__filename__ = "filters.py" __author__ = "Bob Mottram" __license__ = "AGPL3+" __version__ = "1.0.0" __maintainer__ = "Bob Mottram" __email__ = "bob@freedombone.net" __status__ = "Production" import os def addFilter(baseDir: str,nickname: str,domain: str,words: str) -> bool: """Adds a filter for particular words within the content of a incoming posts """ filtersFilename=baseDir+'/accounts/'+nickname+'@'+domain+'/filters.txt' if os.path.isfile(filtersFilename): if words in open(filtersFilename).read(): return False filtersFile=open(filtersFilename, "a+") filtersFile.write(words+'\n') filtersFile.close() return True def removeFilter(baseDir: str,nickname: str,domain: str, \ words: str) -> bool: """Removes a word filter """ filtersFilename=baseDir+'/accounts/'+nickname+'@'+domain+'/filters.txt' if os.path.isfile(filtersFilename): if words in open(filtersFilename).read(): with open(filtersFilename, 'r') as fp: with open(filtersFilename+'.new', 'w') as fpnew: for line in fp: line=line.replace('\n','') if line!=words: fpnew.write(line+'\n') if os.path.isfile(filtersFilename+'.new'): os.rename(filtersFilename+'.new',filtersFilename) return True return False def isFiltered(baseDir: str,nickname: str,domain: str,content: str) -> bool: """Should the given content be filtered out? This is a simple type of filter which just matches words, not a regex You can add individual words or use word1+word2 to indicate that two words must be present although not necessarily adjacent """ filtersFilename=baseDir+'/accounts/'+nickname+'@'+domain+'/filters.txt' if os.path.isfile(filtersFilename): with open(filtersFilename, 'r') as fp: for line in fp: filterStr=line.replace('\n','') if '+' not in filterStr: if filterStr in content: return True else: filterWords=filterStr.replace('"','').split('+') for word in filterWords: if not word in content: return False return True return False