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Zodbot runs on the value01.iad2.fedoraproject.org host, hosted by Fedora infrastructure. It is written in Python using the [https://github.com/ProgVal/Limnoria Limnoria] IRC bot framework.
Zodbot runs on the value01.iad2.fedoraproject.org host, hosted by Fedora infrastructure. It is written in Python using the [https://github.com/ProgVal/Limnoria Limnoria] IRC bot framework.


This page describes what zodbot does and how it can be used by those with the permissions to operate it. Most functions do not require any special permissions. Those the do are noted as such.
This page describes what zodbot does and how it can be used by those with the permissions to operate it. Most functions do not require any special permissions. Those that do are noted as such.


== Addressing zodbot ==  
== Addressing zodbot ==  
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and zodbot will reply in the channel with the owner of the fedora-release package.
and zodbot will reply in the channel with the owner of the fedora-release package.


If you wish to avoid chatter in channel from zodbot, you can address zodbot directly. You may wish to do this in channels with a large number of users or if you have a number of queries. For example, this IRC command:
If you want to avoid chatter from zodbot in the channel, you can address zodbot directly. You may wish to do this in channels with a large number of users or if you have a number of queries. For example, this IRC command:


  /msg zodbot whoowns fedora-release
  /msg zodbot whoowns fedora-release

Latest revision as of 09:41, 4 November 2021

Zodbot is an IRC bot connected to the libera.chat IRC network and joined to many Fedora-related IRC channels. Zodbot listens for commands you send to it over IRC and will reply to you in the same channel.

Zodbot runs on the value01.iad2.fedoraproject.org host, hosted by Fedora infrastructure. It is written in Python using the Limnoria IRC bot framework.

This page describes what zodbot does and how it can be used by those with the permissions to operate it. Most functions do not require any special permissions. Those that do are noted as such.

Addressing zodbot

You can send commands to zodbot in any IRC channel where zodbot is present. Zodbot only responds to lines beginning with . so you will need to add . to the beginning of any of the commands listed below. For example, you can say:

.whoowns fedora-release

and zodbot will reply in the channel with the owner of the fedora-release package.

If you want to avoid chatter from zodbot in the channel, you can address zodbot directly. You may wish to do this in channels with a large number of users or if you have a number of queries. For example, this IRC command:

/msg zodbot whoowns fedora-release

will send the same command but in a private message. Zodbot will reply to you by private message. Depending on your IRC client, the reply may appear in the same window or in the window for the network. You can also open a private message window, using this IRC command:

/query zodbot whoowns fedora-release

for an extended conversation with zodbot.

Fedora-specific functions

  • badges username (badges)
Returns the number of Fedora Badges held by a user.
  • branches package_name (pkgdb)
Returns the branches of a package.
  • bug bug_number (RH bugzilla)
Return the name and URL of a Red Hat Bugzilla ticket.
  • fas query (fas)
Searches the Fedora Account System database in usernames, emails, full names, and IRC nicks. (Note that some accounts have enabled privacy, so nothing but their FAS username will be searchable.)
  • fasinfo account_name (fas)
Provides detailed Fedora Account System information about the specific account name. This requires an exact username.
  • fesco ticket_number (fesco)
Return the name and URL of a FESCo ticket.
  • group group_name (fas)
Return information about a Fedora Account System group.
  • members group_name (fas)
Return a list of members of the specified group.
  • nextmeeting channel_name (fedocal)
Return the next meeting scheduled to occur in a given channel.
  • nextmeetings
Return the next 5 scheduled meetings in any channel.
  • pingall message
Ping everyone in the IRC channel.
Use pinglist instead
Pinglist allows people to opt-in instead. Refer to the instructions for more information.
  • pulls organization/repository
Return the list of open pull requests on a GitHub repository.
  • pulls organization
Return the list of open pull requests on all repositories on a GitHub organization.
  • pushduty
List who is currently on updates-push duty for Release Engineering.
  • quote symbol period (fedmsg)
Return statistics on fedmsg activity for different services.
  • refresh
Refresh the necessary caches. This requires special permissions
  • sponsors group_name (fas)
Provides a list of sponsors for an exact group name, with @ indicating administrators of the group.
  • swbug bug_number (SW bugzilla)
Return the name and URL of a Sourceware Bugzilla ticket.
  • swedish (zodbot)
Bot version. (Humor mmcgrath.)
  • ticket ticket_number (infrastructure)
Return the name and URL of a Fedora Infrastructure ticket.
  • vacation
Returns the list of who is currently on vacation according to fedocal.
  • what package_name (pkgdb)
Returns a description of a package.
  • whoowns package_name (pkgdb)
Returns the FAS account of the owner of a package. To get directly the fasinfo of the owner, you can use: fasinfo [whoowns package_name]
  • wikilink account_name (fas)
Return MediaWiki link syntax for a FAS user's page on the wiki.

Koji-specific functions

  • builders - returns a list of build machines enabled and disabled.
  • building <builder> - returns what is building on builder number <builder>
  • taskload - lists number of current koji tasks.
  • buildload - lists load on all koji build cluster.

Meeting Functions

Zodbot has the supybot-meetbot plugin package installed and configured. See: the MeetBot manual for more information on the meeting commands (the odds are the manual may be more current than this wiki page). Meeting logs will be at meetbot.fedoraproject.org.

The implementation of MeetBot used by the Fedora project is packaged in the Fedora and EPEL repositories. It can be installed with 'sudo dnf install supybot-meetbot'. This will install both the MeetBot plugin and the supybot base code, as needed. You can also use the MeetBot plugin with the Limnoria fork of supybot if you are looking for something more actively maintained than supybot.

To work with the supybot code, you would need to install the fedpkg command. How to use it and how to gain access to Fedora-maintained packages can be found elsewhere on this wiki.

In general, for meetings using the plugin, you will use this sequence of commands:

  • #startmeeting <meeting name> - Start the meeting. A value for <meeting name> is required to start a meeting (as it will be used to name and organize the logs), or the meeting will not be started and will not be logged. It also sets the "user-friendly" title for the meeting. It can be changed later if needed. If not specified later, the name used to start the meeting will be used in the logs (and also used for categorizing the meeting in meetbot.fedoraproject.org.
    • Example: #startmeeting Fedora CommOps meeting (2016-07-12)
  • #meetingname <meeting-name> - Usually the name of the team meeting (example: fesco). Not required during the meeting, but it can be used to change the name of the meeting in the IRC channel at any time. This will also change the name the meeting is logged under. Use this to change if from the value passed to #startmeeting. Make sure this name is consistent across all your meetings, otherwise they will not be categorized and saved consistently in meetbot.fedoraproject.org!
  • #meetingtopic <topic> - Overall meeting topic (example: FESCo meeting) Not required. May be useful to meetings that have many topics and where the group may find it helpful to call out topics as a method of organizing the meeting in the logs.
  • #topic <currenttopic> - Use topic to go through each of the topics in your agenda. The main meetingtopic will stay the same.
  • #action, #accepted, #agreed, #chair, #idea, #info, #link, #rejected, etc. - as needed in the meeting. (#commands will provide a full list of available commands.)
  • #endmeeting - Ends the meeting and presents the log links in the IRC channel

Zodbot also has some aliases setup to list the time until various meetings:

nextfescomeeting, nextkdemeeting, nextepelmeeting, nextinframeeting, nextrelengmeeting, etc. These commands will list the time until the next meeting of that sig or group.

Meeting admin commands

These all require special permissions to run.

  • addchair channel freenode nick - Add a chair to a meeting. Useful if you need to end a meeting that someone has going in a channel that they forgot to end.
  • listmeetings - list the currently in-progress meetings
  • deletemeeting channel freenode - used to end a meeting. Contrary to the name, it saves the meeting first, unless you specify False as the last parameter
  • recent - list recent meetings
  • savemeetings - save all currently active meetings

Zodbot blew up while it was logging my meeting, what can I do?

First, go to meetbot.fedoraproject.org and find the incomplete log of your meeting. Then extract the remainder of the log from your IRC client and save that to a text file. The log must end with somebody saying "#endmeeting". Please do not upload HTMLified logs.

Go to the Fedora Infrastructure Project, login with your FAS account, and click "New Issue" at the top. Mention that your meeting log is incomplete and the meetbot.fedoraproject.org URL of the incomplete log. Also include the URL for the https://docs.pagure.org/infra-docs/sysadmin-guide/sops/zodbot.html for the convenience of the person processing the issue. Click "Browse" button and attach the remainder of the log then click "Create" button.

Example issue
Please make your issue as similar to issue 2213 as possible.

Thanking other contributors with karma points

Fedora contributors can thank each other by giving 'karma' points, limited to one karma point per user per release cycle (a contributor can receive multiple karmas in a release cycle, if multiple people thank them).

  • for both the sender and recipient, if the IRC nick does not match the FAS username, the nick has to be registered in FAS
  • you can grant karma using username++ or ircnick++ e.g. for Kevin Fenzi, either of kevin++ (FAS) or nirik++ should work
  • you can check a user's current karma using karma username or karma ircnick

Other useful commands

  • seen <nick> - returns the last time nick was seen in that channel and what they were saying.
  • any <nick> - returns the last time nick was in any channel zodbot is in and what they were saying.

Source code

The source code for the Fedora extensions are available in the supybot-fedora GitHub repository.

Additional Reading

More general information on supybot can be found in the excellent supybook.

Contact

For any questions about zodbot, please ask in #fedora-admin.

Bugs and feature requests can also be reported in the Fedora Infrastructurce trac using the component General.