Scripts

Script API reference

Scripts are the out-of-character siblings to the in-character Objects. Scripts are so flexible that the name “Script” is a bit limiting in itself - but we had to pick something to name them. Other possible names (depending on what you’d use them for) would be OOBObjects, StorageContainers or TimerObjects.

If you ever consider creating an Object with a None-location just to store some game data, you should really be using a Script instead.

  • Scripts are full Typeclassed entities - they have Attributes and can be modified in the same way. But they have no in-game existence, so no location or command-execution like Objects and no connection to a particular player/session like Accounts. This means they are perfectly suitable for acting as database-storage backends for game systems: Storing the current state of the economy, who is involved in the current fight, tracking an ongoing barter and so on. They are great as persistent system handlers.

  • Scripts have an optional timer component. This means that you can set up the script to tick the at_repeat hook on the Script at a certain interval. The timer can be controlled independently of the rest of the script as needed. This component is optional and complementary to other timing functions in Evennia, like evennia.utils.delay and evennia.utils.repeat.

  • Scripts can attach to Objects and Accounts via e.g. obj.scripts.add/remove. In the script you can then access the object/account as self.obj or self.account. This can be used to dynamically extend other typeclasses but also to use the timer component to affect the parent object in various ways. For historical reasons, a Script not attached to an object is referred to as a Global Script.

Changed in version 1.0: In previous Evennia versions, stopping the Script’s timer also meant deleting the Script object. Starting with this version, the timer can be start/stopped separately and .delete() must be called on the Script explicitly to delete it.

Working with Scripts

There are two main commands controlling scripts in the default cmdset:

The addscript command is used for attaching scripts to existing objects:

> addscript obj = bodyfunctions.BodyFunctions

The scripts command is used to view all scripts and perform operations on them:

> scripts
> scripts/stop bodyfunctions.BodyFunctions
> scripts/start #244
> scripts/pause #11
> scripts/delete #566

Changed in version 1.0: The addscript command used to be only script which was easy to confuse with scripts.

Code examples

Here are some examples of working with Scripts in-code (more details to follow in later sections).

Create a new script:

new_script = evennia.create_script(key="myscript", typeclass=...)

Create script with timer component:

# (note that this will call `timed_script.at_repeat` which is empty by default)
timed_script = evennia.create_script(key="Timed script",
                                     interval=34,  # seconds <=0 means off
                                     start_delay=True,  # wait interval before first call
                                     autostart=True)  # start timer (else needing .start() )

# manipulate the script's timer
timed_script.stop()
timed_script.start()
timed_script.pause()
timed_script.unpause()

Attach script to another object:

myobj.scripts.add(new_script)
myobj.scripts.add(evennia.DefaultScript)
all_scripts_on_obj = myobj.scripts.all()

Search/find scripts in various ways:

# regular search (this is always a list, also if there is only one match)
list_of_myscripts = evennia.search_script("myscript")

# search through Evennia's GLOBAL_SCRIPTS container (based on
# script's key only)
from evennia import GLOBAL_SCRIPTS

myscript = GLOBAL_SCRIPTS.myscript
GLOBAL_SCRIPTS.get("Timed script").db.foo = "bar"

Delete the Script (this will also stop its timer):

new_script.delete()
timed_script.delete()

Defining new Scripts

A Script is defined as a class and is created in the same way as other typeclassed entities. The parent class is evennia.DefaultScript.

Simple storage script

In mygame/typeclasses/scripts.py is an empty Script class already set up. You can use this as a base for your own scripts.

# in mygame/typeclasses/scripts.py

from evennia import DefaultScript

class Script(DefaultScript):
    # stuff common for all your scripts goes here

class MyScript(Script):
    def at_script_creation(self):
        """Called once, when script is first created"""
        self.key = "myscript"
        self.db.foo = "bar"

Once created, this simple Script could act as a global storage:

evennia.create_script('typeclasses.scripts.MyScript')

# from somewhere else

myscript = evennia.search_script("myscript").first()
bar = myscript.db.foo
myscript.db.something_else = 1000

Note that if you give keyword arguments to create_script you can override the values you set in your at_script_creation:


evennia.create_script('typeclasses.scripts.MyScript', key="another name",
                      attributes=[("foo", "bar-alternative")])


See the create_script and search_script API documentation for more options on creating and finding Scripts.

Timed Script

There are several properties one can set on the Script to control its timer component.

# in mygame/typeclasses/scripts.py

class TimerScript(Script):

    def at_script_creation(self):
        self.key = "myscript"
        self.desc = "An example script"
        self.interval = 60  # 1 min repeat

    def at_repeat(self):
        # do stuff every minute

This example will call at_repeat every minute. The create_script function has an autostart=True keyword set by default - this means the script’s timer component will be started automatically. Otherwise .start() must be called separately.

Supported properties are:

  • key (str): The name of the script. This makes it easier to search for it later. If it’s a script attached to another object one can also get all scripts off that object and get the script that way.

  • desc (str): Note - not .db.desc! This is a database field on the Script shown in script listings to help identifying what does what.

  • interval (int): The amount of time (in seconds) between every ‘tick’ of the timer. Note that it’s generally bad practice to use sub-second timers for anything in a text-game - the player will not be able to appreciate the precision (and if you print it, it will just spam the screen). For calculations you can pretty much always do them on-demand, or at a much slower interval without the player being the wiser.

  • start_delay (bool): If timer should start right away or wait interval seconds first.

  • repeats (int): If >0, the timer will only run this many times before stopping. Otherwise the number of repeats are infinite. If set to 1, the Script mimics a delay action.

  • persistent (bool): This defaults to True and means the timer will survive a server reload/reboot. If not, a reload will have the timer come back in a stopped state. Setting this to False will not delete the Script object itself (use .delete() for this).

The timer component is controlled with methods on the Script class:

  • .at_repeat() - this method is called every interval seconds while the timer is active.

  • .is_valid() - this method is called by the timer just before at_repeat(). If it returns False the timer is immediately stopped.

  • .start() - start/update the timer. If keyword arguments are given, they can be used to change interval, start_delay etc on the fly. This calls the .at_start() hook. This is also called after a server reload assuming the timer was not previously stopped.

  • .update() - legacy alias for .start.

  • .stop() - stops and resets the timer. This calls the .at_stop() hook.

  • .pause() - pauses the timer where it is, storing its current position. This calls the .at_pause(manual_pause=True) hook. This is also called on a server reload/reboot, at which time the manual_pause will be False.

  • .unpause() - unpause a previously paused script. This will call the at_start hook.

  • .time_until_next_repeat() - get the time until next time the timer fires.

  • .remaining_repeats() - get the number of repeats remaining, or None if repeats are infinite.

  • .reset_callcount() - this resets the repeat counter to start over from 0. Only useful if repeats>0.

  • .force_repeat() - this prematurely forces at_repeat to be called right away. Doing so will reset the countdown so that next call will again happen after interval seconds.

Script timers vs delay/repeat

If the only goal is to get a repeat/delay effect, the evennia.utils.delay and evennia.utils.repeat functions should generally be considered first. A Script is a lot ‘heavier’ to create/delete on the fly. In fact, for making a single delayed call (script.repeats==1), the utils.delay call is probably always the better choice.

For repeating tasks, the utils.repeat is optimized for quick repeating of a large number of objects. It uses the TickerHandler under the hood. Its subscription-based model makes it very efficient to start/stop the repeating action for an object. The side effect is however that all objects set to tick at a given interval will all do so at the same time. This may or may not look strange in-game depending on the situation. By contrast the Script uses its own ticker that will operate independently from the tickers of all other Scripts.

It’s also worth noting that once the script object has already been created, starting/stopping/pausing/unpausing the timer has very little overhead. The pause/unpause and update methods of the script also offers a bit more fine-control than using utils.delays/repeat.

Script attached to another object

Scripts can be attached to an Account or (more commonly) an Object. If so, the ‘parent object’ will be available to the script as either .obj or .account.

    # mygame/typeclasses/scripts.py
    # Script class is defined at the top of this module

    import random

    class Weather(Script):
        """
        A timer script that displays weather info. Meant to
        be attached to a room.

        """
        def at_script_creation(self):
            self.key = "weather_script"
            self.desc = "Gives random weather messages."
            self.interval = 60 * 5  # every 5 minutes

        def at_repeat(self):
            "called every self.interval seconds."
            rand = random.random()
            if rand < 0.5:
                weather = "A faint breeze is felt."
            elif rand < 0.7:
                weather = "Clouds sweep across the sky."
            else:
                weather = "There is a light drizzle of rain."
            # send this message to everyone inside the object this
            # script is attached to (likely a room)
            self.obj.msg_contents(weather)

If attached to a room, this Script will randomly report some weather to everyone in the room every 5 minutes.

    myroom.scripts.add(scripts.Weather)

Note that typeclasses in your game dir is added to the setting TYPECLASS_PATHS. Therefore we don’t need to give the full path (typeclasses.scripts.Weather but only scripts.Weather above.

You can also attach the script as part of creating it:

    create_script('typeclasses.weather.Weather', obj=myroom)

Other Script methods

A Script has all the properties of a typeclassed object, such as db and ndb(see Typeclasses). Setting key is useful in order to manage scripts (delete them by name etc). These are usually set up in the Script’s typeclass, but can also be assigned on the fly as keyword arguments to evennia.create_script.

  • at_script_creation() - this is only called once - when the script is first created.

  • at_server_reload() - this is called whenever the server is warm-rebooted (e.g. with the reload command). It’s a good place to save non-persistent data you might want to survive a reload.

  • at_server_shutdown() - this is called when a system reset or systems shutdown is invoked.

  • at_server_start() - this is called when the server comes back (from reload/shutdown/reboot). It can be usuful for initializations and caching of non-persistent data when starting up a script’s functionality.

  • at_repeat()

  • at_start()

  • at_pause()

  • at_stop()

  • delete() - same as for other typeclassed entities, this will delete the Script. Of note is that it will also stop the timer (if it runs), leading to the at_stop hook being called.

In addition, Scripts support Attributes, Tags and Locks etc like other Typeclassed entities.

See also the methods involved in controlling a Timed Script above.

Dealing with Script Errors

Errors inside a timed, executing script can sometimes be rather terse or point to parts of the execution mechanism that is hard to interpret. One way to make it easier to debug scripts is to import Evennia’s native logger and wrap your functions in a try/catch block. Evennia’s logger can show you where the traceback occurred in your script.


from evennia.utils import logger

class Weather(Script):

    # [...]

    def at_repeat(self):

        try:
            # [...]
        except Exception:
            logger.log_trace()

Using GLOBAL_SCRIPTS

A Script not attached to another entity is commonly referred to as a Global script since it’t available to access from anywhere. This means they need to be searched for in order to be used.

Evennia supplies a convenient “container” evennia.GLOBAL_SCRIPTS to help organize your global scripts. All you need is the Script’s key.

from evennia import GLOBAL_SCRIPTS

# access as a property on the container, named the same as the key
my_script = GLOBAL_SCRIPTS.my_script
# needed if there are spaces in name or name determined on the fly
another_script = GLOBAL_SCRIPTS.get("another script")
# get all global scripts (this returns a Django Queryset)
all_scripts = GLOBAL_SCRIPTS.all()
# you can operate directly on the script
GLOBAL_SCRIPTS.weather.db.current_weather = "Cloudy"

Warning

Note that global scripts appear as properties on GLOBAL_SCRIPTS based on their key. If you were to create two global scripts with the same key (even with different typeclasses), the GLOBAL_SCRIPTS container will only return one of them (which one depends on order in the database). Best is to organize your scripts so that this does not happen. Otherwise, use evennia.search_script to get exactly the script you want.

There are two ways to make a script appear as a property on GLOBAL_SCRIPTS:

  1. Manually create a new global script with a key using create_script.

  2. Define the script’s properties in the GLOBAL_SCRIPTS settings variable. This tells Evennia that it should check if a script with that key exists and if not, create it for you. This is very useful for scripts that must always exist and/or should be auto-created when your server restarts. If you use this method, you must make sure all script keys are globally unique.

Here’s how to tell Evennia to manage the script in settings:

# in mygame/server/conf/settings.py

GLOBAL_SCRIPTS = {
    "my_script": {
        "typeclass": "typeclasses.scripts.Weather",
        "repeats": -1,
        "interval": 50,
        "desc": "Weather script"
    },
    "storagescript": {}
}

Above we add two scripts with keys myscript and storagescriptrespectively. The following dict can be empty - the settings.BASE_SCRIPT_TYPECLASS will then be used. Under the hood, the provided dict (along with the key) will be passed into create_script automatically, so all the same keyword arguments as for create_script are supported here.

Warning

Before setting up Evennia to manage your script like this, make sure that your Script typeclass does not have any critical errors (test it separately). If there are, you’ll see errors in your log and your Script will temporarily fall back to being a DefaultScript type.

Moreover, a script defined this way is guaranteed to exist when you try to access it:

from evennia import GLOBAL_SCRIPTS
# Delete the script
GLOBAL_SCRIPTS.storagescript.delete()
# running the `scripts` command now will show no storagescript
# but below it's automatically recreated again!
storage = GLOBAL_SCRIPTS.storagescript

That is, if the script is deleted, next time you get it from GLOBAL_SCRIPTS, Evennia will use the information in settings to recreate it for you on the fly.