Go to file
2022-12-11 13:53:26 -08:00
.gitignore Initial Commit 2022-12-10 20:08:29 -08:00
config.go Initial Commit 2022-12-10 20:08:29 -08:00
go.mod Initial Commit 2022-12-10 20:08:29 -08:00
go.sum Initial Commit 2022-12-10 20:08:29 -08:00
lemmy-reply-bot.example.toml Initial Commit 2022-12-10 20:08:29 -08:00
LICENSE Add GPLv3 license 2022-12-10 20:09:13 -08:00
logger.go Add more debug logs and fix bounds check 2022-12-11 13:53:26 -08:00
main.go Add more debug logs and fix bounds check 2022-12-11 13:53:26 -08:00
README.md Add instructions for building and running 2022-12-10 20:30:24 -08:00

Lemmy Reply Bot

This project is a simple bot that replies to comments on Lemmy. Every 10 seconds, it fetches the 200 newest comments from your configured Lemmy instance, and sees if they match any regex configured in the config file. If it finds one that does, it replies with the message corresponding to that regex.

Configuration

This repo contains a file called lemmy-reply-bot.example.toml. This is an example config file. Copy it to lemmy-reply-bot.toml and edit it to fit your needs. The config contains your password, so its permissions must be set to 600 or the bot will refuse to start.

This bot uses PCRE2 for regular expressions, so you can use any of PCRE2's features, and Regex101 in PCRE2 mode for testing.

If any regular expressions configured in the file also match the reply messages, the bot will refuse to start because this may cause an infinite loop.

Debugging

In order to enable debug log messages, set LEMMY_REPLY_BOT_DEBUG=1.

Building and Running

First, make sure Go 1.18 or newer is installed on your system. Older versions will not work.

If you are planning to run it on the same machine as the one you're building on, simply run

go build

And then you can start the bot with

./lemmy-reply-bot

If you want to run it on a different machine than the one you're building on, for example, a Raspberry Pi, you can build it like this:

GOARCH=arm64 go build

If your raspberry pi is 32-bit, use arm instead of arm64. Then, you can run it the same way I described above.