![]() ![]() This command can only be entered by the bot owner. Note that this should happen automatically upon login, and should only need to be manually invoked in special situations. This command tells the bot to attempt to identify itself via NickServ. This command reloads the bot (affects both sides of the mirror), meaning it will disconnect and reconnect to both servers. This command quits the bot (affects both sides of the mirror). This command resumes message mirroring if it was previously paused via the !pause command. Use the !resume command to start mirroring again. You can use this if you get a spam flood, and want to pause mirroring while you deal with kicking / banning the spam bots. This command pauses all message mirroring (both directions), while keeping the bot itself active. Note that this command is only for standard IRC servers, not Twitch. Specify the nickname of the user after the command: !kick some_bad_nick. This command kicks the specified user out of the channel on the other side of the mirror. This doesn't really have any use except to test the bot, to make sure it is still listening. Use this command to have the bot repeat the specified text into the channel on the other side of the mirror. Example: !msg some_nick Hello there I am a bot. Use this command to have the bot send private messages to users on the other side of the mirror. Specify the nickname of the user after the command: !unban some_bad_nick. ![]() This command reverses a Twitch ban, and restores access to the specified user on the other side of the mirror. Specify the nickname of the user after the command: !ban some_bad_nick. This command bans the specified user from the Twitch channel on the other side of the mirror, so they can no longer login. Specify the nickname of the user after the command: !timeout some_bad_nick !ban (Remote, Twitch Only) This command times out the specified Twitch user out of the mirrored channel. Here are the available bot commands you can send: !timeout (Remote, Twitch Only) For commands to be detected and executed by the bot, they need to be prefixed with a special activator symbol (defaults to " !"), and your user needs to have a high enough access level (op, admin, etc. Some commands also run through the mirror, to the bot on the other side. While the bot is designed to run relatively unmanaged, you can send a variety of commands to it. Here are some of the features in Mirror Bot: Commands See the Manual Installation Instructions for other OSes, or if the single-command installer doesn't work for you.Īfter installation, you will be provided instructions for configuring and connecting to your servers. Basically, anything that has "yum" or "apt-get" should be happy. This single command installer should work fine on any modern Linux RedHat (RHEL, Fedora, CentOS) or Debian (Ubuntu) operating system. Change the word "stable" to "dev" in the above command to install the development branch. This will install the latest stable version of MirrorBot into the /opt/mirrorbot/ directory.
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