Cinch: A Ruby IRC Bot Building Framework

By Peter Cooper

Cinch (or GitHub repo) is a new Ruby "microframework" for creating IRC bots. Effectively, Cinch is a library that both abstracts away all of the complexities of dealing with IRC servers and presents a DSL for rolling out your own functionality.

Cinch's Hello Bot example demonstrates how you can easily create a bot that connects to an IRC server (irc.freenode.org), joins a channel (#cinch) and then replies to greetings:

irc = Cinch . setup :verbose => true do server " irc.freenode.org " nick " Cinchbot " channels %w( #cinch ) end irc . plugin " hello " do | m | m . reply " Hello, #{m.nick} ! " end irc . run

Cinch isn't the first attempt at building a DSL for creating bots in Ruby. Autumn is perhaps the most famous existing library, but it's extremely heavy compared to Cinch. Cinch vs Autumn is almost like Sinatra vs Rails. Other libraries include Rbot and Butler.

Update: I've been reminded in the comments that Isaac is another IRC bot DSL that's very much like Cinch.

If you prefer to get nearer the wire and see how the IRC protocol works, this Ruby code snippet provides basic IRC functionality.