This is a HipChat-specific version of the more general instructions in the Hubot wiki.
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From your existing HipChat account add your bot as a new user. Stay signed in to the account - we'll need to access its account settings later.
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Make sure native dependencies are installed:
(e.g. OS X with brew) % brew install icu4c % brew link icu4c (e.g. Linux with apt-get) % apt-get install libexpat1-dev % apt-get install libicu-dev
-
Install
hubot
from npm, if you don't already have it:% npm install --global coffee-script [email protected]
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Create a new
hubot
if necessary:% hubot --create <path>
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Switch to the new
hubot
directory:% cd <above path>
-
Install
hubot
dependencies:% npm install
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Install the
hipchat
adapter:% npm install --save hubot-hipchat
-
Edit
Procfile
and change it to use thehipchat
adapter:web: bin/hubot --adapter hipchat
-
Turn your
hubot
directory into a git repository:% git init % git add . % git commit -m "Initial commit"
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Install the Heroku command line tools if you don't have them installed yet.
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Create a new Heroku application and (optionally) rename it:
% heroku create % heroku rename our-company-hubot
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Note: If you're going to include the redis-brain.coffee plugin you'll need to add Redis To Go.
% heroku addons:add redistogo:nano
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Configure it:
You will need to set a configuration variable if you are hosting on the free Heroku plan.
% heroku config:add HEROKU_URL=http://soothing-mists-4567.herokuapp.com
Where the URL is your Heroku app's URL (shown after running
heroku create
, orheroku rename
).Set the JID to the "Jabber ID" shown on your bot's XMPP/Jabber account settings:
% heroku config:add HUBOT_HIPCHAT_JID="..."
Set the password to the password chosen when you created the bot's account.
% heroku config:add HUBOT_HIPCHAT_PASSWORD="..."
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Deploy and start the bot:
% git push heroku master % heroku ps:scale web=1
This will tell Heroku to run 1 of the
web
process type which is described in theProcfile
. -
You should see the bot join all rooms it has access to (or are specified in HUBOT_HIPCHAT_ROOMS, see below). If not, check the output of
heroku logs
. You can also useheroku config
to check the config vars andheroku restart
to restart the bot.heroku ps
will show you its current process state. -
Assuming your bot's name is "Hubot", the bot will respond to commands like "@hubot help". It will also respond in 1-1 chat ("@hubot" must be omitted there, so just use "help" for example).
-
To configure the commands the bot responds to, you'll need to edit the
hubot-scripts.json
file (valid script names here) or add scripts to thescripts/
directory. -
To deploy an updated version of the bot, simply commit your changes and run
git push heroku master
again.
Bonus: Add a notification hook to Heroku so a notification is sent to a room whenever the bot is updated: https://www.hipchat.com/help/page/heroku-integration
This adapter uses the following environment variables:
This is your bot's Jabber ID which can be found in your XMPP/Jabber account settings. It will look something like [email protected]
This is the password for your bot's HipChat account.
Optional. This is a comma separated list of room JIDs that you want your bot to join. You can leave this blank or set it to "All" to have your bot join every room. Room JIDs look like "[email protected]" and can be found in the XMPP/Jabber account settings - just add "@conf.hipchat.com" to the end of the room's "XMPP/Jabber Name".
Optional. Use to force the host to open the XMPP connection to.
Optional. Setting to false
will prevent the HipChat adapter from auto-joining rooms when invited.
Optional. Set to debug
to enable detailed debug logging.
To run locally on OSX or Linux you'll need to set the required environment variables and run the bin/hubot
script. An example script to run the bot might look like:
#!/bin/bash
export HUBOT_HIPCHAT_JID="..."
export HUBOT_HIPCHAT_PASSWORD="..."
bin/hubot --adapter hipchat