# Adding a Module A module is a plugin that registers commands with the bot. The framework handles loading, routing, visibility, `/help` rendering, and per-module database namespacing. A new module is usually under 100 lines. ## Three-step checklist ### 1. Create the module folder ``` src/modules//index.js ``` Module name must match `^[a-z0-9_-]+$`. The folder name, the `name` field in the default export, and the key in the static import map MUST all be identical. ### 2. Add it to the static import map Edit `src/modules/index.js`: ```js export const moduleRegistry = { util: () => import("./util/index.js"), wordle: () => import("./wordle/index.js"), // ... existing entries ... mynew: () => import("./mynew/index.js"), // add this line }; ``` Static imports are required — wrangler's bundler strips unused code based on static analysis. Dynamic `import(variablePath)` would bundle everything. ### 3. Enable the module via env Add the name to `MODULES` in two places: `wrangler.toml`: ```toml [vars] MODULES = "util,wordle,loldle,misc,mynew" ``` `.env.deploy` (so the register script sees it too): ``` MODULES=util,wordle,loldle,misc,mynew ``` Modules NOT listed in `MODULES` are simply not loaded — no errors, no overhead. ## Minimal module skeleton ```js /** @type {import("../registry.js").BotModule} */ const mynewModule = { name: "mynew", commands: [ { name: "hello", visibility: "public", description: "Say hello", handler: async (ctx) => { await ctx.reply("hi!"); }, }, ], }; export default mynewModule; ``` ## Using the database If your module needs storage, opt into it with an `init` hook: ```js /** @type {import("../../db/kv-store-interface.js").KVStore | null} */ let db = null; const mynewModule = { name: "mynew", init: async ({ db: store }) => { db = store; }, commands: [ { name: "count", visibility: "public", description: "Increment a counter", handler: async (ctx) => { const state = (await db.getJSON("counter")) ?? { n: 0 }; state.n += 1; await db.putJSON("counter", state); await ctx.reply(`counter: ${state.n}`); }, }, ], }; export default mynewModule; ``` **Key namespacing is automatic.** The `db` you receive is a `KVStore` whose keys are all prefixed with `mynew:` before hitting Cloudflare KV. The raw key for `counter` is `mynew:counter`. Two modules cannot read each other's data unless they reconstruct the prefix by hand. ### Available `KVStore` methods ```js await db.get("key") // → string | null await db.put("key", "value", { expirationTtl: 60 }) // seconds await db.delete("key") await db.list({ prefix: "games:", limit: 50, cursor }) // paginated // JSON helpers (recommended — DRY for structured state) await db.getJSON("key") // → parsed | null (swallows corrupt JSON) await db.putJSON("key", { a: 1 }, { expirationTtl: 60 }) ``` See `src/db/kv-store-interface.js` for the full JSDoc contract. ## Command contract Each command is: ```js { name: "hello", // ^[a-z0-9_]{1,32}$, no leading slash visibility: "public", // "public" | "protected" | "private" description: "Say hello", // required, ≤ 256 chars handler: async (ctx) => { ... }, // grammY context } ``` ### Name rules - Lowercase letters, digits, underscore - 1 to 32 characters - No leading `/` - Must be unique across ALL loaded modules, regardless of visibility ### Visibility levels | Level | In `/` menu | In `/help` | When to use | |---|---|---|---| | `public` | yes | yes | Normal commands users should discover | | `protected` | no | yes | Admin / debug tools you don't want in the menu but want discoverable via `/help` | | `private` | no | no | Easter eggs, testing hooks — fully hidden | Private commands are still slash commands — users type `/mycmd`. They're simply absent from Telegram's `/` popup and from `/help` output. ## Testing your module Add a test in `tests/modules/.test.js` or extend an existing suite. The `tests/fakes/` directory provides `fake-kv-namespace.js`, `fake-bot.js`, and `fake-modules.js` for hermetic unit tests that don't touch Cloudflare or Telegram. Run: ```bash npm test ``` Also worth running before deploying: ```bash npm run register:dry ``` This prints the `setMyCommands` payload your module will push to Telegram — a fast way to verify the public command descriptions look right. ## Full example See `src/modules/misc/index.js` — it's a minimal module that uses the DB (`putJSON` / `getJSON` via `/ping` + `/mstats`) and registers one command at each visibility level. Copy it as a starting point for your own module.