6.9 KiB
Setting Up NadekoBot on OSX
Prerequisites
-
- Mono
-
- Google Account
-
- Soundcloud Account (if you want soundcloud support)
-
- Text Editor (TextWrangler, or equivalent) or outside editor such as Atom
####Installing Homebrew
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
Run brew update
to fetch the latest package data.
####Installing dependencies
brew install git
brew install ffmpeg
brew update && brew upgrade ffmpeg
brew install opus
brew install opus-tools
brew install opusfile
brew install libffi
brew install libsodium
brew install tmux
####Check your FFMPEG
In case your FFMPEG
wasnt installed properly
brew options ffmpeg
brew install ffmpeg --with-x --with-y --with-z
etc.brew update && brew upgrade
(Update formulae and Homebrew itself && Install newer versions of outdated packages)brew prune
(Remove dead symlinks from Homebrew’s prefix)brew doctor
(Check your Homebrew installation for common issues)- Then try
brew install ffmpeg
again.
####Installing xcode-select Xcode command line tools. You will do this in Terminal.app by running the following command line:
xcode-select --install
A dialog box will open asking if you want to install xcode-select
. Select install and finish the installation.
####Installing Mono
- Building Mono dependencies:
brew install autoconf automake libtool pkg-config
- Building Mono from Source:
To build Mono from a Git Source Code checkout, you will want to have the official Mono installed on the system, as the build requires a working C# compiler to run. Once you do this, run the following commands, remember to replace PREFIX with your installation prefix that you selected:
PATH=$PREFIX/bin:$PATH
git clone https://github.com/mono/mono.git
cd mono
CC='cc -m32' ./autogen.sh --prefix=$PREFIX --disable-nls --build=i386-apple-darwin11.2.0
make
make install
To build Mono in 64 bit mode instead use this to configure the build:
./autogen.sh --prefix=$PREFIX --disable-nls
####Nadeko Setup
- Create a new folder and name it
Nadeko
. - Move to our
Nadeko
folder
cd Nadeko
- Go to Releases and copy the zip file address of the lalest version available, it should look like
https://github.com/Kwoth/NadekoBot/releases/download/vx.xx/NadekoBot.vx.x.zip
- Get the correct link, type
curl -O
and past the link, then hitEnter
- It should be something like this:
curl -O https://github.com/Kwoth/NadekoBot/releases/download/vx.xx/NadekoBot.vx.x.zip
^ do not copy-paste it
- Unzip the downloaded file in our
Nadeko
folder
####Creating DiscordBot application
- Go to DiscordApp.
- Log in with your Discord account.
- On the left side, press
New Application
. - Fill out the
App Name
(your bot's name, in this case), put the image you want, and add an app description(optional). - Create the application.
- Once the application is created, click on
Create a Bot User
and confirm it. - Keep this window open for now.
####Setting up Credentials.json file
- In our
NadekoBot
folder you should have.json
file namedcredentials_example.json
. (Note: If you do not see a .json aftercredentials_example.json
, do not add the**.json**
. You most likely have"Hide file extensions"
enabled.) - Rename
credentials_example.json
tocredentials.json
. - Open the file with your Text editor.
- In there you will see fields like
Token
,ClientId
,BotId
,OwnerIDs
. - In your DiscordApp, under
Bot User
part, you will see theToken:click to reveal
part, click to reveal it. - Copy your bot's token, and put it between
" "
in yourcredentials.json
file. - Copy
Client ID
and replace it with the example one in yourcredentials.json
inClient ID
andBotID
field. - Save your
credentials.json
but keep it open. We need to put yourUser ID
and owner.
####Running NadekoBot
- Copy/past and hit
Enter
tmux new -s nadeko
^this will create a new session named “nadeko” (you can replace “nadeko” with anything you prefer and remember its your session name)
.
or if you want to use Screen, run:
screen -S nadeko
^this will create a new screen named “nadeko” (you can replace “nadeko” with anything you prefer and remember its your screen name)
.
cd nadeko
- Start NadekoBot.exe using Mono:
mono NadekoBot.exe
CHECK THE BOT IN DISCORD, IF EVERYTHING IS WORKING
Now time to move bot to background and to do that, press CTRL+B+D (this will ditach the nadeko session using TMUX)
if you used Screen press CTRL+A+D (this will detach the nadeko screen)
####Inviting your bot to your server - Invite Guide
- Create a new server in Discord.
- Copy your
Client ID
from your DiscordApp. - Replace
12345678
in this linkhttps://discordapp.com/oauth2/authorize?client_id=12345678&scope=bot&permissions=66186303
with yourClient ID
. - Link should look like this:
https://discordapp.com/oauth2/authorize?client_id=**YOUR_CLENT_ID**&scope=bot&permissions=66186303
. - Go to newly created link and pick the server we created, and click
Authorize
. - Bot should be added to your server.
####Setting up OwnerIds
- In the server where your bot is, in a text channel, type
.uid
- Your
User ID
should show, copy it. - Close
NadekoBot.exe
- Replace your
User ID
in thecredentials.json
between[ ]
and save the changes. - Run
NadekoBot.exe
again. - Now you are the bot owner.
- You can add
User IDs
from the other users by separating IDs with a comma if you want to have more owners.
####Setting NadekoBot Music
For Music Setup and API keys check [Setting up NadekoBot for Music](Windows Guide.md#setting-up-nadekobot-for-music) and [JSON Explanations](JSON Explanations.md).
####Some more Info - TMUX
-If you want to see the sessions after logging back again, type tmux ls
, and that will give you the list of sessions running.
-If you want to switch to/ see that session, type tmux a -t nadeko
(nadeko is the name of the session we created before so, replace “nadeko”
with the session name you created.)
-If you want to kill NadekoBot session, type tmux kill-session -t nadeko
####Some more Info - Screen
-If you want to see the sessions after logging back again, type screen -ls
, and that will give you the list of screens.
-If you want to switch to/ see that screen, type screen -r nadeko
(nadeko is the name of the screen we created before so, replace “nadeko”
with the screen name you created.)
-If you want to kill the NadekoBot screen, type screen -X -S nadeko quit