Go to file
2022-08-02 02:17:18 +01:00
.github/workflows Add release CI 2022-07-30 16:42:07 +01:00
src Fix bug with line endings 2022-08-02 02:17:11 +01:00
.editorconfig Initial commit 2022-07-29 22:04:23 +01:00
.gitignore Initial commit 2022-07-29 22:04:23 +01:00
Cargo.toml Bump version number 2022-08-02 02:17:18 +01:00
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md Initial commit 2022-07-29 22:04:23 +01:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2022-07-29 22:04:23 +01:00
README.md Bump version number 2022-08-02 02:17:18 +01:00

ircparser

An IRC (RFC1459) parser and formatter, built in Rust.

ircparser should work on basically any Rust version, but the earliest version checked in the CI is v1.31 (the first version with Rust 2018 support).

Setup

To use the latest stable version of ircparser, add it to your Cargo.toml file like so:

[dependencies]
ircparser = "^0.2.1"

You can also use the latest development version by specifying the following:

[dependencies]
ircparser = { git = "https://github.com/parafoxia/ircparser" }

Usage

ircparser currently only has one public function — parse. This function takes a line of an IRC message, and parses it into an easy-to-use Line object.

use ircparser;

fn main() {
    let msg = "@id=123;name=rick :nick!user@host.tmi.twitch.tv PRIVMSG #rickastley :Never gonna give you up!";
    match ircparser::parse(msg) {
        Ok(x) => {
            let line = x;

            assert_eq!(&line.tags["id"], "123");
            if line.source.is_some() {
                assert_eq!(line.source.unwrap(), ":nick!user@host.tmi.twitch.tv");
            }
            assert_eq!(line.command, "PRIVMSG");
            assert_eq!(line.params[0], "#rickastley");
            assert_eq!(line.params[1], "Never gonna give you up!");
        }
        Err(e) => {
            println!("A parsing error occured: {e}");
            return;
        }
    };
}

License

The ircparser crate for Rust is licensed under the BSD 3-Clause License.