This is an IRC bot to help solve a problem we have in CSS Working Group meetings, which is that we discuss a topic for a while that has a GitHub issue, and then fail to make a note of that discussion in the GitHub issue. Since minute taking in meetings happens in IRC, an IRC bot is useful here.
The idea is that the bot will be in the channel, will split the IRC up based on "Topic:" and start/end of meeting, and then if somebody writes "Github: <github-url>" at some point within a topic (changeable/cancellable also with acknowledgment), it will acknowledge it and then when the topic concludes, make a comment in that GitHub issue at the end of the topic with the resolutions, and a <details> with the full IRC log, or something like that. (Understanding "Topic:" itself being a github URL turned out badly because of multiple people entering the same topic leading to multiple short or empty comments.)
(Ideally it will also understand ScribeNick: and the other scribe.perl conventions, but that's past minimum-viable-product, I think. Though ScribeNick should probably be doable quickly...)
Begin a topic on IRC using Topic:
or Subtopic:
, and tell github-bot which issue to post to with Github:
Topic: [name of topic]
github: [URL of a GitHub issue]
Alternatively, you can use github-bot, topic [URL]
or github-bot, subtopic [URL]
to ask github-bot to extract the topic from the issue summary and post a Topic:
or Subtopic:
line for you.
The bot responds to confirm the target issue:
* github-bot OK, I'll post this discussion to [URL of the GitHub issue]
Discuss the topic on IRC.
You can declare resolutions, which are exerpted and highlighted:
RESOLVED: frob the snozwuzzle breadth-first
As are summaries:
SUMMARY: Jack defeated the Giant.
To end the transript, either begin a new topic:
Topic: Semantics of the gribble
or explictly end the topic:
github-bot, end topic
At this point, the github-bot posts an IRC transcript to the issue and responds:
* github-bot Successfully commented on [URL of the GitHub issue]
The comments that github-bot adds are everything since the last Topic was begun, even if that was before the github: [URL]
was entered.
If multiple github: [URL]
lines were entered during this topic, the last one wins.
If you don't have Rust installed, start with rustup.
If you want to use the bot to generate real GitHub comments, you'll need
to generate a GitHub personal access
token while logged in to the GitHub
account that you want to make the comments, and put the personal access
token in a file (say, ./github_access_token_file
). Then you can
compile and run the bot with a single cargo
command, such as one of:
RUST_BACKTRACE=1 RUST_LOG=wgmeeting_github_ircbot cargo run ./src/config-dev.toml ./github_access_token_file
RUST_BACKTRACE=1 RUST_LOG=wgmeeting_github_ircbot cargo run --release ./src/config.toml ./github_access_token_file
Or you could just run automated tests with a different single cargo
command (which doesn't require an access token):
RUST_BACKTRACE=1 RUST_LOG=wgmeeting_github_ircbot,test_chats cargo test
or for more verbosity:
RUST_BACKTRACE=1 RUST_LOG=wgmeeting_github_ircbot,test_chats,tokio_core,tokio_reactor cargo test
If you want this bot for your working group that minutes its
teleconferences on irc.w3.org
, I'm happy to take pull requests to this
repository. You need to add a new channels
item in src/config.toml
.
The channel name in the header gives the IRC channel, the group
gives
the name of the working group used in comments on github issues, and the
github_repos_allowed
line lists github repositories that the bot is
allowed to comment in.
Thanks to Xidorn Quan and Alan Stearns for feature suggestions, and to Manish Goregaokar, Simon Sapin, Jack Moffitt, and Till Schneidereit for answering my questions about Rust while I was trying to learn Rust while writing this.