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README.md

Twitch TextToSpeech Bot

A simple Twitch TTS bot (Web Speech API)

Description

The goal of this project is to provide a simple to use Text to Speech IRC bot. It's mainly focused on Twitch, but might be easily adapt to other IRC chats as well. Anyway, right now some parts are Twitch specific (like CAP REQ :twitch.tv/commands twitch.tv/tags). There are some other projects providing TTS for IRC based chats, like IRC Radio (TTS), but they are missing moderation features like Black-/Whitelists or deletion of single messages, before they are read. Therefore I created my own TTS bot, providing those features.

The project consits of a very simple IRC client, which monitors the incoming messages. If a valid!tts command is detected the message will send into a queue. Depending on your config it will wait there a few seconds for deletion by you/your moderators. If nobody deletes the message, it will send into another queue. This queue will get fetched by the HTML frontend, which will be delivered by an internal webserver (backend). The HTML frontend will use the Web Speech API included in any modern webbrowser to read the incoming TTS message. When this is done it will report back to the webserver and the message will be removed from the queue.

The server part is written in Python. The TTS part is written in Javascript.

By using Javascript for the actual TTS part it's not only very easy to access the Web Speech API and the underlying Speech features of your OS, it also makes it possible to use a wide range of devices to actually play the TTS output. You can start the backend on your PC/Server and open the frontend on your Android/iOS tablet or Mobile Phone. If you expose the backend to the internet (I would recommend to use a reverse proxy, rather than exposing the backend directly) you can also use the TTS bot on the go (e.g. your IRL setup).

(⃰sender is not on the blacklist, message is not too long, etc.)

Getting Started

Dependencies

  • Browser with Web Speech API support
  • Web Speech API Voices (usually already included in your OS and/or browser)
  • If you use tts.py see requirements.txt. If you use tts.exe all dependencies are included.

Installing

  1. Clone the repo, or download and unzip the newest Release
  2. Rename/copy config-dist.yml to config.yml
  3. Move/copy ./dist/tts.exe into the main directory (you can omit this step if you have Python installed)

Configuration

Adapt config.yml to your needs. Example:

irc:
  channel: "#gpkvt"
  username: "ttsbot"
  oauth_token: "oauth:ohkoace0wooghue8she9xaN0nooSau"
  server: "irc.chat.twitch.tv"
  clearmsg_timeout: 10

http:
  port: 80
  bind: "localhost"

bot:
  subonly: False
  modonly: False
  message_length: 200

messages:
  too_long: "Sorry, your TTS message is too long."
  disabled: "Sorry, TTS is disabled right now."
  denied: "Sorry, you are not allowed to use TTS."
  subonly: "Sorry, TTS is a sub-only feature."
  whitelist: "Sorry, you are not allowed to use TTS."
  ready: "TTS bot alpha ready!"
  says: "says"

log:
  level: "INFO"

usermapping:
  gpkvt: "gpk"

whitelist:

Explanation

irc
  • channel: Channel you want to monitor (e.g. #gpkvt)
  • username: The bots username (e.g. gpkvt)
  • oauth_token: The bots OAUTH-Token (e.g. oauth:ohkoace0wooghue8she9xaN0nooSau)
  • server: Twitch IRC server to be used (default should be fine)
  • clearmsg_timeout: Time to wait for an moderator to delete a message, before it's added to the TTS queue
http
  • port: Internal Webserver Port to listen to (e.g. 8080)
  • bind: Interface/IP to bind server to (e.g. localhost)
bot
  • subonly: If True only Subs can use TTS
  • modonly: If True only Mods can use TTS
  • message_length: Maximum allowed message length for TTS
messages
  • toff: The bots reply when !toff is used.
  • ton: The bots reply when !ton is used.
  • too_long: The bots reply if message exceeds message_length
  • disabled: The bots reply if TTS is disabled
  • denied: The bots reply if the user is not allowed to use TTS
  • subonly: The bots reply if subonly is active and the user isn't one.
  • whitelist: The bots reply if whitelist is set and user isn't on the list.
  • ready: The bots init message
  • says: Prefix to add between username and message
log
  • level: The loglevel, valid values are: DEBUG, INFO, WARNING, ERROR, CRITICAL
usermapping

Use this section to define key:value pairs of usernames. The first value is the Twitch username, the second value is how the bot should pronouce the user, when reading the message. This is helpfull if you have regulars with numbers or strangs chars in the name. You can add new/change entries on the fly without restarting the bot (changes took up to 60 seconds).

Please note: The key (real username) MUST be lowercase.

whitelist

You can add a whitelist section to config.yml, a whitelist will override any other settings like subonly and modonly. Only users on the whitelist are allowed to use !tts. Broadcasters and mods can temporarily add users (including themselfs) to the whitelist by using the !ptts command, though.

A whitelist looks as follows:

whitelist:
  - gpkvt
  - foo
  - bar

To disable the whitelist, remove it from config.yml completely. If you just leave whitelist: without entries, everyone must be whitelisted using !ptts (even broadcaster and mods). The permit is temporary until the bot restarts or (whichever happens first) if the user is removed from the whitelist using !dtts.

Please note: Usernames MUST be lowercase.

Executing program

Execute tts.exe (or tts.py if you have Python installed), open the TTS webpage in your browser (the URL depends on your bind and port configuration, usually it's just http://localhost). Click the Init button at the button of the TTS webpage (you should hear Init complete).

Connect to the configured Twitch channel and send a message starting with !tts. After a few seconds (depending on your clearmsg_timeout config), the message should be read.

Additional Commands

Additional commands (broadcaster and mods only) are:

  • !ping: Check if bot is alive (the bot should reply: Pong!)
  • !toff: Turn TTS off (will also empty the current TTS queue)
  • !ton: Turn TTS back on
  • !dtts <username>: Disable TTS for the given user
  • !ptts <username>: Allow TTS for the given user

Build

If you prefer to build your own tts.exe instead of using the shipped one, you can do as follows:

  • Install Python 3
  • Install pyinstaller: pip install pyinstaller
  • Install the required dependencies: pip install -r requirements.txt -v
  • Create the executeable: pyinstaller --onefile tts.py

Voices

The voices available depend on your Operating System and/or browser. On some systems only a default voice is available and the Select voice dropdown might stay empty or will only show entries after you clicked the Init button. Some Android devices will show a huge list of voices, but sounds the same no matter which one you choose.

On Windows you can install additional voices via Settings > Time & language > Speech > Add voices or by simply run Add speech voices.

Help

Feel free to use the Issuetracker or send an E-Mail if you experience any problems.

Authors

@gpkvt

Version History

See CHANGELOG.md

License

This project is licensed under the GPLv3 License - see LICENSE.md for details.

Acknowledgments

Ideas and Testing

Libraries

Disclaimer

This project is not affiliated, associated, authorized, endorsed by, or in any way officially connected with Twitch Interactive, Inc.