contains any
IRC color codes, 0 otherwise. Useful if you want your bot to kick users
for (ab)using colors. :)
"has_formatting"
Takes one parameter, a string of IRC text. Returns 1 if it contains any
IRC formatting codes, 0 otherwise.
"strip_color"
Takes one parameter, a string of IRC text. Returns the string stripped
of all IRC color codes. Due to the fact that both color and formatting
codes can be cancelled with the same character, this might strip more
than you hoped for if the string contains both color and formatting
codes. Stripping both will always do what you expect it to.
"strip_formatting"
Takes one parameter, a string of IRC text. Returns the string stripped
of all IRC formatting codes. Due to the fact that both color and
formatting codes can be cancelled with the same character, this might
strip more than you hoped for if the string contains both color and
formatting codes. Stripping both will always do what you expect it to.
"irc_to_utf8"
This function takes a byte string (e.g. a message from an "irc_public"
handler) in "IRC encoding" and returns a text string. Since the source
encoding might have been UTF-8, you should encode/store it in UTF-8 or
some other Unicode encoding in your file/database/whatever.
use POE::Component::IRC::Commonqw(irc_to_utf8);
sub irc_public {
my ($who, $where, $what) = @_[ARG0..ARG2];
# not wise, $what is either CP1252 or UTF-8
print $what, "\n";
$what = irc_to_utf8($what);
# good, $what is always UTF-8
print $what, "\n";
}
"irc_ip_get_version"
Try to guess the IP version of an IP address.
Params: IP address Returns: 4, 6, 0(unable to determine)
"$version = ip_get_version ($ip)"
"irc_ip_is_ipv4"
Check if an IP address is of type 4.
Params: IP address Returns: 1 (yes) or 0 (no)
"ip_is_ipv4($ip) and print "$ip is IPv4";"
"irc_ip_is_ipv6"
Check if an IP address is of type 6.
Params: IP address Returns: 1 (yes) or 0 (no)
ip_is_ipv6($ip) && print "$ip is IPv6";
AUTHOR
Chris 'BinGOs' Williams
IP functions are shamelessly 'borrowed' from Net::IP by Manuel Valente
SEE ALSO
POE::Component::IRC
Net::IP
perl v5.14.1 2010-11-05 POE::Component::IRC::Common(3)