DMDirc is an IRC client written in Java. It's cross-platform, hugely configurable, and is easily extensible with a robust plugins system.
To download and run the latest stable version of DMDirc, download an installer or archive for your platform from the releases page.
If there's not a distribution for your platform, you can download the Jar file instead. You will need to manually install OpenJDK 8 or newer in this case.
This repository doesn't actually contain the source for DMDirc. Instead it's split over four different components, each with their own repository:
- client: contains the main guts of the client
- parser: an interface for parsers and a full IRC parser
- plugins: official plugins, including the main UI
- util: general purpose utility classes not directly related to IRC
Each of the repositories can be worked on and built independently of all the others (and we've paid particular care to make sure the parser and util projects can be dropped in to other applications with the minimum of fuss). If you actually want to develop the client, though, it's a lot easier if they're all together — that's what this repository is for! Each of the components mentioned above is included as a submodule, and there are some handy top-level build scripts for bundling everything together.
To build and run the DMDirc client, you will need to have Java 8 or greater. DMDirc will work with either the Oracle JDK or Open JDK. All other dependencies are downloaded by the build scripts automatically.
First off, clone this repository and init the submodules:
git clone https://github.com/DMDirc/Meta.git
cd Meta
git submodule update --init --remote
You can then use the provided gradle wrapper to start a build, or run all the tests in the project:
./gradlew jar
./gradlew test
We strongly recommend using IntelliJ IDEA. To get started install IDEA 2016.1 or newer and follow these steps to import the project and enable annotation processing:
- Select
Import project
- Select the
build.gradle
file in this directory - Ensure
Create separate module per source set
is ticked - Click OK; you should see a list of modules
- Click OK; the IDE itself should now load
- Open the main settings window (File -> Settings)
- Under
Build, Execution and Deployment
navigate toCompiler
, thenAnnotation Processors
(you can also use the search field) - Tick the box to enable annotation processing
- Change the
Store generated sources relative to
option tocontent root
Once you have executed ./gradlew jar
, a copy of the client jar will be placed
in client/dist
and all of the plugins will be collected in plugins/dist
. For
development work, it is often easiest to symlink the plugins
directory from
your DMDirc profile to the dist directory in the source tree. This ensures the
latest plugins are always used.
For convenience a skeleton profile is located in etc/profile
in this
repository, and includes a symlink to the correct plugins directory. To run the
client using this profile, use the -d
option:
java -jar DMDirc.jar -d path/to/etc/profile
We welcome pull requests on GitHub for all the DMDirc repositories. The tests for the module will run on CircleCI, and the pull request will be updated with the result.
Please bear in mind that these are just unit tests for the individual modules — they don't test how your change will affect DMDirc itself. It's good practice to run all of the tests in the project and compile and run an actual client to make sure everything actually still works!
You can see an overview of open pull requests across all of the DMDirc projects here.
The current CI and coverage status for the major projects are shown below:
Project | Status | Coverage | Codacy |
---|---|---|---|
Meta | (No code) | (No code) | |
Client | |||
Parser | |||
Plugins | |||
Util |
We track issues in each of the separate projects listed above (for example, issues with the IRC parser are raised in the 'parser' repository; issues with the Swing UI are raised in the 'plugins' repository). If you are unsure where to raise an issue, feel free to raise it in Meta (this repository) and we'll relocate it accordingly.
You can see an overview of open issues across all of the DMDirc projects here.
Clover is disabled by default as it requires a license file we can't distribute. If you have a Clover license, or have access to DMDirc's license, place it in etc/clover/clover.license.
To enable clover, set the enableClover property to true value:
./gradlew -PenableClover=true cloverAggregateReports
This will place a HTML report in build/reports/clover/html
.
All cross-repository dependencies are specified as artifacts, rather than project dependencies. That means if (say) the client is compiled on its own, it will pull snapshot versions of the parser and util modules from our maven repository.
The meta repository includes a gradle build script that finds these dependencies and replaces them with project links instead. This ensures that while developing the client your changes are reflected across modules properly.