NAME¶
AnyEvent::IRC::Connection - An IRC connection abstraction
SYNOPSIS¶
use AnyEvent;
use AnyEvent::IRC::Connection;
my $c = AnyEvent->condvar;
my $con = new AnyEvent::IRC::Connection;
$con->connect ("localhost", 6667);
$con->reg_cb (
connect => sub {
my ($con) = @_;
$con->send_msg (NICK => 'testbot');
$con->send_msg (USER => 'testbot', '*', '0', 'testbot');
},
irc_001 => sub {
my ($con) = @_;
print "$_[1]->{prefix} says I'm in the IRC: $_[1]->{params}->[-1]!\n";
$c->broadcast;
}
);
$c->wait;
DESCRIPTION¶
The connection class. Here the actual interesting stuff can be done, such as
sending and receiving IRC messages. And it also handles TCP connecting and
even enabling of TLS.
Please note that CTCP support is available through the functions
"encode_ctcp" and "decode_ctcp" provided by
AnyEvent::IRC::Util.
METHODS¶
- $con = AnyEvent::IRC::Connection->new ()
- This constructor doesn't take any arguments.
NOTE: You are free to use the hash member "heap" (which
contains a hash) to store any associated data with this object. For
example retry timers or anything else.
You can also access that member via the "heap" method.
- $con->connect ($host, $port [, $prepcb_or_timeout])
- Tries to open a socket to the host $host and the port
$port. If an error occurred it will die (use eval to catch the exception).
If you want to connect via TLS/SSL you have to call the
"enable_ssl" method before to enable it.
$prepcb_or_timeout can either be a callback with the semantics of a prepare
callback for the function "tcp_connect" in AnyEvent::Socket or a
simple number which stands for a timeout.
- $con->enable_ssl ()
- This method will enable SSL for new connections that are
initiated by "connect".
- $con->disconnect ($reason)
- Unregisters the connection in the main AnyEvent::IRC
object, closes the sockets and send a 'disconnect' event with $reason as
argument.
- $con->is_connected
- Returns true when this connection is connected. Otherwise
false.
- $con->heap ()
- Returns the hash reference stored in the "heap"
member, that is local to this connection object that lets you store any
information you want.
- $con->send_raw ($ircline)
- This method sends $ircline straight to the server without
any further processing done.
- $con->send_msg ($command, @params)
- This function sends a message to the server. @ircmsg is the
argument list for "AnyEvent::IRC::Util::mk_msg (undef, $command,
@params)".
EVENTS¶
Following events are emitted by this module and shouldn't be emitted from a
module user call to "event". See also the documents Object::Event
about registering event callbacks.
- connect => $error
- This event is generated when the socket was successfully
connected or an error occurred while connecting. The error is given as
second argument ($error) to the callback then.
- disconnect => $reason
- This event will be generated if the connection is somehow
terminated. It will also be emitted when "disconnect" is called.
The second argument to the callback is $reason, a string that contains a
clue about why the connection terminated.
If you want to reestablish a connection, call "connect"
again.
- send => $ircmsg
- Emitted when a message is about to be sent. $ircmsg is an
array reference to the arguments of "mk_msg" (see
AnyEvent::IRC::Util). You may modify the array reference to change the
message or even intercept it completely by calling "stop_event"
(see Object::Event API):
$con->reg_cb (
send => sub {
my ($con, $ircmsg) = @_;
if ($ircmsg->[1] eq 'NOTICE') {
$con->stop_event; # prevent any notices from being sent.
} elsif ($ircmsg->[1] eq 'PRIVMSG') {
$ircmsg->[-1] =~ s/sex/XXX/i; # censor any outgoing private messages.
}
}
);
- sent => @ircmsg
- Emitted when a message (@ircmsg) was sent to the server.
@ircmsg are the arguments to "AnyEvent::IRC::Util::mk_msg".
- irc_* => $msg
- irc_<lowercase command> => $msg
- read => $msg
- Emitted when a message ($msg) was read from the server.
$msg is the hash reference returned by
"AnyEvent::IRC::Util::parse_irc_msg";
Note: '<lowercase command>' stands for the command of the message in
(ASCII) lower case.
- buffer_empty
- This event is emitted when the write buffer of the
underlying connection is empty and all data has been given to the kernel.
See also "samples/notify" about a usage example.
Please note that this buffer is NOT the queue mentioned in
AnyEvent::IRC::Client!
AUTHOR¶
Robin Redeker, "<elmex@ta-sa.org>"
SEE ALSO¶
AnyEvent::IRC
AnyEvent::IRC::Client
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE¶
Copyright 2006-2009 Robin Redeker, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.