Configuration reference
Quick Links:
- Config file
- Reference
- Connector Modules
- Database Modules
- Logging
- Installation Path
- Parsers
- Skills
- Time Zone
- Language
- Web Server
- Module Options
- Install Location
- Git Repository
- Local Directory
- Disable Caching
- Disable dependency install
- Environment Variables
- Include Additional Yaml Files
Config file
For configuration, opsdroid uses a single YAML file named configuration.yaml
. When you run opsdroid it will look for the file in the following places in order:
./configuration.yaml
/etc/opsdroid/configuration.yaml
- one of the default locations:
- Mac:
~/Library/Application Support/opsdroid
- Linux:
~/.local/share/opsdroid
- Windows:
C:\<User>\<Application Data>\<Local Settings>\opsdroid\
orC:\Users\<User>\AppData\Local\opsdroid
Note: If no file named configuration.yaml
can be found on one of these folders one will be created for you taken from the example configuration file
If you are using one of the default locations you can run the command opsdroid -e
or opsdroid --edit-config
to open the configuration with your favourite editor(taken from the environment variable EDITOR
) or the default editor vim.
The opsdroid project itself is very simple and requires modules to give it functionality. In your configuration file, you must specify the connector, skill and database* modules you wish to use and any options they may require.
Connectors are modules for connecting opsdroid to your specific chat service.
Skills are modules which define what actions opsdroid should perform based on different chat messages.
Database modules connect opsdroid to your chosen database and allow skills to store information between messages.
For example, a simple barebones configuration would look like:
connectors:
- name: shell
skills:
- name: hello
This tells opsdroid to use the shell connector and hello skill from the official module library.
In opsdroid all modules are git repositories which will be cloned locally the first time they are used. By default, if you do not specify a repository opsdroid will look at https://github.com/opsdroid/<moduletype>-<modulename>.git
for the repository. Therefore in the above configuration, the connector-shell
and skill-hello
repositories were pulled from the opsdroid organisation on GitHub.
You are of course encouraged to write your own modules and make them available on GitHub or any other repository host which is accessible by your opsdroid installation.
A more advanced config would like similar to the following:
connectors:
- name: slack
token: "mysecretslacktoken"
databases:
- name: mongo
host: "mymongohost.mycompany.com"
port: "27017"
database: "opsdroid"
skills:
- name: hello
- name: seen
- name: myawesomeskill
repo: "https://github.com/username/myawesomeskill.git"
In this configuration we are using the slack connector with a slack auth token supplied, a built-in mongo database connection for persisting data, hello
and seen
skills from the official repos and finally a custom skill hosted on GitHub.
Configuration options such as the token
in the slack connector or the host
, port
and database
options in the mongo database are specific to those modules. Ensure you check each module's required configuration items before you use them.
Reference
Connector Modules
Opsdroid comes with some built-in connectors out of the box. A connector is a module which is either installed as a plugin or built-in that connect opsdroid to a specific chat service.
The built-in connectors are:
Note: More connectors will be added as built-in connectors into the opsdroid over time.
Config options of the connectors themselves differ between connectors, see the connector documentation for details.
connectors:
- name: slack
token: "mysecretslacktoken"
# conceptual connector
- name: twitter
oauth_key: "myoauthkey"
secret_key: "myoauthsecret"
Some connectors will allow you to specify a delay to simulate a real user, you just need to add the delay option under a connector in the configuration.yaml
file.
Thinking Delay: accepts a int, float or a list to delay reply by x seconds. Typing Delay: accepts a int, float or a list to delay reply by x seconds - this is calculated by the length of opsdroid response text so waiting time will be variable.
Example:
connectors:
- name: slack
token: "mysecretslacktoken"
thinking-delay: <int, float or two element list>
typing-delay: <int, float or two element list>
Note: As expected this will cause a delay on opsdroid time of response so make sure you don't pass a high number.
See module options for installing custom connectors.
Database Modules
Opsdroid comes with some built-in databases out of the box. Database modules which connect opsdroid to a persistent data storage service.
Skills can store data in opsdroid's "memory", this is a dictionary which can be persisted in an external database.
The built-in databases are:
Config options of the databases themselves differ between databases, see the database documentation for details.
databases:
- name: mongo
host: "mymongohost.mycompany.com"
port: "27017"
database: "opsdroid"
See module options for installing custom databases.
Welcome-message
Configure welcome message.
If set to true then a welcome message is printed in the log at startup. It defaults to true.
welcome-message: true
Logging
Configure logging in opsdroid.
Setting path
will configure where opsdroid writes the log file to. This location must be writable by the user running opsdroid. Setting this to false
will disable log file output.
Note: If you forget to declare a path for the logs but have logging active, one of the default locations will be used.
All python logging levels are available in opsdroid. level
can be set to debug
, info
, warning
, error
and critical
.
You may not want opsdroid to log to the console, for example, if you are using the shell connector. However, if running in a container you may want exactly that. Setting console
to true
or false
will enable or disable console logging.
The default locations for the logs are:
- Mac:
/Users/<User>/Library/Logs/opsdroid
- Linux:
/home/<User>/.cache/opsdroid/log
- Windows:
C:\Users\<User>\AppData\Local\opsdroid\Logs\
If you are using one of the default paths for your log you can run the command opsdroid -l
or opsdroid --view-log
to open the logs with your favourite editor(taken from the environment variable EDITOR
) or the default editor vim.
logging:
path: ~/.opsdroid/output.log
level: info
console: true
connectors:
- name: shell
skills:
- name: hello
- name: seen
Installation Path
Set the path for opsdroid to use when installing skills. Defaults to the current working directory.
module-path: "/etc/opsdroid/modules"
connectors:
- name: shell
skills:
- name: hello
- name: seen
Parsers
When writing skills for opsdroid there are multiple parsers you can use for matching messages to your functions.
Config options of the parsers themselves differ between parsers, see the parser/matcher documentation for details.
parsers:
- name: regex
enabled: true
# NLU parser
- name: rasanlu
url: http://localhost:5000
project: opsdroid
token: 85769fjoso084jd
min-score: 0.8
Some parsers will allow you to specify a min-score to tell opsdroid to ignore any matches which score less than a given number between 0 and 1. You just need to add the required min-score under a parser in the configuration.yaml file.
See the matchers section for more details.
Skills
Skill modules which add functionality to opsdroid.
Config options of the skills themselves differ between skills, see the skill documentation for details.
skills:
- name: hello
- name: seen
See module options for installing custom skills.
Time Zone
Configure the timezone.
This timezone will be used in crontab skills if the timezone has not been set as a kwarg in the crontab decorator. All timezone names from the tz database are valid here.
timezone: 'Europe/London'
Language
Configure the language to use opsdroid.
To use opsdroid with a different language other than English you can specify it in your configuration.yaml. The language code needs to be in the standardized ISO 639-1.
Note: If no language is specified, opsdroid will default to English.
lang: <ISO 639-1 code - example: 'en'>
Web Server
Configure the REST API in opsdroid.
By default, opsdroid will start a web server accessible only to localhost on port 8080
(or 8443
if ssl details are provided). For more information see the REST API docs.
web:
host: '127.0.0.1' # set to '0.0.0.0' to allow all traffic
port: 8080
ssl:
cert: /path/to/cert.pem
key: /path/to/key.pem
Module options
Install Location
All modules are installed from git repositories. By default, if no additional options are specified opsdroid will look for the repository at https://github.com/opsdroid/<moduletype>-<modulename>.git
.
However, if you wish to install a module from a different location you can specify one of the following options.
Git Repository
A git URL to install the module from.
connectors:
- name: slack
token: "mysecretslacktoken"
- name: mynewconnector
repo: https://github.com/username/myconnector.git
Note: When using a git repository, opsdroid will try to update it at startup pulling with fast forward strategy.
Local Directory
A local path to install the module from.
skills:
- name: myawesomeskill
path: /home/me/src/opsdroid-skills/myawesomeskill
You can specify a single file.
skills:
- name: myawesomeskill
path: /home/me/src/opsdroid-skills/myawesomeskill/myskill.py
Or even an IPython/Jupyter Notebook.
skills:
- name: myawesomeskill
path: /home/me/src/opsdroid-skills/myawesomeskill/myskill.ipynb
GitHub Gist
A gist url to download and install the module from. This downloads the gist to a temporary file and then uses the single file local installer above. Therefore Notebooks are also supported.
skills:
- name: ping
gist: https://gist.github.com/jacobtomlinson/6dd35e0f62d6b779d3d0d140f338d3e5
Or you can specify the Gist ID without the full URL.
skills:
- name: ping
gist: 6dd35e0f62d6b779d3d0d140f338d3e5
Disable Caching
Set no-cache
to true to do a fresh git clone of the module whenever you start opsdroid.
databases:
- name: mongodb
repo: https://github.com/username/mymongofork.git
no-cache: true
Disable dependency install
Set no-dep
to true to skip the installation of dependencies on every start of opsdroid.
skills:
- name: myawesomeskill
no-cache: true
no-deps: true
Note: This might be useful when you are developing a skill and already have the dependencies installed.
Environment variables
You can use environment variables in your config. You need to specify the variable in the place of a value.
skills:
- name: myawesomeskill
somekey: $ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE
Note: Your environment variable names must consist of uppercase characters and underscores only. The value must also be just the environment variable, you cannot currently mix env vars inside strings.
Include additional yaml files
You can split the config into smaller modules by using the value !include file.yaml
to import the contents of a yaml file into the main config.
skills: !include skills.yaml
Note: The file.yaml that you wish to include in the config must be in the same directory as your configuration.yaml (e.g ~/.opsdroid)