mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
246 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
246 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
# Deploying bots in production
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Usually, work on a bot starts on a laptop. At some point, you'll want
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to deploy your bot in a production environment, so that it'll stay up
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regardless of what's happening with your laptop. There are several
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options for doing so:
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* The simplest is running `zulip-run-bot` inside a `screen` session on
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a server. This works, but if your server reboots, you'll need to
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manually restart it, so we don't recommend it.
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* Using `supervisord` or a similar tool for managing a production
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process with `zulip-run-bot`. This consumes a bit of resources
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(since you need a persistent process running), but otherwise works
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great.
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* Using the Zulip Botserver, which is a simple Flask server for
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running a bot in production, and connecting that to Zulip's outgoing
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webhooks feature. This can be deployed in environments like
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Heroku's free tier without running a persistent process.
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## Zulip Botserver
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The Zulip Botserver is for people who want to
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* run bots in production.
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* run multiple bots at once.
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The Zulip Botserver is a Python (Flask) server that implements Zulip's
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Outgoing Webhooks API. You can of course write your own servers using
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the Outgoing Webhooks API, but the Botserver is designed to make it
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easy for a novice Python programmer to write a new bot and deploy it
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in production.
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### How Botserver works
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Zulip Botserver starts a web server that listens to incoming messages
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from your main Zulip server. The sequence of events in a successful
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Botserver interaction are:
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1. Your bot user is mentioned or receives a private message:
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```
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@**My Bot User** hello world
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```
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1. The Zulip server sends a POST request to the Botserver on `https://bot-server.example.com/`:
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```
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{
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"message":{
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"content":"@**My Bot User** hello world",
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},
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"bot_email":"myuserbot-bot@example.com",
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"trigger":"mention",
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"token":"XXXX"
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}
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```
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This url is configured in the Zulip web-app in your Bot User's settings.
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1. The Botserver searches for a bot to handle the message.
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1. The Botserver executes your bot's `handle_message` code.
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Your bot's code should work just like it does with `zulip-run-bot`;
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for example, you reply using
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[bot_handler.send_reply](writing-bots#bot_handlersend_reply)).
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### Installing the Zulip Botserver
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Install the `zulip_botserver` package:
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```
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pip3 install zulip_botserver
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```
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### Running a bot using the Zulip Botserver
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1. Construct the URL for your bot, which will be of the form:
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```
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http://<hostname>:<port>
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```
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where the `hostname` is the hostname you'll be running the bot
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server on, and `port` is the port for it (the recommended default
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is `5002`).
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1. Register new bot users on the Zulip server's web interface.
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* Log in to the Zulip server.
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* Navigate to *Settings (<i class="fa fa-cog"></i>)* -> *Your bots* -> *Add a new bot*.
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Select *Outgoing webhook* for bot type, fill out the form (using
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the URL from above) and click on *Create bot*.
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* A new bot user should appear in the *Active bots* panel.
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1. Download the `zuliprc` file for your bot from the *Active Bots*
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panel, using the download button.
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1. Run the Botserver, where `helloworld` is the name of the bot you
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want to run:
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`zulip-botserver --config-file <path_to_zuliprc> --bot-name=helloworld`
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You can specify the port number and various other options; run
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`zulip-botserver --help` to see how to do this.
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1. Congrats, everything is set up! Test your Botserver like you would
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test a normal bot.
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### Running multiple bots using the Zulip Botserver
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The Zulip Botserver also supports running multiple bots from a single
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Botserver process. You can do this with the following procedure.
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1. Download the `botserverrc` from the `your-bots` settings page, using
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the "Download config of all active outgoing webhook bots in Zulip
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Botserver format." option at the top.
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1. Open the `botserverrc`. It should contain one or more sections that look like this:
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```
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[]
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email=foo-bot@hostname
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key=dOHHlyqgpt5g0tVuVl6NHxDLlc9eFRX4
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site=http://hostname
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token=aQVQmSd6j6IHphJ9m1jhgHdbnhl5ZcsY
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```
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Each section contains the configuration for an outgoing webhook bot. For each
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bot, enter the name of the bot you want to run in the square brackets `[]`.
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For example, if we want `foo-bot@hostname` to run the `helloworld` bot, our
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new section would look like this:
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```
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[helloworld]
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email=foo-bot@hostname
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key=dOHHlyqgpt5g0tVuVl6NHxDLlc9eFRX4
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site=http://hostname
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token=aQVQmSd6j6IHphJ9m1jhgHdbnhl5ZcsY
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```
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To run an external bot, enter the path to the bot's python file in the square
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brackets `[]`. For example, if we want to run `~/Documents/my_new_bot.py`, our
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new section could look like this:
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```
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[~/Documents/my_new_bot.py]
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email=foo-bot@hostname
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key=dOHHlyqgpt5g0tVuVl6NHxDLlc9eFRX4
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site=http://hostname
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```
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1. Run the Zulip Botserver by passing the `botserverrc` to it. The
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command format is:
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```
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zulip-botserver --config-file <path_to_botserverrc>
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```
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If omitted, `hostname` defaults to `127.0.0.1` and `port` to `5002`.
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### Running Zulip Botserver with supervisord
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[supervisord](http://supervisord.org/) is a popular tool for running
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services in production. It helps ensure the service starts on boot,
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manages log files, restarts the service if it crashes, etc. This
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section documents how to run the Zulip Botserver using *supervisord*.
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Running the Zulip Botserver with *supervisord* works almost like
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running it manually.
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1. Install *supervisord* via your package manager; e.g. on Debian/Ubuntu:
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```
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sudo apt-get install supervisor
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```
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1. Configure *supervisord*. *supervisord* stores its configuration in
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`/etc/supervisor/conf.d`.
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* Do **one** of the following:
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* Download the [sample config file][supervisord-config-file]
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and store it in `/etc/supervisor/conf.d/zulip-botserver.conf`.
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* Copy the following section into your existing supervisord config file.
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[program:zulip-botserver]
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command=zulip-botserver --config-file=<path/to/your/botserverrc>
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--hostname <address> --port <port>
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startsecs=3
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stdout_logfile=/var/log/zulip-botserver.log ; all output of your Botserver will be logged here
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redirect_stderr=true
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* Edit the `<>` sections according to your preferences.
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[supervisord-config-file]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/zulip/python-zulip-api/master/zulip_botserver/zulip-botserver-supervisord.conf
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1. Update *supervisord* to read the configuration file:
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```
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supervisorctl reread
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supervisorctl update
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```
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(or you can use `/etc/init.d/supervisord restart`, but this is less
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disruptive if you're using *supervisord* for other services as well).
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1. Test if your setup is successful:
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```
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supervisorctl status
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```
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The output should include a line similar to this:
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> zulip-botserver RUNNING pid 28154, uptime 0:00:27
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The standard output of the Botserver will be logged to the path in
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your *supervisord* configuration.
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If you are hosting the Botserver yourself (as opposed to using a
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hosting service that provides SSL), we recommend securing your
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Botserver with SSL using an `nginx` or `Apache` reverse proxy and
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[Certbot](https://certbot.eff.org/).
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### Troubleshooting
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1. Make sure the API key you're using is for an [Outgoing webhook
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bot](https://zulipchat.com/api/outgoing-webhooks) and you've
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correctly configured the URL for your Botserver.
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1. Your Botserver needs to be accessible from your Zulip server over
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HTTP(S). Make sure any firewall allows the connection. We
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recommend using [zulip-run-bot](running-bots) instead for
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development/testing on a laptop or other non-server system.
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If your Zulip server is self-hosted, you can test by running `curl
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http://zulipbotserver.example.com:5002` from your Zulip server;
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the output should be:
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```
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$ curl http://zulipbotserver.example.com:5002/
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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN">
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<title>405 Method Not Allowed</title>
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<h1>Method Not Allowed</h1>
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<p>The method is not allowed for the requested URL.</p>
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```
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