5.4 KiB
bashbot
A Telegram bot written in bash.
Written by Drew (@topkecleon), Daniil Gentili (@danogentili), and Kay M (@gnadelwartz).
Contributions by JuanPotato, BigNerd95, TiagoDanin, and iicc1.
Released to the public domain wherever applicable. Elsewhere, consider it released under the WTFPLv2.
Prerequisites
Depends on tmux. Uses JSON.sh.
Most complete UTF-8 support for bashbot is availible if phyton is installed (optional).
Bashbot Documentation and Downloads are availible on www.github.com
Documentation
- Introdution to Telegram Bots
- Install Bashbot
- Install release
- Install from githup
- Update Bashbot
- Notes on Updates
- Create a new Telegram Bot with botfather
- Getting Started
- Managing your Bot
- Recieve data
- Send messages
- Send files, locations, keyboards
- Advanced Features
- Access Control
- Interactive Chats
- Background Jobs
- Inline queries
- Expert Use
- Handling UTF-8 character sets
- Run as other user or system service
- Scedule bashbot from Cron
- Best Practices
- Customize commands.sh
- Seperate logic from commands
- Test your Bot with shellcheck
- Bashbot function reference
- Deveoper Notess
- Setup your environment
- Test, Add, Push changes
- Prepare a new version
- Bashbot testsuite
- Customize bashbot environment
- Examples
Security Considerations
Running a Telegram Bot means it is connected to the public and you never know whats send to your Bot.
Bash scripts in general are not designed to be bullet proof, so consider this Bot as a proof of concept. Bash programmers often struggle with 'quoting hell' and globbing, see Implications of wrong quoting
Whenever you are processing input from from untrusted sources (messages, files, network) you must be as carefull as possible, e.g. set IFS appropriate, disable globbing (set -f) and quote everthing. In addition delete unused scripts and examples from your Bot, e.g. scripts 'notify', 'calc', 'question', and disable all not used commands.
A powerful tool to improve your scripts is shellcheck
. You can use it online or install shellcheck locally. Shellcheck is used extensive in bashbot development to enshure a high code quality, e.g. it's not allowed to push changes without passing all shellcheck tests.
In addition bashbot has a test suite to check if important functionality is working as expected.
Run your Bot as a restricted user
I recommend to run your bot as a user, with almost no access rights. All files your Bot have write access to are in danger to be overwritten/deleted if your bot is hacked. For the same reason ervery file your Bot can read is in danger to be disclosed. Restict your Bots access rigths to the absolute minimum.
Never run your Bot as root, this is the most dangerous you can do! Usually the user 'nobody' has almost no rights on Unix/Linux systems. See Expert use on how to run your Bot as an other user.
Secure your Bot installation
Your Bot configuration must no be readable from other users. Everyone who can read your Bots token can act as your Bot and has access to all chats your Bot is in!
Everyone with read access to your Bot files can extract your Bots data. Especially your Bot Token in token
must be protected against other users. No one exept you must have write access to the Bot files. The Bot must be restricted to have write access to count
and tmp-bot-bash
only, all other files must be write protected.
To set access rights for your bashbot installation to a reasonable default run sudo ./bashbot.sh init
after every update or change to your installation directory.
Is this Bot insecure?
Bashbot is not more (in)secure as any other Bot written in any other language, we have done our best to make it as secure as possible. But YOU are responsible for the bot commands you wrote and you should know about the risks ...
Why Bash and not the much better xyz?
Well, thats a damn good question ... may be because I'm an Unix/Linux admin from stone age. Nevertheless there are more reasons from my side:
- bashbot will run everywhere where bash is availible, from ebedded linux to mainframe
- easy to integrate with other shell script, e.g. for sending system message / health status
- no need to install or learn a new programming language, library or framework
- no database, not event driven, not OO ...
@Gnadelwartz
That's it!
If you feel that there's something missing or if you found a bug, feel free to submit a pull request!