#!/usr/bin/env python3.9 import os # Used exactly once to check for the config file import shutil # Used exactly once to copy the sample config file import asyncio import aiohttp import re import json import requests import io import traceback import atoot # Asynchronous Mastodon API wrapper import scrython # Scryfall API (similar to Gatherer but I prefer Scryfall) import nest_asyncio # I cannot even begin to explain why I need this one. nest_asyncio.apply() # It has something to do with Scrython using asyncio, which means I can't # use it from within my asyncio code. And that's on purpose, I think. # But this patches asyncio to allow that, somehow? # I'm sorry, it's completely beyond me. Look it up. import face from debug import * async def startup(): log('Starting up...') if not os.path.exists('config.py'): log('Config file not found, copying', Severity.WARNING) shutil.copyfile('config.sample.py', 'config.py') import config async with atoot.client(config.instance, access_token=config.access_token) as c: log('Connected to server!') me = await c.verify_account_credentials() log('Credentials verified!') tasks = [] tasks.append(asyncio.create_task(listen(c, me))) tasks.append(asyncio.create_task(repeat(5 * 60, update_followers, c, me))) for t in tasks: await t async def get_cards(card_names): async def download_card_image(session, c): log(f'Downloading image for {c.name()}...') url = c.image_uris(0, 'normal') async with session.get(url) as r: # BytesIO stores the data in memory as a file-like object. # We can turn around and upload it to fedi without ever # touching the disk. image = io.BytesIO(await r.read()) log(f'Done downloading image for {c.name()}!') return image def get_text_representation(c): try: # Double face cards have to be treated ENTIRELY DIFFERENTLY # Instead of card objects we just get a list of two dictionaries. # I've decided to try to reuse at much code as possible by jerryrigging # my own Face object that can be passed into my card parsing logic return '\n\n//\n\n'.join(( get_text_representation(face.Face(card_face)) for card_face in c.card_faces() )) except: pass # I genuinely think this is the best way to check whether a card has # power/toughness, considering how Scrython is implemented. # Can't even check for Creature type because of stuff like Vehicles. try: c.power() has_pt = True except KeyError: has_pt = False ret = c.name() # All cards have a name. # Some cards (lands, [[Wheel of Fate]], whatever) don't have mana costs. # Add it if it's there. if c.mana_cost(): ret += f' - {c.mana_cost()}' # All cards have a type line. ret += '\n' + c.type_line() # Funnily enough, not all cards have oracle text. # It feels like they should, but that's ignoring vanilla creatures. if c.oracle_text(): ret += f'\n\n{c.oracle_text()}' # Finally, power/toughness. if has_pt: ret += f'\n\n{c.power()}/{c.toughness()}' return ret # Responses list: One entry for each [[card name]] in parent, even if the # response is just "No card named 'CARDNAME' was found." responses = [] # Cards list: Only cards that were found successfully cards = [] for name in card_names: name = re.sub(r'<.*?>', '', name).strip() try: if len(name) > 141: c = scrython.cards.Named(fuzzy='Our Market Research Shows That Players Like Really Long Card Names So We Make This Card to Have The Absolute Longest Card Name Ever Elemental') elif len(name) == 0: c = scrython.cards.Named(fuzzy='_____') else: c = scrython.cards.Named(fuzzy=name) cards.append(c) responses.append(f'{c.name()} - {c.scryfall_uri()}') except scrython.foundation.ScryfallError: responses.append(f'No card named "{name}" was found.') # Download card images. # A status can only have four images on it, so we can't necessarily include # every card mentioned in the status. # The reason I choose to include /no/ images in that case is that someone # linking to more than 4 cards is probably talking about enough different things # that it would be weird for the first four they happened to mention to have images. # Like if someone's posting a decklist it would be weird for the first four cards to # be treated as special like that. if 1 <= len(cards) <= 4: async with aiohttp.ClientSession() as session: images = tuple(zip( await asyncio.gather( *(download_card_image(session, c) for c in cards) ), (get_text_representation(c) for c in cards) )) else: images = None return responses, images async def update_followers(c, me): log('Updating followed accounts...') accounts_following_me = set(map(lambda a: a['id'], await c.get_all(c.account_followers(me)))) accounts_i_follow = set(map(lambda a: a['id'], await c.get_all(c.account_following(me)))) # Accounts that follow me that I don't follow to_follow = accounts_following_me - accounts_i_follow # Accounts I follow that don't follow me to_unfollow = accounts_i_follow - accounts_following_me if to_follow: # Note that the bot listens for follows and tries to follow # back instantly. This is /usually/ dead code but it's a failsafe # in case someone followed while the bot was down or something. log(f'{len(to_follow)} accounts to follow:') for account in to_follow: await c.account_follow(account) log(f'Followed {account}') else: log('No accounts to follow.') if to_unfollow: log(f'{len(to_unfollow)} accounts to unfollow:') for account in to_unfollow: await c.account_unfollow(account) log(f'Unfollowed {account}') else: log('No accounts to unfollow.') async def listen(c, me): log('Listening...') async with c.streaming('user') as stream: async for msg in stream: status = json.loads(msg.json()['payload']) try: # Two events come in for each status on the timeline. I don't know why. # One of them has the status nested deeper. Just ignore that one I guess. if 'status' in status: continue # Don't activate on boosts at all if 'reblog' in status and status['reblog'] is not None: continue status_id = status['id'] status_author = '@' + status['account']['acct'] status_text = status['content'] status_visibility = status['visibility'] except: try: if status['type'] == 'follow': id = status['account']['id'] log(f'Received follow from {id}, following back') await c.account_follow(id) except: log('Event came in that we don\'t know how to handle.', Severity.WARNING) log(status, Severity.WARNING) continue # Reply unlisted or at the same visibility as the parent, whichever is # more restrictive # I realized after writing this that I don't /think/ it ever matters? # I think replies behave the same on public and unlisted. But I'm not 100% # sure so it stays. reply_visibility = min(('unlisted', status_visibility), key=['direct', 'private', 'unlisted', 'public'].index) media_ids = None try: card_names = re.findall(r'\[\[(.*?)\]\]', status_text) # ignore any statuses without cards in them if not card_names: continue cards, media = await get_cards(card_names) reply_text = status_author # Just a personal preference thing. If I ask for one card, put the # text on the same line as the mention. If I ask for more, start the # list a couple of lines down. if len(cards) == 1: reply_text += ' ' + cards[0] else: reply_text += '\n\n' + '\n'.join(cards) if media: try: media_ids = [] for image, desc in media: media_ids.append((await c.upload_attachment(fileobj=image, params={}, description=desc))['id']) except atoot.api.RatelimitError: media_ids = None reply_text += '\n\nMedia attachments are temporarily disabled due to API restrictions, they will return shortly.' except Exception as e: # Oops! log(traceback.print_exc(), Severity.ERROR) reply_text = f'{status_author} Sorry! You broke me somehow. Please let Holly know what you did!' log('Sending reply...') reply = await c.create_status(status=reply_text, media_ids=media_ids, in_reply_to_id=status_id, visibility=reply_visibility) log(f'Reply sent! {reply["uri"]}') # https://stackoverflow.com/a/55505152/2114129 async def repeat(interval, func, *args, **kwargs): """Run func every interval seconds. If func has not finished before *interval*, will run again immediately when the previous iteration finished. *args and **kwargs are passed as the arguments to func. """ while True: await asyncio.gather( func(*args, **kwargs), asyncio.sleep(interval), ) if __name__ == '__main__': asyncio.run(startup())