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README.md

bashbot

A Telegram bot written in bash.

Depends on tmux. Uses JSON.sh.

Written by Drew (@topkecleon) and Daniil Gentili (@danogentili). Also contributed: JuanPotato, BigNerd95, TiagoDanin, iicc1, Kay M (@gnadelwartz).

Download from github

Released to the public domain wherever applicable. Elsewhere, consider it released under the WTFPLv2.

Instructions

Create your first bot

  1. Message @botfather https://telegram.me/botfather with the following text: /newbot If you don't know how to message by username, click the search field on your Telegram app and type @botfather, you should be able to initiate a conversation. Be careful not to send it to the wrong contact, because some users has similar usernames to botfather.

    botfather initial conversation

  2. @botfather replies with Alright, a new bot. How are we going to call it? Please choose a name for your bot.

  3. Type whatever name you want for your bot.

  4. @botfather replies with Good. Now let's choose a username for your bot. It must end in bot. Like this, for example: TetrisBot or tetris_bot.

  5. Type whatever username you want for your bot, minimum 5 characters, and must end with bot. For example: telesample_bot

  6. @botfather replies with:

    Done! Congratulations on your new bot. You will find it at telegram.me/telesample_bot. You can now add a description, about section and profile picture for your bot, see /help for a list of commands.

    Use this token to access the HTTP API: 123456789:AAG90e14-0f8-40183D-18491dDE

    For a description of the Bot API, see this page: https://core.telegram.org/bots/api

  7. Note down the 'token' mentioned above.

  8. Type /setprivacy to @botfather.

    botfather later conversation

  9. @botfather replies with Choose a bot to change group messages settings.

  10. Type @telesample_bot (change to the username you set at step 5 above, but start it with @)

  11. @botfather replies with

    'Enable' - your bot will only receive messages that either start with the '/' symbol or mention the bot by username. 'Disable' - your bot will receive all messages that people send to groups. Current status is: ENABLED

  12. Type Disable to let your bot receive all messages sent to a group. This step is up to you actually.

  13. @botfather replies with Success! The new status is: DISABLED. /help

Install bashbot

  1. Go to the directory you want to install bashbot, e.g.

    • your $HOME directory (install and run with your user-ID)
    • /usr/local if you want to run as service
  2. Clone the repository:

git clone --recursive https://github.com/topkecleon/telegram-bot-bash
  1. Change to directory telegram-bot.bash, run ./bashbot.sh init and follow the instructions. At this stage you are asked for your Bots token given by botfather.

Creating your own Bot

All Commands for the Bot are in the commands.sh file (this should ease upgrades of the bot core). Here you find some examples how to process messages and send out text.

Once you're done editing start the Bot with ./bashbot.sh start. If some thing doesn't work as it should, debug with bash -x bashbot.sh. To stop the Bot run ./bashbot.sh kill

To use the functions provided in this script in other scripts simply source bashbot: source bashbot.sh

Have FUN!

Receive data

Evertime a Message is recieved, you can read incoming data using the following variables:

  • $MESSAGE: Incoming messages
  • ${MESSAGE[ID]}: ID of incoming message
  • $CAPTION: Captions
  • $REPLYTO: Original message wich was replied to
  • $USER: This array contains the First name, last name, username and user id of the sender of the current message.
    • ${USER[ID]}: User id
    • ${USER[FIRST_NAME]}: User's first name
    • ${USER[LAST_NAME]}: User's last name
    • ${USER[USERNAME]}: Username
  • $CHAT: This array contains the First name, last name, username, title and user id of the chat of the current message.
    • ${CHAT[ID]}: Chat id
    • ${CHAT[FIRST_NAME]}: Chat's first name
    • ${CHAT[LAST_NAME]}: Chat's last name
    • ${CHAT[USERNAME]}: Username
    • ${CHAT[TITLE]}: Title
    • ${CHAT[TYPE]}: Type
    • ${CHAT[ALL_MEMBERS_ARE_ADMINISTRATORS]}: All members are administrators (true if true)
  • $REPLYTO: This array contains the First name, last name, username and user id of the ORIGINAL sender of the message REPLIED to.
    • ${REPLYTO[ID]}: ID of message wich was replied to
    • ${REPLYTO[UID]}: Original user's id
    • ${REPLYTO[FIRST_NAME]}: Original user's first name
    • ${REPLYTO[LAST_NAME]}: Original user's' last name
    • ${REPLYTO[USERNAME]}: Original user's username
  • $FORWARD: This array contains the First name, last name, username and user id of the ORIGINAL sender of the FORWARDED message.
    • ${FORWARD[ID]}: Same as MESSAGE[ID] if message is forwarded
    • ${FORWARD[UID]}: Original user's id
    • ${FORWARD[FIRST_NAME]}: Original user's first name
    • ${FORWARD[LAST_NAME]}: Original user's' last name
    • ${FORWARD[USERNAME]}: Original user's username
  • $URLS: This array contains documents, audio files, stickers, voice recordings and stickers stored in the form of URLs.
    • ${URLS[AUDIO]}: Audio files
    • ${URLS[VIDEO]}: Videos
    • ${URLS[PHOTO]}: Photos (maximum quality)
    • ${URLS[VOICE]}: Voice recordings
    • ${URLS[STICKER]}: Stickers
    • ${URLS[DOCUMENT]}: Any other file
  • $CONTACT: This array contains info about contacts sent in a chat.
    • ${CONTACT[NUMBER]}: Phone number
    • ${CONTACT[FIRST_NAME]}: First name
    • ${CONTACT[LAST_NAME]}: Last name
    • ${CONTACT[ID]}: User id
  • $LOCATION: This array contains info about locations sent in a chat.
    • ${LOCATION[LONGITUDE]}: Longitude
    • ${LOCATION[LATITUDE]}: Latitude

Usage of bashbot functions

send_message

To send messages use the send_message function:

send_message "${CHAT[ID]}" "lol"

To send html or markdown put the following strings before the text, depending on the parsing mode you want to enable:

send_message "${CHAT[ID]}" "markdown_parse_mode lol *bold*"
send_message "${CHAT[ID]}" "html_parse_mode lol <b>bold</b>"

This function also allows a third parameter that disables additional function parsing (for safety use this when reprinting user input):

send_message "${CHAT[ID]}" "lol" "safe"

To forward messages use the forward function:

forward "${CHAT[ID]}" "from_chat_id" "message_id"

For safety and performance reasoms I recommend to use send_xxxx_message direct and not the universal send_message function.

To send regular text without any markdown use:

send_text_message "${CHAT[ID]}" "lol"

To send text with markdown:

send_markdown_message "${CHAT[ID]}" "lol *bold*"

To send text with html:

send_html_message "${CHAT[ID]}" "lol <b>bold</b>"

If your Bot is Admin in a Chat you can delete every message, if not you can delete only your messages. To delete a message with a known ${MESSAGE[ID]} you can simple use:

delete_message "${CHAT[ID]}" "${MESSAGE[ID]}"

Send files, location etc.

To send images, videos, voice files, photos etc. use the send_photo function (remember to change the safety Regex @ line 14 of command.sh to allow sending files only from certain directories):

send_file "${CHAT[ID]}" "/home/user/doge.jpg" "Lool"

To send custom keyboards use the send_keyboard function:

send_keyboard "${CHAT[ID]}" "Text that will appear in chat?" "Yep" "No"

To send locations use the send_location function:

send_location "${CHAT[ID]}" "Latitude" "Longitude"

To send venues use the send_venue function:

send_venue "${CHAT[ID]}" "Latitude" "Longitude" "Title" "Address" "optional foursquare id"

To send a chat action use the send_action function. Allowed values: typing for text messages, upload_photo for photos, record_video or upload_video for videos, record_audio or upload_audio for audio files, upload_document for general files, find_location for locations.

send_action "${CHAT[ID]}" "action"

Interactice Chats

To create interactive chats, write (or edit the question script) a normal bash (or C or python) script, chmod +x it and then change the argument of the startproc function to match the command you usually use to start the script. The text that the script will output will be sent in real time to the user, and all user input will be sent to the script (as long as it's running or until the user kills it with /cancel). To open up a keyboard in an interactive script, print out the keyboard layout in the following way:

echo "Text that will appear in chat? mykeyboardstartshere \"Yep, sure\" \"No, highly unlikely\""

Same goes for files:

echo "Text that will appear in chat? myfilelocationstartshere /home/user/doge.jpg"

And locations:

echo "Text that will appear in chat. mylatstartshere 45 mylongstartshere 45"

And venues:

echo "Text that will appear in chat. mylatstartshere 45 mylongstartshere 45 mytitlestartshere my home myaddressstartshere Diagon Alley N. 37"

You can combine them:

echo "Text that will appear in chat? mykeyboardstartshere \"Yep, sure\" \"No, highly unlikely\" myfilelocationstartshere /home/user/doge.jpg mylatstartshere 45 mylongstartshere 45"

Please note that you can either send a location or a venue, not both. To send a venue add the mytitlestartshere and the myaddressstartshere keywords.

To insert a linebreak in your message you can insert mynewlinestartshere in your echo command:

echo "Text that will appear in one message  mynewlinestartshere  with this text on a new line"

Background Jobs

A background job is similar to an interactive chat, but runs in the background and does only output massages instead of processing input from the user. In contrast to interactive chats it's possible to run multiple background jobs. To create a background job write a script or edit the notify script and use the funtion background to start it:

background "./notify" "jobname"

All output of the script will be sent to the user or chat. To stop a background job use:

killback "jobname"

You can also suspend and resume the last running background jobs from outside bashbot, e.g. in your startup schripts:

./bashbot.sh suspendback
./bashbot.sh resumeback

If you want to kill all background jobs permantly run:

./bashbot.sh killback

Note: If your run bashbot as an other user or system service, see Expert use.

Inline queries

The following commands allows users to interact with your bot via inline queries. In order to enable inline mode, send /setinline command to @BotFather and provide the placeholder text that the user will see in the input field after typing your bots name. Also, edit line 12 from commands.sh putting a "1". Note that you can't modify the first two parameters of the function answer_inline_query, only the ones after them.

To send messsages or links through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "article" "Title of the result" "Content of the message to be sent"

To send photos in jpeg format and less than 5MB, from a website through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "photo" "A valid URL of the photo" "URL of the thumbnail"

To send standard gifs from a website (less than 1MB) through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "gif" "gif url"

To send mpeg4 gifs from a website (less than 1MB) through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "mpeg4_gif" "mpeg4 gif url"

To send videos from a website through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "video" "valid video url" "Select one mime type: text/html or video/mp4" "URL of the thumbnail" "Title for the result"

To send photos stored in Telegram servers through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "cached_photo" "identifier for the photo"

To send gifs stored in Telegram servers through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "cached_gif" "identifier for the gif"

To send mpeg4 gifs stored in Telegram servers through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "cached_mpeg4_gif" "identifier for the gif"

To send stickers through an inline query:

answer_inline_query "$iQUERY_ID" "cached_sticker" "identifier for the sticker"

Managing your Bot

Start / Stop

Start or Stop your Bot use the following commands:

./bashbot.sh start
./bashbot.sh kill

User count

To count the total number of users that ever used the bot run the following command:

./bashbot.sh count

Sending broadcasts to all users

To send a broadcast to all of users that ever used the bot run the following command:

./bashbot.sh broadcast "Hey! I just wanted to let you know that the bot's been updated!"

Handling UTF-8 character sets

Setting up your Environment

In general bash and GNU utitities are UTF-8 aware, but you have to setup your environment and your scripts accordingly:

  1. Your Terminal and Editor must support UTF-8: Set Terminal and Editor locale to UTF-8, eg. in Settings/Configuration select UTF-8 (Unicode) as Charset.

  2. Set Shell environment to UTF-8 in your .profile and your scripts. The usual settings are:

export LC_ALL=C.UTF-8
export LANG=C.UTF-8
export LANGUAGE=C.UTF-8

If you use other languages, eg. german or US english, change the shell settings to:

export LC_ALL=de_DE.UTF-8
export LANG=de_DE.UTF-8
export LANGUAGE=de_DE.UTF-8
export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
export LANG=de_en_US.UTF-8
export LANGUAGE=den_US.UTF-8
  1. make shure your bot scripts use the correct settings, eg. include the lines above at the beginning of your scripts

To display all availible locales on your system run locale -a | more. Gentoo Wiki

UTF-8 in Telegram and Bash

UTF-8 is a variable length encoding of Unicode. UTF-8 is recommended as the default encoding in JSON, XML and HTML, also Telegram make use of it.

The first 128 characters are regular ASCII, so it's a superset of and compatible with ASCII environments. The next 1,920 characters need two bytes for encoding and covers almost all Latin alphabets, also Greek, Cyrillic, Hebrew, Arabic and more. See Wikipedia for more deatils.

Telegram send Messages with all characters not fitting in one byte (256 bit) escaped as sequences of \uxxxx to be regular one byte ASCII (incl. iso-xxx-x), e.g. Emoticons and Arabic characters. E.g. the Emoticons 😁 😘 ❤️ 😊 👍 are encoded as:

\uD83D\uDE01 \uD83D\uDE18 \u2764\uFE0F \uD83D\uDE0A \uD83D\uDC4D

'\uXXXX' and '\UXXXXXXXX' escaped endocings are supported by zsh, bash, ksh93, mksh and FreeBSD sh, GNU 'printf' and GNU 'echo -e', see this Stackexchange Answer for more information.

Expert Usage

Bashbot is desingned to run manually by the user who installed it. Nevertheless it's possible to run it by an other user-ID, as a system service or sceduled from cron. This is onyl recommended for experiend linux users.

Run as other user or system service

Running bashbot as an other user is only possible (and strongly recommended) for root.

Setup the environment for the user you want to run bashbot and enter new username:

./bashbot.sh init

Edit the example rc file bashbot.rc, uncomment the runcmd availible on your system and fill the name of your Bot in name.

From now on always use bashbot.rc to start/stop your bot:

./bashbot.rc start

Type ps -ef | grep bashbot to verify your Bot is running as the desired user.

If you started bashbot by bashbot.rc you must use bashbot.rc also to manage your Bot! The following commands are availible:

./bashbot.rc start
./bashbot.rc stop
./bashbot.rc status
./bashbot.rc suspendback
./bashbot.rc resumeback
./bashbot.rc killback

To change back the environment to your user-ID run ./bashbot.rc init again and enter your user-ID.

To use bashbot as a system servive include a working bashbot.rc in your init system (systemd, /etc/init.d).

Scedule bashbot from Cron

An example crontab is provided in bashbot.cron.

  • If you are running bashbot with your user-ID, copy the examples lines to your crontab and remove username www.
  • if you run bashbot as an other user or a system service edit bashbot.cron to fit your needs and replace username````wwwwith the username you want to run bashbot. copy the modified file to/etc/cron.d/bashbot```

That's it!

If you feel that there's something missing or if you found a bug, feel free to submit a pull request!