2012-03-16

social networking with bitlbee and erc

Instant messaging (IM) is one of the great time sinks of our age. Emacs-users, social butterflies as we are, of course want to take part in that -- preferrably from the comfort of our own environment.

There are various ways to use services like MS Live Messenger, Facebook Chat, GTalk, Yahoo etc. from within emacs – the one I use is called BitlBee. BitlBee is a program that presents all the various forms of IM as IRC-channels. In other words, while BitlBee knows all the details about communicating with these networks, all you need is an IRC-client to connect to BitlBee. This IRC-client does not have to be Emacs-based - any client can be used - but I am using ERC. Note, the below assumes you are somewhat familiar with it.

So, let's see how we can set up BitlBee on our system; there are public BitlBee-servers available online, but in the case of IM, I wouldn't necessarily want to trust them with my account data… so I'm using my own.

Setting up Bitlbee

So, how can we set this up? First, install BitlBee – many distributions have ready-made packages, otherwise you can build from source. In the examples below, I am assuming you are using Bitlbee version 3 or higher; if you use a different version, the details will vary a bit.

You can either run Bitlbee as a system-wide daemon, or just use it on your own. I am doing the former (for the latter, bitlbee.el is useful).

To connect ERC to the Bitlbee daemon, you can use something like the following:

(defun i-wanna-be-social ()
  "Connect to IM networks using bitlbee."
  (interactive)
  (erc :server "localhost" :port 6667 :nick "user"))

I'm sure you can come up with a better nick than user… Anyhow, with this function in your ~/.emacs, we can connect to bitlbee with:

M-x i-wanna-be-social RET

This should connect us to BitlBee; when all goes well, this will look something like this:

*** You have joined channel &bitlbee
*** mindcrime has changed mode for &bitlbee to +t
*** Users on &bitlbee: @user @root
*** Topic for &bitlbee: Welcome to the control channel. Type help for help
    information.
<root> Welcome to the BitlBee gateway!
<root>
<root> If you've never used BitlBee before, please do read the help
  information using the help command. Lots of FAQs are answered there.
<root> If you already have an account on this server, just use the identify
  command to identify yourself.
<root> The nick is (probably) not registered
*** &bitlbee modes: +t
<ERC>

Now, this first time, you will need to register yourself (this is only needed once); use the same nick (user in the example) that you used before:

<user> register user secretpassword
<root> Account successfully created

We're registered! This means, that bitlbee knows about you, and will save your settings.

Re-entering bitlbee

Just to complete the bitlbee-connecting part: the next time you want to use bitlbee, use i-wanna-be-social as before. However, now you need to identify yourself (rather than register):

<user> identify user secretpassword
<root> Password accepted, settings and accounts loaded

This can be automated by adding something like the following to your config:

(defun bitlbee-identify ()
  (when (and (string= "localhost" erc-session-server)
          (string= "&bitlbee" (buffer-name)))
    (erc-message "PRIVMSG" (format "%s identify user secretpassword"
                             (erc-default-target)
                             djcb-bitlbee-password))))

(add-hook 'erc-join-hook 'bitlbee-identify)

Modify user and secretpassword as desired. If you don't want write out your passwords in your emacs config files, take a look at keeping your secrets secret.

Adding accounts

Now, let's add some IM-accounts (just some examples here; also see Bitlbee Quickstart. Note, add any point during this, you can see your accounts with the command:

<user> account list

and using the numbers (or the accounts 'tag') you can switch an account on (and off):

<user> account 0 on

There are many other commands – use help command the consult the built-in documentation.

Connecting to IM networks

To connect to IM networks, you have to add the accounts to BitlBee. It will save them, so you only need to do that once. Let's do it - in each case, replace user and password with whatever you use for those.

You can see your combined logged-in buddy list using M-x erc-channel-names (or C-c C-n). Or use the blist command (see help blist).

After adding an account, it's a good idea to issue the save command, to ensure that bitlbee saves it.

Jabber

<user> account add jabber foobar@jabber.org mypassword
<root> Account successfully added with tag jabber
<user> account jabber on
<root> jabber - Logging in: Connecting
<root> jabber - Logging in: Connected to server, logging in
<root> jabber - Logging in: Converting stream to TLS
<root> jabber - Logging in: Connected to server, logging in
<root> jabber - Logging in: Authentication finished
<root> jabber - Logging in: Authenticated, requesting buddy list
<root> jabber - Logging in: Logged in

(and of course, you can use other servers beside jabber.org)

GoogleTalk

GoogleTalk (gtalk) is implemented using XMPP (jabber), and it's recommended to use oauth for authentication. Note, the foobar below is just a placeholder (for a password); bitlbee wants us to put something there, but since we'll be using oauth, it's not actually used.

<user> account add jabber myaccount@gmail.com foobar
<root> Account successfully added with tag gtalk
<user> account gtalk set oauth on
<root> oauth = `on'
<user> account gtalk set nick_source full_name
<root> nick_source = `full_name'
<user> account gtalk on
<root> gtalk - Logging in: Starting OAuth authentication

Now, a second window will open with a URL:

<jabber_oauth> Open this URL in your browser to authenticate:
https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth?scope=https://www.googleapis.\
com/auth/googletalk&response_type=code&redirect_uri=urn:ietf:wg:oauth:2.0:oob&client_i\
d=78312399893489.apps.googleusercontent.com

<jabber_oauth> Respond to this message with the returned authorization
token.

Follow this URL in your browser, and it will take you to some Google page for authentication. When that is completed, you will receive some string cookie, which you paste back into the newly opened window.

<user> 4/sIns904fdlkP5nudjCF4mBHF7Go_-E0g8
*** jabber_oauth is AWAY: Offline

Et voilĂ ! We're connected to Gtalk (don't worry about the Offline-warning).

Facebook

Apart from being a social website, Facebook can also be used for IM. You can do this through the website, or you can use its jabber interface. It works very similar to gtalk; only important thing is that you get yourself a Facebook username:

<user> account add jabber myusername0@chat.facebook.com
<root> Account successfully added with tag fb
<root> You can now use the /OPER command to enter the password
<root> Alternatively, enable OAuth if the account supports it: account
  fb set oauth on
<user> account fb set oauth on
<root> oauth = `on'
<user> account gtalk set nick_source full_name
<root> nick_source = `full_name'
<user> account fb on
<root> fb - Logging in: Starting OAuth authentication

Then, go through the oath-authentication steps (see the discussion about adding Gtalk accounts above).

Once authenticated, you'll get something like this:

<root> fb - Logging in: Requesting OAuth access token
<root> fb - Logging in: Connecting
<root> fb - Logging in: Connected to server, logging in
<root> fb - Logging in: Converting stream to TLS
<root> fb - Logging in: Connected to server, logging in
<root> fb - Logging in: Authentication finished
<root> fb - Logging in: Server claims your JID is
  `-748234518@chat.facebook.com' instead of
  `myusername0@chat.facebook.com'. This mismatch may cause problems with
  groupchats and possibly other things.
<root> fb - Logging in: Authenticated, requesting buddy list
<root> fb - Logging in: Logged in

It's to now act upon the warning, so, we log out, change the user name and long back in:

<user> account fb off
<root> fb - Signing off..
<user> account fb set username -748234518@chat.facebook.com
<root> username = `-748234518@chat.facebook.com'
<user> account fb on

MSN / Live Messenger

MSN uses its own protocol (although apparently they're also supporting XMPP ("jabber") now). Suppose you have an account there, user partygirl89@hotmail.com with password iamcute:

<user> account add msn partygirl89@hotmail.com iamcute
<root> Account successfully added
<user> account msn on
<root> msn - Logging in: Connecting
<root> msn - Logging in: Connected to server, waiting for reply
<root> msn - Logging in: Transferring to other server
<root> msn - Logging in: Connected to server, waiting for reply
<root> msn - Logging in: Authenticated, getting buddy list
<root> msn - Login error: Error reported by MSN server: Invalid
       (non-existent) handle                                      [12:17]
<root> msn - Logging in: Logged in

The 'Error reported' does not seem to matter.

Other accounts

It's similarly easy to setup Twitter-accounts and Identi.ca-accounts; I've stopped using those though, as it turned out to be a little too easy for some typing in the wrong window to end op as a tweet… The risk is less with twittering-mode and identica-mode.

For ICQ/Yahoo/AIM see below – replace the username/password with your own.

  • ICQ
    <user> account add oscar ICQ-ID PASSWORD login.icq.com
    <root> ...
    
  • AIM
    <user> account add oscar AIM-NICK PASSWORD login.aol.oscar.com
    <root> ...
    
  • Yahoo!
    <user> account add yahoo YAHOO-NICK PASSWORD
    <root> ...
    

    And I'm not even talking about combining bitlbee and Skype – yes, that is possible, too.

Chatting

Now, chatting is easy, following the normal ERC conventions (and settings). When people talk to you, a window opens (or a frame – see erc-auto-query. And you can initiate conversations with people by using /msg nick, with nick of course being the nickname of the person you want to talk to.

ERC/Bitlbee also work together nicely with Sauron, the emacs event tracker.

Have fun! I have only scratched the surface here - you now have the full arsenal of Elisp and ERC power available for your chatting.

2 comments:

qdot said...

I've actually set up sort of a IM Client interface to bitlbee+erc. It's using workgroups.el to maintain a screen for IMs, and has its own window allocator (albeit somewhat jank), matches IM service icons with their accounts in erc-nicklist, etc... Unfortunately it's scattered around my emacs configuration (http://www.github.com/qdot/conf_emacs), but I might try to write it up soon.

Having ZNC or another bouncer running on a server is hugely helpful for this too. Means you never miss messages, and can possibly log them remotely the same way IMO.im/beejive works.

Also, a handy thing to know about bitlbee: You can have nicks prefixed per account. This means all your AIM contacts can be aim-[nick], facebook can be fb-[nick], etc... It's great for doing super simple group filtering.

Unknown said...

Thank you for this presentation. I've been able to setup bitlbee in no time following your guide. I have a few questions however :

* What is this djcb-bitlbee-password function in bitlbee-identify ?

* I have (add-hook 'erc-join-hook 'bitlbee-identify) set but still need to issue "identify my_bitlbee_identity" in ERC at each startup. Is that how it's supposed to be ?

wilk