NAME

Net::OSCAR - Implementation of AOL's OSCAR protocol for instant messaging

SYNOPSIS

use Net::OSCAR qw(:standard);

$oscar = Net::OSCAR->new();
$oscar->set_callback_foo(\&foo);
$oscar->signon($screenname, $password);
while(1) {
	$oscar->do_one_loop();
	# Do stuff
}

INSTALLATION

perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install

See perlmodinstall for details.

DEPENDENCIES

This modules requires Digest::MD5 and Scalar::Util.

ABSTRACT

Net::OSCAR implements the OSCAR protocol which is used by AOL's AOL Instant Messenger service. To use the module, you create a Net::OSCAR object, register some functions as handlers for various events by using the module's callback mechanism, and then continually make calls to the module's event processing methods.

You probably want to use the :standard parameter when importing this module in order to have a few important constants added to your namespace. See "CONSTANTS" below for a list of the constants exported by the :standard tag.

No official documentation exists for the OSCAR protocol, so it had to be figured out by analyzing traffic generated by AOL's official AOL Instant Messenger client. That doesn't really help this module's stability much.

This module strives to be as compatible with Net::AIM as possible, but some protocol-level differences prevent total compatibility. The TOC protocol implemented by Net::AIM is simpler and more well-documented but less-powerful protocol then OSCAR. See the section on "Net::AIM Compatibility" for more information.

EVENT PROCESSING

There are two main ways for the module to handle event processing. The first is to call the do_one_loop method, which performs a select call on all the object's sockets and reads incoming commands from the OSCAR server on any connections which have them. The select call has a default timeout of 0.01 seconds which can be adjust using the timeout method.

The other way of doing event processing is designed to make it easy to integrate Net::OSCAR into an existing select-based event loop, especially one where you have many Net::OSCAR objects. Simply call the "process_connections" method with references to the lists of readers, writers, and errors given to you by select. Connections that don't belong to the object will be ignored, and connections that do belong to the object will be removed from the select lists so that you can use the lists for your own purposes. Here is an example that demonstrates how to use this method with multiple Net::OSCAR objects:

my $rin = $my_readers;
my $win = $my_writers;
foreach my $oscar(@oscars) {
	my($readers, $writers) = $oscar->selector_filenos();
	$rin |= $readers;
	$win |= $writers;
}
my $ein = $rin | $win;
select($rin, $win, $ein, 0.01);
foreach my $oscar(@oscars) {
	$oscar->process_connections(\$rin, \$win, \$ein);
}

# Now $rin, $win, and $ein only have the file descriptors not
# associated with any of the OSCAR objects in them - we can
# process our events.

FUNCTIONALITY

Net::OSCAR pretends to be WinAIM 4.3.2229. It supports remote buddylists including permit and deny settings. It also supports chat. At the present time, setting and retrieving of directory information is not supported; nor are email privacy settings, buddy icons, voice chat, stock ticker, and many other of the official AOL Instant Messenger client's features.

TERMINOLOGY/METHODOLOGY

When you sign on with the OSCAR service, you are establishing an OSCAR session. Net::OSCAR connects to the login server and requests a random challenge string. It then sends the MD5 sum of the challenge string, AOL Instant Messenger (SM), and your password to the server. If the login is successful, the login server gives you an IP address and an authorization cookie to use to connect with the BOS (Basic OSCAR Services) server.

Net::OSCAR proceeds to disconnect from the login server and connect to the BOS server. The two go through a handshaking process which includes the server sending us our buddylist.

Net::OSCAR supports privacy controls. Our visibility setting, along with the contents of the permit and deny lists, determines who can contact us. Visibility can be set to permit or deny everyone, permit only those on the permit list, deny only those on the deny list, or permit everyone on our buddylist.

METHODS

    new

    Creates a new Net::OSCAR object.

    timeout ([NEW TIMEOUT])

    Gets or sets the timeout value used by the do_one_loop method. The default timeout is 0.01 seconds.

    signon (SCREENNAME, PASSWORD[, HOST, PORT])

    Sign on to the OSCAR service. You can specify an alternate host/port to connect to. The default is login.oscar.aol.com port 5190.

    signoff

    Sign off from the OSCAR service.

    loglevel ([LOGLEVEL[, SCREENNAME DEBUG]])

    Gets or sets the loglevel. If this is non-zero, varing amounts of information will be printed to standard error (unless you have a "log" callback defined). Higher loglevels will give you more information. If the optional screenname debug parameter is non-zero, debug messages will be prepended with the screenname of the OSCAR session which is generating the message (but only if you don't have a "log" callback defined). This is useful when you have multiple Net::OSCAR objects.

    See the "log" callback for more information.

    process_connections (READERSREF, WRITERSREF, ERRORSREF)

    Use this method when you want to implement your own select statement for event processing instead of using Net::OSCAR's do_one_loop method. The parameters are references to the readers, writers, and errors parameters used by the select statement. The method will ignore all connections which are not Net::OSCAR::Connection objects or which are Net::OSCAR::Connection objects from a different Net::OSCAR object. It modifies its arguments so that its connections are removed from the connection lists. This makes it very convenient for use with multiple Net::OSCAR objects or use with a select-based event loop that you are also using for other purposes.

    You must include the file numbers of all sockets returned by the connections method in both the readers, writers, and errors parameters of your select statement.

    See the connections method for a way to get the file descriptors to add to your select.

    do_one_loop

    Processes incoming data from our connections to the various OSCAR services. This method reads one command from any connections which have data to be read. See the timeout method to set the timeout interval used by this method.

    findbuddy (BUDDY)

    Returns the name of the group that BUDDY is in, or undef if BUDDY could not be found in any group. If BUDDY is in multiple groups, will return the first one we find.

    commit_buddylist

    Sends your modified buddylist to the OSCAR server. Changes to the buddylist won't actually take effect until this method is called. Methods that change the buddylist have a warning about needing to call this method in their documentation.

    rollback_buddylist

    Revert changes you've made to the buddylist, assuming you haven't called "commit_buddylist" since making them.

    reorder_groups GROUPS

    Changes the ordering of the groups in your buddylist. Call "commit_buddylist" to save the new order on the OSCAR server.

    reorder_buddies GROUP BUDDIES

    Changes the ordering of the buddies in a group on your buddylist. Call "commit_buddylist" to save the new order on the OSCAR server.

    add_permit (BUDDIES)

    Add buddies to your permit list. Call "commit_buddylist" for the change to take effect.

    add_deny (BUDDIES)

    See add_permit.

    remove_permit (BUDDIES)

    See add_permit.

    remove_deny (BUDDIES)

    See add_permit.

    get_permitlist

    Returns a list of all members of the permit list.

    get_denylist

    Returns a list of all members of the deny list.

    rename_group (OLDNAME, NEWNAME)

    Renames a group. Call "commit_buddylist" for the change to take effect.

    add_buddy (GROUP, BUDDIES)

    Adds buddies to the given group on your buddylist. Call "commit_buddylist" for the change to take effect.

    remove_buddy (GROUP, BUDDIES)

    See add_buddy.

    set_visibility (MODE)

    Sets the visibility mode, which determines how the permit and deny lists are interpreted. The visibility mode may be:

    • VISMODE_PERMITALL: Permit everybody.

    • VISMODE_DENYALL: Deny everybody.

    • VISMODE_PERMITSOME: Permit only those on your permit list.

    • VISMODE_DENYSOME: Deny only those on your deny list.

    • VISMODE_PERMITBUDS: Same as VISMODE_PERMITSOME, but your permit list is made to be the same as the buddies from all the various groups in your buddylist (except the deny group!) Adding and removing buddies maintains this relationship. You shouldn't manually alter the permit or deny groups when using this visibility mode.

    These constants are contained in the Net::OSCAR::Common package, and will be imported into your namespace if you import Net::OSCAR with the :standard parameter.

    When someone is permitted, they can see when you are online and send you messages. When someone is denied, they can't see when you are online or send you messages. You cannot see them or send them messages. You can talk to them if you are in the same chatroom, although neither of you can invite the other one into a chatroom.

    Call "commit_buddylist" for the change to take effect.

    set_group_permissions NEWPERMS

    Set group permissions. This lets you block any OSCAR users or any AOL users. NEWPERMS should be a list of zero or more of the following constants:

    GROUPPERM_OSCAR

    Permit AOL Instant Messenger users to contact you.

    GROUPPERM_AOL

    Permit AOL subscribers to contact you.

    Call "commit_buddylist" for the change to take effect.

    group_permissions

    Returns current group permissions. The return value is a list like the one that "set_group_permissions" wants.

    profile

    Returns your current profile.

    get_app_data [GROUP[, BUDDY]]

    Gets application-specific data. Returns a hashref whose keys are app-data IDs. IDs with high-order byte 0x0001 are reserved for non-application-specific usage and must be registered with the libfaim-aim-protocol@lists.sourceforge.net list. If you wish to set application-specific data, you should reserve a high-order byte for your application by emailing libfaim-aim-protocol@lists.sourceforge.net. This data is stored in your server-side buddylist and so will be persistent, even across machines.

    If GROUP is present, a hashref for accessing data specific to that group is returned.

    If BUDDY is present, a hashref for accessing data specific to that buddy is returned.

    Call "commit_buddylist" to have the new data saved on the OSCAR server.

    get_info (WHO)

    Requests a user's information, which includes their profile and idle time. See the buddy_info callback for more information.

    get_away (WHO)

    Similar to get_info, except requests the user's away message instead of their profile.

    send_im(WHO, MESSAGE[, AWAY])

    Sends someone an instant message. If the message is an automated reply generated, perhaps, because you have an away message set, give the AWAY parameter a non-zero value. Note that Net::OSCAR will not handle sending away messages to people who contact you when you are away - you must perform this yourself if you want it done.

    buddyhash

    Returns a reference to a tied hash which automatically normalizes its keys upon a fetch. Use this for hashes whose keys are AIM screennames since AIM screennames with different capitalization and spacing are considered equivalent.

    The keys of the hash as returned by the keys and each functions will be Net::OSCAR::Screenname objects, so you they will automagically be compared without regards to case and whitespace.

    evil (WHO[, ANONYMOUSLY])

    Evils, or warns, a user. Evilling a user increases their evil level, which makes them look bad and decreases the rate at which they can send messages. Evil level gradually decreases over time. If the second parameter is non-zero, the evil will be done anonymously, which does not increase the user's evil level by as much as a standard evil.

    You can't always evil someone. You can only do it when they do something like send you an instant message.

    set_away (MESSAGE)

    Set's the users away message, also marking them as being away. If the message is undef or the empty string, the user will be marked as no longer being away.

    set_info (PROFILE)

    Sets the user's profile. Call "commit_buddylist" to have the new profile stored on the OSCAR server.

    change_password (CURRENT PASSWORD, NEW PASSWORD)

    Changes the user's password.

    confirm_account

    Confirms the user's account. This can be used when the user's account is in the trial state, as determined by the presence of the trial key in the information given when the user's information is requested.

    change_email (NEW EMAIL)

    Requests that the email address registered to the user's account be changed. This causes the OSCAR server to send an email to both the new address and the old address. To complete the change, the user must follow instructions contained in the email sent to the new address. The email sent to the old address contains instructions which allow the user to cancel the change within three days of the change request. It is important that the user's current email address be known to the OSCAR server so that it may email the account password if the user forgets it.

    format_screenname (NEW FORMAT)

    Allows the capitalization and spacing of the user's screenname to be changed. The new format must be the same as the user's current screenname, except that case may be changed and spaces may be inserted or deleted.

    chat_join(NAME[, EXCHANGE])

    Creates (or joins?) a chatroom. The exchange parameter should probably not be specified unless you know what you're doing. Do not use this method to accept invitations to join a chatroom - use the "chat_accept" method for that.

    chat_accept (CHAT)

    Use this to accept an invitation to join a chatroom.

    set_idle (TIME)

    Sets the user's idle time in seconds. Set to zero to mark the user as not being idle. Set to non-zero once the user becomes idle. The OSCAR server will automatically increment the user's idle time once you mark the user as being idle.

    clone

    Clones the object. This creates a new Net::OSCAR object whose callbacks, loglevel, screenname debugging, and timeout are the same as those of the current object. This is provided as a convenience when using multiple Net::OSCAR objects in order to allow you to set those parameters once and then call the signon method on the object returned by clone.

    selector_filenos

    Returns a list whose first element is a vec of all filehandles that we care about reading from and whose second element is a vec of all filehandles that we care about writing to. See the "process_connections" method for details.

    visibility

    Returns the user's current visibility setting. See set_visibility.

    groups

    Returns a list of groups in the user's buddylist.

    buddies (GROUP)

    Returns the names of the buddies in the specified group in the user's buddylist. The names may not be formatted - that is, they may have spaces and capitalization removed. The names are Net::OSCAR::Screenname objects, so you don't have to worry that they're case and whitespace insensitive when using them for comparison.

    buddy (BUDDY[, GROUP])

    Returns information about a buddy on the user's buddylist. This information is a hashref which may have the following keys:

    online

    The user is signed on. If this key is not present, all of the other keys may not be present.

    screenname

    The formatted version of the user's screenname. This includes all spacing and capitalization. This is a Net::OSCAR::Screenname object, so you don't have to worry about the fact that it's case and whitespace insensitive when comparing it.

    comment

    A user-defined comment associated with the buddy. See "set_buddy_comment". Note that this key will be present but undefined if there is no comment.

    trial

    The user's account has trial status.

    aol

    The user is accessing the AOL Instant Messenger service from America OnLine.

    free

    Opposite of aol.

    away

    The user is away.

    admin

    The user is an administrator.

    membersince

    Time that the user's account was created, in the same format as the time function.

    onsince

    Time that the user signed on to the service, in the same format as the time function.

    idle

    Time that the user has been idle for, in seconds. If this key is present but zero, the user is not idle. If this key is not present, the user is not reporting idle time.

    email

    Returns the email address currently assigned to the user's account.

    screenname

    Returns the user's current screenname, including all capitalization and spacing.

    set_buddy_comment(GROUP, BUDDY[, COMMENT])

    Set a brief comment about a buddy. This can be used for things such as the buddy's real name. You must call "commit_buddylist" to save the comment to the server. If COMMENT is undefined, the comment is deleted.

    chat_invite(CHAT, MESSAGE, WHO)

    Deprecated. Provided for compatibility with Net::AIM. Use the appropriate method of the Net::OSCAR::Chat object instead.

    chat_leave(CHAT)

    Deprecated. Provided for compatibility with Net::AIM. Use the appropriate method of the Net::OSCAR::Chat object instead.

    chat_send(CHAT, MESSAGE)

    Deprecated. Provided for compatibility with Net::AIM. Use the appropriate method of the Net::OSCAR::Chat object instead.

CALLBACKS

Net::OSCAR uses a callback mechanism to notify you about different events. A callback is registered by calling the set_callback_callbackname method with a code reference as a parameter. For instance, you might call $oscar-set_callback_error(\&got_error);>. Your callback function will be passed parameters which are different for each callback type (and are documented below). The first parameter to each callback function will be the Net::OSCAR object which generated the callback. This is useful when using multiple Net::OSCAR objects.

error (OSCAR, CONNECTION, ERROR, DESCRIPTION, FATAL)

Called when any sort of error occurs (except see admin_error below.)

CONNECTION is the particular connection which generated the error - the log_print method of Net::OSCAR::Connection may be useful, as may be getting $connection-{description}>. DESCRIPTION is a nicely formatted description of the error. ERROR is an error number.

If FATAL is non-zero, the error was fatal and the connection to OSCAR has been closed.

rate_alert (OSCAR, LEVEL, CLEAR, WINDOW)

This is called when you are sending commands to OSCAR too quickly.

LEVEL is one of RATE_CLEAR, RATE_ALERT, RATE_LIMIT, or RATE_DISCONNECT from the Net::OSCAR::Common package (they are imported into your namespace if you import Net::OSCAR with the :standard parameter.) RATE_CLEAR means that you're okay. RATE_ALERT means you should slow down. RATE_LIMIT means that the server is ignoring messages from you until you slow down. RATE_DISCONNECT means you're about to be disconnected.

CLEAR and WINDOW tell you the maximum speed you can send in order to maintain RATE_CLEAR standing. You must send no more than WINDOW commands in CLEAR milliseconds. If you just want to keep it simple, you can just not send any commands for CLEAR milliseconds and you'll be fine.

buddylist_error (OSCAR, ERROR, WHAT)

This is called when there is an error commiting changes to the buddylist. ERROR is the error number. WHAT is a string describing which buddylist change failed. Net::OSCAR will revert the failed change to its state before commit_buddylist was called. Note that the buddylist contains information other than the user's buddies - see any method which says you need to call commit_buddylist to have its changes take effect.

buddylist_ok (OSCAR)

This is called when your changes to the buddylist have been successfully commited.

admin_error (OSCAR, REQTYPE, ERROR, ERRURL)

This is called when there is an error performing an administrative function - changing your password, formatting your screenname, changing your email address, or confirming your account. REQTYPE is a string describing the type of request which generated the error. ERROR is an error message. ERRURL is an http URL which the user may visit for more information about the error.

admin_ok (OSCAR, REQTYPE)

This is called when an administrative function succeeds. See admin_error for more info.

chat_closed (OSCAR, CHAT, ERROR)

Your connection to CHAT (a Net::OSCAR::Chat object) was severed due to ERROR.

buddy_in (OSCAR, SCREENNAME, GROUP, BUDDY DATA)

SCREENNAME (in buddy group GROUP) has signed on, or their information has changed. BUDDY DATA is the same as that returned by the buddy method.

chat_buddy_in (OSCAR, SCREENNAME, CHAT, BUDDY DATA)

SCREENNAME has entered CHAT. BUDDY DATA is the same as that returned by the buddy method.

buddy_out (OSCAR, SCREENNAME, GROUP)

Called when a buddy has signed off (or added us to their deny list.)

chat_buddy_out (OSCAR, SCREENNAME, CHAT)

Called when someone leaves a chatroom.

im_ok (OSCAR, TO)

Called when an IM to TO is successfully sent.

im_in (OSCAR, FROM, MESSAGE[, AWAY])

Called when someone sends you an instant message. If the AWAY parameter is non-zero, the message was generated as an automatic reply, perhaps because you sent that person a message and they had an away message set.

chat_im_in(OSCAR, FROM, CHAT, MESSAGE)

Called when someone says something in a chatroom. Note that you receive your own messages in chatrooms unless you specify the NOREFLECT parameter in chat_send.

chat_invite(OSCAR, WHO, MESSAGE, CHAT, CHATURL)

Called when someone invites us into a chatroom. MESSAGE is the message that they specified on the invitation. CHAT is the name of the chatroom. CHATURL is a chat URL and not a Net::OSCAR::Chat object. CHATURL can be passed to the chat_accept method to accept the invitation.

chat_joined(OSCAR, CHATNAME, CHAT)

Called when you enter a chatroom. CHAT is the Net::OSCAR::Chat object for the chatroom.

evil(OSCAR, NEWEVIL[, FROM])

Called when your evil level changes. NEWEVIL is your new evil level, as a percentage (accurate to tenths of a percent.) ENEMY is undef if the evil was anonymous (or if the message was triggered because your evil level naturally decreased), otherwise it is the screenname of the person who sent us the evil. See the "evil" method for more information on evils.

buddy_info(OSCAR, SCREENNAME, BUDDY DATA)

Called in response to a get_info or get_away request. BUDDY DATA is the same as that returned by the buddy method, except that one of two additional keys, profile and awaymsg, may be present.

signon_done(OSCAR)

Called when the user is completely signed on to the service.

log(OSCAR, LEVEL, MESSAGE)

Use this callback if you don't want the log_print methods to just print to STDERR. It is called when even MESSAGE of level LEVEL is called. The levels are, in order of increasing importance:

OSCAR_DBG_NONE

Really only useful for setting in the "loglevel" method. No information will be logged. The default loglevel.

OSCAR_DBG_PACKETS

Hex dumps of all incoming/outgoing packets.

OSCAR_DBG_DEBUG

Information useful for debugging Net::OSCAR, and precious little else.

OSCAR_DBG_SIGNON

Like OSCAR_DBG_NOTICE, but only for the signon process; this is where problems are most likely to occur, so we provide this for the common case of people who only want a lot of information during signon. This may be deprecated some-day and be replaced by a more flexible facility/level system, ala syslog.

OSCAR_DBG_NOTICE
OSCAR_DBG_INFO
OSCAR_DBG_WARN

Note that these symbols are imported into your namespace if and only if you use the :loglevels or <:all> tags when importing the module (e.g. use Net::OSCAR qw(:standard :loglevels).)

Also note that this callback is only triggered for events whose level is greater than or equal to the loglevel for the OSCAR session. The "loglevel" method allows you to get or set the loglevel.

CHATS

Aside from the methods listed here, there are a couple of methods of the Net::OSCAR::Chat object that are important for implementing chat functionality. Net::OSCAR::Chat is a descendent of Net::OSCAR::Connection.

invite (WHO, MESSAGE)

Invite somebody into the chatroom.

chat_send (MESSAGE[, NOREFLECT[, AWAY]])

Sends a message to the chatroom. If the NOREFLECT parameter is present, you will not receive the message as an incoming message from the chatroom. If AWAY is present, the message was generated as an automatic reply, perhaps because you have an away message set.

part

Leave the chatroom.

url

Returns the URL for the chatroom. Use this to associate a chat invitation with the chat_joined that Net::OSCAR sends when you've join the chatroom.

name

Returns the name of the chatroom.

CONSTANTS

The following constants are defined when Net::OSCAR is imported with the :standard tag. Unless indicated otherwise, the constants are magical scalars - they return different values in string and numeric contexts (for instance, an error message and an error number.)

ADMIN_TYPE_PASSWORD_CHANGE
ADMIN_TYPE_EMAIL_CHANGE
ADMIN_TYPE_SCREENNAME_FORMAT
ADMIN_TYPE_ACCOUNT_CONFIRM
ADMIN_ERROR_UNKNOWN
ADMIN_ERROR_BADPASS
ADMIN_ERROR_BADINPUT
ADMIN_ERROR_BADLENGTH
ADMIN_ERROR_TRYLATER
ADMIN_ERROR_REQPENDING
ADMIN_ERROR_CONNREF
VISMODE_PERMITALL
VISMODE_DENYALL
VISMODE_PERMITSOME
VISMODE_DENYSOME
VISMODE_PERMITBUDS
RATE_CLEAR
RATE_ALERT
RATE_LIMIT
RATE_DISCONNECT
GROUPPERM_OSCAR
GROUPPERM_AOL

Net::AIM Compatibility

Here are the major differences between the Net::OSCAR interface and the Net::AIM interface:

  • No get/set method.

  • No newconn/getconn method.

  • No group parameter for add_permit or add_deny.

  • Many differences in chat handling.

  • No chat_whisper.

  • No encode method - it isn't needed.

  • No send_config method - it isn't needed.

  • No send_buddies method - we don't keep a separate local buddylist.

  • No normalize method - it isn't needed. Okay, there is a normalize function in Net::OSCAR::Common, but I can't think of any reason why it would need to be used outside of the module internals.

  • Different callbacks with different parameters.

MISCELLANEOUS

There are two programs included with the Net::OSCAR distribution. oscartest is a minimalist implementation of a Net::OSCAR client. snacsnatcher is a tool designed for analyzing the OSCAR protocol from libpcap-format packet captures.

There is a class Net::OSCAR::Screenname. OSCAR screennames are case and whitespace insensitive, and if you do something like $buddy = new Net::OSCAR::Screenname "Matt Sachs" instead of $buddy = "Matt Sachs", this will be taken care of for you when you use the string comparison operators (eq, ne, cmp, etc.)

HISTORY

  • 0.09, 2001-10-01

    • Crash and undefined value fixes

    • New method: im_ok

    • New method: rename_group, should fix "Couldn't get group name" error.

    • Fix for buddy_in callback and data

    • Better error handling when we can't resolve a host

    • Vastly improved logging infrastructure - debug_print(f) replaced with log_print(f). debug_print callback is now called log and has an extra parameter.

    • Fixed MANIFEST - we don't actually use Changes (and we do use Screenname.pm)

    • blinternal now automagically enforces the proper structure (the right things become Net::OSCAR::TLV tied hashes and the name and data keys are automatically created) upon vivification. So, you can do $bli->{0}->{1}->{2}->{data}->{0x3} = "foo" without worrying if 0, 1, 2, or data have been tied. Should close bug #47.

  • 0.08, 2001-09-07

    • Totally rewritten buddylist handling. It is now much cleaner, bug-resistant, and featureful.

    • Many, many internal changes that I don't feel like enumerating. Hey, there's a reason that I haven't declared the interface stable yet! ;)

    • New convenience object: Net::OSCAR::Screenname

    • Makefile.PL: Fixed perl version test and compatibility with BSD make

  • 0.07, 2001-08-13

    • A bunch of Makefile.PL fixes

    • Fixed spurious admin_error callback and prevent user from having multiple pending requests of the same type. (closes #39)

    • Head off some potential problems with set_visibility. (closes #34)

    • Removed connections method, added selector_filenos

    • Added error number 29 (too many recent signons from your site) to Net::OSCAR::Common.

    • We now explicitly perl 5.6.0 or newer.

  • 0.06, 2001-08-12

    • Prevent sending duplicate signon_done messages

    • Don't addconn after crapping out!

    • Don't try to delconn unless we have connections.

    • delete returns the correct value now in Net::OSCAR::Buddylist.

    • Don't use warnings if $] <= 5.005

    • evil is a method, not a manpage (doc fix)

    • Added buddyhash method.

    • Added a debug_print callback.

    • Clarified process_connections method in documentation

    • You can now specify an alternate host/port in signon

    • Added name method to Chat.

    • permit list and deny list are no longer part of buddylist

    • Rewrote buddylist parsing (again!)

    • No more default profile.

    • Fix bug when storing into an already-existing key in Net::OSCAR::Buddylist.

    • snacsnatcher: Remove spurious include of Net::OSCAR::Common

    • We don't need to handle VISMODE_PERMITBUDS ourself - the server takes care of it. Thanks, VB!

    • Makefile.PL: Lots of way cool enhancements to make dist:

      -

      It modifies the version number for us

      -

      It does a CVS rtag

      -

      It updates the HTML documentation on zevils and the README.

    • Added HISTORY and INSTALLATION section to POD.

  • 0.05, 2001-08-08

    • Don't send signon_done until after we get buddylist.

    • Added signoff method.

    • Fixed typo in documentation

    • Fixed chat_invite parm count

    • Added Scalar::Utils::dualvar variables, especially to Common.pm. dualvar variables return different values in numeric and string context.

    • Added url method for Net::OSCAR::Chat (closes #31)

    • Divide evil by 10 in extract_userinfo (closes #30)

    • chat_invite now exposes chatname (closes #32)

    • Removed unnecessary and warning-generating session length from extract_userinfo

  • 0.01, 2001-08-02

    • Initial release.

SUPPORT

See http://www.zevils.com/programs/net-oscar/ for support, including a mailing list and bug-tracking system.

AUTHOR

Matthew Sachs <matthewg@zevils.com>.

CREDITS

John "VBScript" for a lot of technical assistance, including the explanation of rates.

Adam Fritzler and the libfaim team for their documentation and an OSCAR implementation that was used to help figure out a lot of the protocol details. <http://www.zigamorph.net/faim/protocol/>

Mark Doliner for help with remote buddylists. <http://kingant.net/libfaim/ReadThis.html>

The gaim team - the source to their libfaim client was also very helpful. <http://gaim.sourceforge.net/>

The users of aimirc for being reasonably patient while this module was developed. <http://www.zevils.com/programs/aimirc/>

Jayson Baker for some last-minute debugging help.

AOL, for creating the AOL Instant Messenger service, even though they aren't terribly helpful to developers of third-party clients.

LEGAL

Copyright (c) 2001 Matthew Sachs. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. AOL Instant Messenger and AIM are registered service marks of AOL/Time Warner. America OnLine is a registered trademark of AOL/Time Warner. Net::OSCAR is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or supported by AOL.

2 POD Errors

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

Around line 118:

You can't have =items (as at line 144) unless the first thing after the =over is an =item

Around line 1620:

You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'