hpcbot

0.9.5 • Public • Published

hpc-bot

A Twitch Bot library to quickly build custom commands, overlays, and other ways to make your stream incredibly interactive.

Overview

hpc-bot was started because the existing bots out there didn't allow a high amount of customization and logic. We wanted to make html5 games that our viewers could play with us during downtime and add more options than just voting and betting.

We wanted a library that was easy to implement in node and would let us add features regularly to keep our viewers entertained.

Key Features

  • chat Chat bot with interactive chat and whisper commands (e.g. !music)
  • overlays Trigger custom overlays (video, html, audio, etc) that play on your stream
  • music Listen to music sync'd with your fellow streamers and take viewer requests
  • resources Users can earn points and spend them on items/consumables that affect the stream
  • soundboard Trigger events and overlays from your browser
  • teams Users can join a team and compete against other teams for challenges
  • utils A bunch of useful utilities to run your stream: Random numbers, logging/analytics

Setup

Installation (Existing Project)

  1. Add the package into your project: npm install hpc-bot
  2. Install Redis (database): http://redis.io

Installation (New Project)

  1. Install NodeJS: http://nodejs.org
  2. Create a starter file: index.js
  3. Add the package to your project: npm install hpc-bot
  4. Install Redis (database): http://redis.io

Config

First, you need to create a Twitch account and App for your bot: https://blog.twitch.tv/client-id-required-for-kraken-api-calls-afbb8e95f843

hpc-bot requires a few parameters to be configured up front to work with the database and external services. These parameters are passed in via the options object when you start the bot.

Here are the parameters that options accepts:

Parameter Required Example Description
username yes hpc.dumbledore Your bot's Twitch Username (required)
oauth yes oauth:1923094jalfjioa918fads Your Twitch oauth hash. see: http://twitchapps.com/tmi/
channel yes #harrypotterclan Your Twitch chat channel
clientID yes asfdkjkl14jadfa Your Twitch app Client ID - https://blog.twitch.tv/client-id-required-for-kraken-api-calls-afbb8e95f843
secret yes 1lkjklmasd0c0a Your Twitch app Secret - https://blog.twitch.tv/client-id-required-for-kraken-api-calls-afbb8e95f843
eventbus no `new EventEmitter()`` The eventemitter object that the bot uses to call/listen for events
whitelist no [ 'bdickason', 'larry_manalo' ] An array of twitch usernames that have access to the web interface and whitelisted commands
youtubeKey no k12jlkjasdjamc Your Youtube API key to load music videos (Required for Jukebox)
hostname no harrypotterclan.com Necessary for testing/deploying the music feature
logglyToken no akjsdklfjakljf Your Loggly token if you want to log events for debugging purposes (Required for Logging)
logglySubdomain no bdickason Your Loggly subdomain if you want to log events for debugging purposes (Required for Logging)
mixpanel no akjflj232jk1a Your Mixpanel ID to save analytics

Phew! Hope you got that all setup right :D There should be errors along the way if something goes wrong to help you debug when you run the app.

Running the App

To run the app, execute npm start from your project root.

Usage

chat

overlays

music

resources

soundboard

teams

utils

Contributing

Changing what the bot says (Strings)

You can locate all of the strings the bot uses in config/strings.json: https://github.com/bdickason/hpc-bot/blob/master/config/strings.json

You can edit the format here there, just make sure you copy/paste the resulting file here to test it: http://jsonlint.com/

Running Tests

You can run tests to verify that everything is working with the command npm test. This requires mocha to be installed with npm install -g mocha.

If you plan to submit pull requests, please ensure that the request includes proper test coverage of your feature.

Building the app

Because we use React, our app requires a step to build your client side changes into a bundle.js file.

To build for Development, use npm run dev. This will watch your client side js files and re-build a debug-friendly react bundle whenever you change them.

To build for Production, use npm run build. This will build a single bundle.js file that is production-ready (and smaller!) but will not watch changes.

Versions

Current Tags

  • Version
    Downloads (Last 7 Days)
    • Tag
  • 0.9.5
    2
    • latest

Version History

Package Sidebar

Install

npm i hpcbot

Weekly Downloads

2

Version

0.9.5

License

GPL-3.0

Unpacked Size

8.24 MB

Total Files

96

Last publish

Collaborators

  • bdickason