A generic Slack bot framework written in Ruby on top of slack-ruby-client. This library does all the heavy lifting, such as message parsing, so you can focus on implementing slack bot commands. It also attempts to introduce the bare minimum number of requirements or any sorts of limitations. It's a Slack bot boilerplate.
- If you are just trying to send messages to Slack, use slack-ruby-client, which this library is built on top of.
- If you're trying to roll out a full service with Slack button integration, check out slack-bot-server, which uses this library.
- Otherwise, this piece of the puzzle will help you create a single bot instance for one team.
You're reading the documentation for the next release of slack-ruby-bot. Please see the documentation for the last stable release, v0.7.0 unless you're integrating with HEAD. See CHANGELOG for a history of changes and UPGRADING for how to upgrade to more recent versions.
source 'https://rubygems.org'
gem 'slack-ruby-bot'
require 'slack-ruby-bot'
class PongBot < SlackRubyBot::Bot
command 'ping' do |client, data, match|
client.say(text: 'pong', channel: data.channel)
end
end
PongBot.run
After registering the bot, run with SLACK_API_TOKEN=... bundle exec ruby pongbot.rb
. Have the bot join a channel and send it a ping.
A typical production Slack bot is a combination of a vanilla web server and a websocket application that talks to the Slack Real Time Messaging API. See our Writing a Production Bot tutorial for more information.
The following examples of bots based on slack-ruby-bot are listed in growing order of complexity.
- slack-bot-on-rails: A bot running on Rails and using React to display Slack messages on a website.
- slack-mathbot: Slack integration with math.
- slack-google-bot: A Slack bot that searches Google, including CSE.
- slack-aws: Slack integration with Amazon Web Services.
- slack-gamebot: A game bot service for ping pong, chess, etc, hosted at playplay.io.
Bots are addressed by name, they respond to commands and operators. You can combine multiple commands.
class CallBot < SlackRubyBot::Bot
command 'call', '呼び出し' do |client, data, match|
client.say(channel: data.channel, text: 'called')
end
end
Command match data includes match['bot']
, match['command']
and match['expression']
. The bot
match always checks against the SlackRubyBot::Config.user
and SlackRubyBot::Config.user_id
values obtained when the bot starts.
Operators are 1-letter long and are similar to commands. They don't require addressing a bot nor separating an operator from its arguments. The following class responds to =2+2
.
class MathBot < SlackRubyBot::Bot
operator '=' do |client, data, match|
# implementation detail
end
end
Operator match data includes match['operator']
and match['expression']
. The bot
match always checks against the SlackRubyBot::Config.user
setting.
A bot will always respond to its name (eg. rubybot
) and Slack ID (eg. @rubybot
), but you can specify multiple aliases via the SLACK_RUBY_BOT_ALIASES
environment variable or via an explicit configuration.
SLACK_RUBY_BOT_ALIASES=:pp: table-tennis
SlackRubyBot.configure do |config|
config.aliases = [':pong:', 'pongbot']
end
This is particularly fun with emoji.
Bots also will respond to a direct message, with or without the bot name in the message itself.
Commands and operators are generic versions of bot routes. You can respond to just about anything by defining a custom route.
class Weather < SlackRubyBot::Bot
match /^How is the weather in (?<location>\w*)\?$/ do |client, data, match|
client.say(channel: data.channel, text: "The weather in #{match[:location]} is nice.")
end
end
You can also capture multiple matchers with scan
.
class Market < SlackRubyBot::Bot
scan(/(\[A-Z]{2,5})/) do |client, data, stocks|
# lookup stock market price
end
end
See examples/market for a working example.
The SlackRubyBot::Bot
class is DSL sugar deriving from SlackRubyBot::Commands::Base
. For more involved bots you can organize the bot implementation into subclasses of SlackRubyBot::Commands::Base
manually. By default a command class responds, case-insensitively, to its name. A class called Phone
that inherits from SlackRubyBot::Commands::Base
responds to phone
and Phone
and calls the call
method when implemented.
class Phone < SlackRubyBot::Commands::Base
command 'call'
def self.call(client, data, match)
client.say(channel: data.channel, text: 'called')
end
end
To respond to custom commands and to disable automatic class name matching, use the command
keyword. The following command responds to call
and 呼び出し
(call in Japanese).
class Phone < SlackRubyBot::Commands::Base
command 'call'
command '呼び出し'
def self.call(client, data, match)
client.say(channel: data.channel, text: 'called')
end
end
The SlackRubyBot::Client
implementation comes with GIF support.
Sends text and/or a random GIF that matches a keyword using a RealTime client to a channel.
Slack-ruby-bot comes with several built-in commands. You can re-define built-in commands, normally, as described above.
This is also known as the default
command. Shows bot version and links.
Politely says 'hi' back.
Get help.
Hooks are event handlers and respond to Slack RTM API events, such as hello or message. You can implement your own in a couple of ways:
A Hook Handler is any object that respond to a call
message, like a proc, instance of an object, class with a call
class method, etc.
Hooks are registered onto the SlackRubyBot::Server
instance, by way of a configuration hash
SlackRubyBot::Server.new(hook_handlers: {
hello: MyBot::Hooks::UserChange.new
})
or at any time by pushing it to the HookSet
# Push an object that implements the
server.hooks.add(:hello, MyBot::Hooks::UserChange.new)
# Push a lambda to handle the event
server.hooks.add(:hello, ->(client, data) { puts "Hello!" })
For example, the following hook handles user_change, an event sent when a team member updates their profile or data. This can be useful to update the local user cache when a user is renamed.
module MyBot
module Hooks
class UserChange
extend SlackRubyBot::Hooks::Base
def call(client, data)
# data['user']['id'] contains the user ID
# data['user']['name'] contains the new user name
...
end
end
end
end
Hooks can also be written as blocks inside the SlackBotRuby::Server
class, for example
module MyBot
class MyServer < SlackRubyBot::Server
on 'hello' do |client, data|
# data['user']['id'] contains the user ID
# data['user']['name'] contains the new user name
end
end
end
These will get pushed into the hook set on initialization.
Either by configuration, explicit assignment or hook blocks, multiple handlers can exist for the same event type.
By default bots send animated GIFs in default commands and errors. To disable animated GIFs set send_gifs
or ENV['SLACK_RUBY_BOT_SEND_GIFS']
to false
.
SlackRubyBot.configure do |config|
config.send_gifs = false
end
By default bots do not respond to their own messages. If you wish to change that behavior, set allow_message_loops
to true
.
SlackRubyBot.configure do |config|
config.allow_message_loops = true
end
By default bots set a logger to STDOUT
with DEBUG
level. The logger is used in both the RealTime and Web clients. Silence logger as follows.
SlackRubyBot::Client.logger.level = Logger::WARN
You may want to integrate a bot or multiple bots into other systems, in which case a globally configured bot may not work for you. You may create instances of SlackRubyBot::Server which accepts token
, aliases
and send_gifs
.
EM.run do
bot1 = SlackRubyBot::Server.new(token: token1, aliases: ['bot1'])
bot1.start_async
bot2 = SlackRubyBot::Server.new(token: token2, send_gifs: false, aliases: ['bot2'])
bot2.start_async
end
For an example of advanced integration that supports multiple teams, see slack-gamebot and playplay.io that is built on top of it.
Slack-ruby-bot ships with a number of shared RSpec behaviors that can be used in your RSpec tests. Require 'slack-ruby-bot/rspec' in your spec_helper.rb
.
- behaves like a slack bot: A bot quacks like a Slack Ruby bot.
- respond with slack message: The bot responds with a message.
- respond with error: An exception is raised inside a bot command.
- newrelic-slack-ruby-bot: NewRelic instrumentation for slack-ruby-bot.
See CONTRIBUTING.
See CHANGELOG for a history of changes and UPGRADING for how to upgrade to more recent versions.
Copyright (c) 2015-2016, Daniel Doubrovkine, Artsy and Contributors.
This project is licensed under the MIT License.