Forwards the supplied IRCEvent to IRCPluginImpl.onEventImpl.
Basic constructor for a plugin.
Lets a plugin modify an IRCEvent while it's begin constructed, before it's finalised and passed on to be handled.
Writes plugin resources to disk, creating them if they don't exist.
Loads configuration for this plugin from disk.
Change a plugin's Settings-annotated settings struct member by their string name.
Prints the plugin's Settings-annotated settings struct.
Gathers the configuration text the plugin wants to contribute to the configuration file.
Returns the name of the plugin. (Technically it's the name of the module.)
Compile a list of our a plugin's oneliner commands.
Forwards to IRCPluginImpl.commandsImpl.
Proxies a bus message to the plugin, to let it handle it (or not).
Metadata about a IRCEventHandler.Command- and/or IRCEventHandler.Regex-annotated event handler.
An IRCPluginState instance containing variables and arrays that represent the current state of the plugin. Should generally be passed by reference.
Allows a plugin to modify an event post-parsing.
Called to let the plugin react to a new event, parsed from the server.
Called when the plugin is requested to initialise its disk resources.
Reads serialised configuration text into the plugin's settings struct.
Called to let the plugin contribute settings when writing the configuration file.
Called when we want to change a setting by its string name.
Called at program start but before connection has been established.
Called when connection has been established.
Called when we want a plugin to print its Settings-annotated struct of settings.
Called during shutdown of a connection; a plugin's would-be destructor.
Returns the name of the plugin.
Returns an array of the descriptions of the commands a plugin offers.
Returns an array of the descriptions of the channel-specific commands a plugin offers.
Reloads the plugin, where such is applicable.
Called when a bus message arrives from another plugin.
Returns whether or not the plugin is enabled in its settings.
The SedReplace plugin stores a buffer of the last said line of every user, and if a new message comes in with a sed-replace-like pattern in it, tries to apply it on the original message as a regex-like replace.