Irssi/irssi-otr

From ArchWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

The irssi-otr module adds Off-the-Record Messaging support to irssi.

Installing

irssi-otr is now part of irssi.

Usage

See the README.

Loading the module on startup

If you are tired of typing /LOAD otr you can put the following in your ~/.irssi/startup:

LOAD otr

Stripping HTML

If you are using irssi-otr with BitlBee you will notice that some clients send you HTML formatted messages. Normally BitlBee automatically strips the HTML formatting, but since the messages are encrypted this does not work anymore. Nevertheless you can achieve the same by stripping the HTML with regular expressions using the Trigger script. Just make sure you load the script before the otr module. You can either do this manually or again make your ~/.irssi/startup look like this:

SCRIPT LOAD trigger.pl
LOAD otr

Also make sure that trigger.pl is not in ~/.irssi/scripts/autorun since the files from this directory are loaded after ~/.irssi/startup.

Since it is not possible to perfectly match HTML code with regular expressions we will take a somewhat conservative approach. We will only strip HTML tags we explicitly specified from PRIVMSGS from the BitlBee network, where we assume you added you server.

You can /TRIGGER add the following lines or copy them to ~/.irssi/triggers.

-privmsgs -nocase -tags 'BitlBee' -regexp '</?(a|b|body|div|em|font|i|s|u)( +\w+=".*?")*>' -replace '' 

You can even make HTML line breaks look like multiple messages:

-privmsgs -nocase -tags 'BitlBee' -regexp '(\s*<br>\s*)+' -replace '\n�8/<�g�</$N�8/>�g �e' 

Where is the non-printable character ^D. In vi(m) you can get it by pressing Ctrl-v Ctrl-d in insert mode. If your are using a theme different than the default one you probably have to adapt the replacing string to match color and indentation.

And finally we convert some escaped HTML characters:

-privmsgs -nocase -tags 'BitlBee' -regexp '&amp;' -replace '&' 
-privmsgs -nocase -tags 'BitlBee' -regexp '&gt;' -replace '>' 
-privmsgs -nocase -tags 'BitlBee' -regexp '&lt;' -replace '<' 
-privmsgs -nocase -tags 'BitlBee' -regexp '&quot;' -replace '"' 

These are just some basic replaces, just extend them if you need more.