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- ngIRCd - Next Generation IRC Server
- http://ngircd.barton.de/
- (c)2001-2013 Alexander Barton and Contributors.
- ngIRCd is free software and published under the
- terms of the GNU General Public License.
- -- NEWS --
- ngIRCd 21 (2013-10-30)
- - Call arc4random_stir() in forked subprocesses, when available. This
- is required by FreeBSD <10 and current NetBSD at least to correctly
- initialize the "arc4" random number generator on these platforms.
- ngIRCd 21~rc2 (2013-10-20)
- - Report the correct configuration file name on configuration errors,
- support longer configuration lines, and warn when lines are truncated.
- ngIRCd 21~rc1 (2013-10-05)
- - Actually KILL clients on GLINE/KLINE. (Closes bug #156)
- - Add support to show all user links using the "STATS L" (uppercase)
- command (restricted to IRC Operators).
- - Implement configurable SSL cipher list selection for GnuTLS and OpenSSL
- using the new configuration option "CipherList". In addition, this
- changes the defaults to more secure values: "HIGH:!aNULL:@STRENGTH" for
- OpenSSL, and "SECURE128" for GnuTLS.
- - Show connection flag "s" (SSL) in RPL_TRACE{LINK|SERVER} messages: now
- you can check if a server-to-server link is SSL-encrypted or not using
- the IRC "TRACE" command.
- - Implement the new configuration option "DefaultUserModes" which lists
- user modes that become automatically set on new local clients right
- after login. Please note that only modes can be set that the client
- could set on itself, so you can't set "a" (away) or "o" (IRC Op),
- for example! User modes "i" (invisible) or "x" (cloaked) etc. are
- "interesting", though. (Closes bug #160)
- - Add support for the new METADATA "account" property, which allows
- services to automatically identify users after netsplits and across
- service restarts.
- - Implement a new configuration option "AllowedChannelTypes" that lists
- all allowed channel types (channel prefixes) for newly created channels
- on the local server. By default, all supported channel types are allowed.
- If set to the empty string, local clients can't create new channels at
- all, which equals the old "PredefChannelsOnly = yes" setting.
- This change deprecates the "PredefChannelsOnly" variable, too, but it is
- still supported and translated to the appropriate "AllowedChannelTypes"
- setting. When the old "PredefChannelsOnly" variable is processed, a
- warning message is logged. (Closes bug #152)
- - Add support for "client certificate fingerprinting". When a client
- passes an SSL certificate to the server, the "fingerprint" will be
- forwarded in the network which enables IRC services to identify the
- user using this certificate and not using passwords.
- - Implement a new configuration option "IncludeDir" in the "[Options]"
- section that can be used to specify a directory which can contain
- further configuration files and configuration file snippets matching
- the pattern "*.conf". These files are read in after the main server
- configuration file ("ngircd.conf" by default) has been read in and
- parsed. The default is "$SYSCONFDIR/ngircd.conf.d", so that it is
- possible to adjust the configuration only by placing additional files
- into this directory. (Closes bug #157)
- - Add Travis-CI configuration file (".travis.yml") to project.
- - ngIRCd now accepts user names including "@" characters, saves the
- unmodified name for authentication but stores only the part in front
- of the "@" character as "IRC user name". And the latter is how
- ircd2.11, Bahamut, and irc-seven behave as well. (Closes bug #155)
- - Lots of IRC "information functions" like ADMIN, INFO, ... now accept
- server masks and names of connected users (in addition to server names)
- for specifying the target server of the command. (Closes bug #153)
- - Implement a new configuration option "IdleTimeout" in the "[Limits]"
- section of the configuration file which can be used to set a timeout
- in seconds after which the whole daemon will shutdown when no more
- connections are left active after handling at least one client.
- The default is 0, "never".
- This can be useful for testing or when ngIRCd is started using "socket
- activation" with systemd(8), for example.
- - Implement support for systemd(8) "socket activation".
- - Enable WHOIS to display information about IRC Services using the new
- numeric 310(RPL_WHOISSERVICE) This numeric is used for this purpose by
- InspIRCd, for example -- but as usual, other numerics are in use, too,
- like 613 in UltimateIRCd ...
- Please note that neither the Operator (+o) not the "bot status" (+B)
- of an IRC service is displayed in the output.
- - Update systemd(8) example configuration files in ./contrib/ directory:
- the "ngircd.service" file now uses the "forking" service type which
- enhances the log messages shown by "systemctl status ngircd.service",
- and the new "ngircd.socket" file configures a systemd socket that
- configures a socket for ngIRCd and launches the daemon on demand.
- - Enhance help system and the HELP command: now a "help text file" can be
- set using the new configuration option "HelpFile" ("global" section),
- which is read in and parsed on server startup and configuration reload,
- and then is used to output individual help texts to specific topics.
- Please see the file ./doc/Commands.txt for details.
- ngIRCd 20.3 (2013-08-23)
- - This release is a bugfix release only, without new features.
- - Security: Fix a denial of service bug (server crash) which could happen
- when the configuration option "NoticeAuth" is enabled (which is NOT the
- default) and ngIRCd failed to send the "notice auth" messages to new
- clients connecting to the server (CVE-2013-5580).
- ngIRCd 20.2 (2013-02-15)
- - This release is a bugfix release only, without new features.
- - Security: Fix a denial of service bug in the function handling KICK
- commands that could be used by arbitrary users to to crash the daemon
- (CVE-2013-1747).
- ngIRCd 20.1 (2013-01-02)
- - This release is a bugfix release only, without new features.
- ngIRCd 20 (2012-12-17)
- - Allow user names ("INDENT") up to 20 characters when ngIRCd has not
- been configured for "strict RFC mode". This is useful if you are using
- external (PAM) authentication mechanisms that require longer user names.
- Patch suggested by Brett Smith <brett@w3.org>, see
- <http://arthur.barton.de/pipermail/ngircd-ml/2012-October/000579.html>.
- ngIRCd 20~rc2 (2012-12-02)
- - Rework cloaked hostname handling and implement the "METADATA cloakhost"
- subcommand: Now ngIRCd uses two fields internally, one to store the
- "real" hostname and one to save the "cloaked" hostname. This allows
- "foreign servers" (aka "IRC services") to alter the real and cloaked
- hostnames of clients without problems, even when the user itself issues
- additional "MODE +x" and "MODE -x" commands.
- ngIRCd 20~rc1 (2012-11-11)
- - Update doc/Services.txt: describe the upcoming version of Anope 1.9.8,
- then including a protocol module for ngIRCd. And remove our own patches
- in ./contrib/Anope because they aren't supported any more ...
- - Implement new "METADATA" command which can be used by remote servers
- and IRC services to update client metadata like the client info text
- ("real name"), user name, and hostname, and use this command to
- configure an cloaked hostname (user mode "+x") on remote servers:
- This prevents "double cloaking" of hostnames and even cloaked
- hostnames are in sync on all servers supporting "METADATA" now.
- - Implement new IRC "SVSNICK" command to allow remote servers (and IRC
- services) to change nicknames of already registered users. The SVSNICK
- command itself doesn't change the nickname, but it becomes forwarded
- to the server to which the user is connected to. And then this server
- initiates the real nickname changing using regular NICK commands.
- This allows to run mixed networks with old servers not supporting the
- SVSNICK command, because SVSNICK commands for nicknames on such servers
- are silently ignored and don't cause a desynchronization of the network.
- - New configuration option "MaxListSize" to configure the maximum number
- of channels returned by a LIST command. The default is 100, as before.
- - Implement user mode "b", "block messages": when a user has set mode "b",
- all private messages and notices to this user are blocked if they don't
- originate from a registered user, an IRC Op, server or service. The
- originator gets an error numeric sent back in this case,
- ERR_NONONREG_MSG (486), which is used by UnrealIRCd, too. (Closes #144)
- - Implement channel mode "V" (invite disallow): If the new channel mode
- "V" is set, the INVITE command becomes invalid and all clients get the
- new ERR_NOINVITE_MSG (518) reply. (Closes #143)
- - Implement channel mode "Q" and user mode "q": Both modes protect users
- from channel kicks: only IRC operators and servers can kick users having
- mode "q" or in channels with mode "Q". (Closes #141)
- - Allow users to "cloak" their hostname only when the configuration
- variable "CloakHostModeX" (introduced in 19.2) is set. Otherwise, only
- IRC operators, other servers, and services are allowed to set the user
- mode "+x": this prevents regular users from changing their hostmask to
- the name of the IRC server itself, which confused quite a few people ;-)
- (Closes #133)
- - New configuration option "OperChanPAutoOp": If disabled, IRC operators
- don't become channel operators in persistent channels when joining.
- Enabled by default, which has been the behavior of ngIRCd up to this
- patch. (Closes #135)
- - Allow IRC operators to see secret (+s) channels in LIST command as long
- as the "MorePrivacy" configuration option isn't enabled in the
- configuration file. (Closes #136)
- - Implement new (optional) IRC+ "CHARCONV" command to set a client
- character set that the server translates all messages to/from UTF-8.
- This feature requires the "libiconv" library and must be enabled using
- the new "--with-iconv" option of the ./configure script. See
- doc/Protocol.txt for details. (Closes #109)
- - Implement user mode "B" ("Bot flag"): it is settable and unsettable by
- every (non-restricted) client. This is how Unreal and InspIRCd do
- behave, and so do we :-)
- - Implement channel mode "M": Only the server, identified users and IRC
- operators are able to talk in such a channel.
- - Block nicknames that are reserved for services and are defined using the
- configuration variable "ServiceMask" in "Server" blocks; And this
- variable now can handle more than one mask separated by commas.
- - Implemented XOP channel user modes: "Half Op" ("+h", prefix "%") can set
- the channel modes +imntvIbek and kick all +v and normal users; "Admin"
- ("+a", prefix "&") can set channel modes +imntvIbekoRsz and kick all +o,
- +h, +v and normal users; and "Owner" ("+q", prefix "~") can set channel
- modes +imntvIbekoRsz and kick all +a, +o, +h, +v and normal users.
- - Implement hashed cloaked hostnames for both the "CloakHost" and
- "CloakHostModeX" configuration options: now the admin can use the new
- '%x' placeholder to insert a hashed version of the clients hostname,
- and the new configuration option "CloakHostSalt" defines the salt for
- the hash function. When "CloakHostSalt" is not set (the default), a
- random salt will be generated after each server restart.
- ngIRCd Release 19.2 (2012-06-19)
- ngIRCd 19.2~rc1 (2012-06-13)
- - New configuration option "CloakHostModeX" to configure the hostname
- that gets used for IRC clients which have user mode "+x" enabled.
- Up to now, the name of the IRC server itself has been used for this,
- which still is the default when "CloakHostModeX" isn't set.
- - Add instructions for setting up Atheme IRC services.
- - Implement support for IRC capability handling, the new "CAP" command,
- and capablity "multi-prefix" which allows both the NAME and WHO command
- handlers to return more than one "class prefix" to the client.
- ngIRCd Release 19.1 (2012-03-19)
- - Really include _all_ patches to build the Anope module into the
- distribution archive ... ooops!
- ngIRCd Release 19 (2012-02-29)
- ngIRCd 19~rc1 (2012-02-12)
- - Update preliminary ngIRCd protocol module for Anope 1.9.6, which now
- is the only supported version.
- - New numeric RPL_WHOISHOST_MSG(378), which returns the DNS host name
- (if available) and the IP address of a client in the WHOIS reply.
- Only the user itself and local IRC operators get this numeric.
- - Implement channel exception list (mode 'e'). This allows a channel
- operator to define exception masks that allow users to join the
- channel even when a "ban" would match and prevent them from joining:
- the exception list (e) overrides the ban list (b).
- - Implement user mode 'C': If the target user of a PRIVMSG or NOTICE
- command has the user mode 'C' set, it is required that both sender
- and receiver are on the same channel. This prevents private flooding
- by completely unknown clients.
- - New RPL_WHOISREGNICK_MSG(307) numeric in WHOIS command replies: it
- indicates if a nickname is registered (if user mode 'R' set).
- - Limit channel invite, ban, and exception lists to 50 entries and fix
- duplicate check and error messages when adding already listed entries
- or deleting no (longer) existing ones.
- - Limit the number of list items in the reply of LIST (100), WHO (25),
- WHOIS (10), and WHOWAS (25) commands.
- - Limit the MODE command to handle a maximum number of 5 channel modes
- that require an argument (+Ibkl) per call and report this number
- in the ISUPPORT(005) numeric: "MODES=5".
- - LINKS command: support <mask> parameter to limit the reply.
- - Add 1 second penalty for every further target on PRIVMSG/NOTICE
- commands: this reduces the possibility of flooding channels with
- commands like "PRIVMSG/NOTICE #a,#n,#c,... :message" a little bit.
- Problem noticed by Cahata, thanks!
- - New configuration option "PAMIsOptional": when set, clients not
- sending a password are still allowed to connect: they won't become
- "identified" and keep the "~" character prepended to their supplied
- user name. See "man 5 ngircd.conf" for details.
- - Fixed handling of WHO commands. This fixes two bugs: "WHO <nick>"
- returned nothing at all if the user was "+i" (reported by Cahata,
- thanks) and "WHO <nick|nickmask>" returned channel names instead
- of "*" when the user was member of a (visible) channel.
- - LUSERS reply: only count channels that are visible to the requesting
- client, so the existence of secret channels is no longer revealed by
- using LUSERS. Reported by Cahata, thanks!
- - Unknown user and channel modes no longer stop the mode parser, but
- are simply ignored. Therefore modes after the unknown one are now
- handled. This is how ircd2.10/ircd2.11/ircd-seven behave, at least.
- Reported by Cahata, thanks!
- - Implement IRC commands "GLINE" and "KLINE" to ban users. G-Lines are
- synchronized between server on peering, K-Lines are local only.
- If you use "*!<user>@<host>" or "*!*@<host>" masks, these connections
- are blocked even before the user is fully logged in (before PASS,
- NICK, and USER commands have been processed) and before the child
- processes for authentication are forked, so resource usage is smaller.
- - Added doc/Modes.txt: document modes supported by ngIRCd.
- - Implement user mode "R": indicates that the nickname of this user
- is "registered". This mode isn't handled by ngIRCd itself, but must
- be set and unset by IRC services like Anope.
- - Implement channel mode "R": only registered users (having the user
- mode "R" set) are allowed to join this channel.
- - Test suite: bind to loopback (127.0.0.1) interface only.
- - Handle unknown user and channel modes: these modes are saved and
- forwarded to other servers, but ignored otherwise.
- - Handle channel user modes 'a', 'h', and 'q' from remote servers.
- These channel user modes aren't used for anything at the moment,
- but ngIRCd knows that these three modes are "channel user modes"
- and not "channel modes", that is that these modes take an "nickname"
- argument. Like unknown user and channel modes, these modes are saved
- and forwarded to other servers, but ignored otherwise.
- ngIRCd Release 18 (2011-07-10)
- - Add preliminary ngIRCd protocol module for Anope 1.9 to contrib/Anope/.
- ngIRCd 18~rc2 (2011-06-29)
- - GnuTLS: use 1024 bits as minimum size of the DH prime. This enables
- ngIRCd to accept incoming connections from other servers and clients
- that "only" use at least 1024 bits again, like ngIRCd 17 did (and no
- longer requires 2048 bits for incoming connections).
- ngIRCd 18~rc1 (2011-06-27)
- - New configuration option "MorePrivacy" to "censor" some user information.
- When enabled, signon time and idle time is left out. Part and quit
- messages are made to look the same. WHOWAS requests are silently dropped.
- All of this is useful if one wish to conceal users that access the ngircd
- servers from TOR or I2P.
- - New configuration option "ScrubCTCP" to scrub incoming CTCP commands. If
- activated, the server silently drops incoming CTCP requests from both
- other servers and from users. The server that scrubs CTCP will not forward
- the CTCP requests to other servers in the network either, which can spell
- trouble if not every oper knows about the CTCP-scrubbing. Scrubbing CTCP
- commands also means that it is not possible to send files between users.
- There is one exception to the CTCP scrubbing performed: ACTION ("/me
- commands") requests are not scrubbed.
- - Restructure ngIRCd configuration file: introduce new [Limits], [Options],
- and [SSL] sections. The intention of this restructuring is to make the
- [Global] section much cleaner, so that it only contains variables that
- most installations must adjust to the local requirements. All the optional
- variables are moved to [Limits], for configurable limits and timers of
- ngIRCd, and [Options], for optional features. All SSL-related variables
- are moved to [SSL] and the "SSL"-prefix is stripped. The old variables in
- the [Global] section are deprecated now, but are still recognized.
- => Don't forget to check your configuration, use "ngircd --configtest"!
- - New documentation "how to contribute": doc/Contributing.txt.
- - Avoid needlessly scary 'buffer overflow' messages: When the write buffer
- space grows too large, ngIRCd has to disconnect the client to avoid
- wasting too much memory, which is logged with a scary 'write buffer
- overflow' message. Change this to a more descriptive wording.
- - New configuration option "RequireAuthPing": PING-PONG on login. When
- enabled, this configuration option lets ngIRCd send a PING with an numeric
- "token" to clients logging in; and it will not become registered in the
- network until the client responds with the correct PONG.
- - New configuration option "NoticeAuth": send NOTICE AUTH on connect. When
- active, ngircd will send "NOTICE AUTH" messages on client connect time
- like e.g. snircd (QuakeNet) does.
- - Add support for up to 3 targets in WHOIS queries, also allow up to one
- wildcard query from local hosts. Follows ircd 2.10 implementation rather
- than RFC 2812. At most 10 entries are returned per wildcard expansion.
- - ngircd.conf(5) manual page: describe types of configuration variables
- (booleans, text strings, integer numbers) and add type information to each
- variable description.
- - Terminate incoming connections on HTTP commands "GET" and "POST".
- - New configuration option "CloakHost": when set, this host name is used for
- every client instead of the real DNS host name (or IP address).
- - New configuration option "CloakUserToNick": when enabled, ngIRCd sets
- every clients' user name to their nickname and hides the user name
- supplied by the IRC client.
- - Make write buffers bigger, but flush early. Before this change, a client
- got disconnected if the buffer flushing at 4k failed, now regular clients
- can store up to 32k and servers up 64k even if flushing is not possible at
- the moment. This enhances reliability on slow links.
- - Allow "Port = 0" in [Server] blocks. Port number 0 marks remote servers
- that try to connect to this daemon, but where this daemon never tries to
- establish a connection on its own: only incoming connections are allowed.
- - Enable WHOIS command to return information about services.
- - Implement channel mode 'O': "IRC operators only". This channel mode is
- used on DALnet (bahamut), for example.
- - Remove support for ZeroConf/Bonjour/Rendezvous service registration
- including the "[No]ZeroConf" configuration option.
- - Deprecate NoXX-Options in ngircd.conf and move new variants into our new
- [Options] section: 'NoDNS=no' => 'DNS=yes', 'NoIdent=no' => 'Ident=yes',
- 'NoPAM=no' => 'PAM=yes', and 'NoZeroConf=no' => 'ZeroConf=yes' (and
- vice-versa). The defaults are adjusted accordingly and the old variables
- in [Global] are still accepted, so there is no functional change.
- ngIRCd Release 17.1 (2010-12-19)
- - Don't log critical (or worse) messages to stderr
- - Remove "error file" when compiled with debug code enabled
- - New numeric 329: get channel creation time on "MODE #chan" commands
- ngIRCd Release 17 (2010-11-07)
- - doc: change path names in sample-ngircd.conf depending on sysconfdir
- ngIRCd 17~rc2 (2010-10-25)
- - Generate ngIRCd version number from GIT tag.
- - Make sourcecode compatible with ansi2knr again. This allows to compile
- ngIRCd using a pre-ANSI K&R C compiler again.
- ngIRCd 17~rc1 (2010-10-11)
- - New configuration option "NoZeroConf" to disable service registration at
- runtime even if ngIRCd is compiled with support for ZeroConf (e.g. using
- Howl, Avahi or on Mac OS X).
- - New configuration option "SyslogFacility" to define the syslog "facility"
- (the "target"), to which ngIRCd should send its log messages.
- Possible values are system dependant, but most probably "auth", "daemon",
- "user" and "local1" through "local7" are possible values; see syslog(3).
- Default is "local5" for historical reasons.
- - Dump the "internal server state" (configured servers, established
- connections and known clients) to the console or syslog when receiving
- the SIGUSR2 signal and debug mode is enabled.
- - Enable the daemon to disable and enable "debug mode" on runtime using
- signal SIGUSR1, when debug code is compiled in, not only on startup
- using the command line parameters.
- - Implement user mode "x": host name cloaking (closes: #102).
- - Change MOTD file handling: ngIRCd now caches the contens of the MOTD
- file, so the daemon now requires a HUP signal or REHASH command to
- re-read the MOTD file when its content changed.
- - Allow IRC ops to change channel modes even without OperServerMode set.
- - Allow IRC operators to use MODE command on any channel (closes: #100).
- - New configuration option "NoPAM" to disable PAM.
- - Implement asynchronous user authentication using PAM, please see the
- file doc/PAM.txt for details.
- - Add some documentation for using BOPM with ngIRCd, see doc/Bopm.txt.
- - Implement user mode "c": receive connect/disconnect NOTICEs. Note that
- this new mode requires the user to be an IRC operator.
- - Show SSL status in WHOIS output, numeric 275.
- ngIRCd Release 16 (2010-05-02)
- ngIRCd 16~rc2 (2010-04-25)
- - Enhace connection statistics counters: display total number of served
- connections on daemon shutdown and when a new client connects using
- the new numeric RPL_STATSCONN (250).
- ngIRCd 16~rc1 (2010-03-25)
- - Implement WEBIRC command used by some Web-IRC frontends. The password
- required to secure this command must be configured using the new
- "WebircPassword" variable in the ngircd.conf file.
- - Remove limit on max number of configured irc operators.
- - A new channel mode "secure connections only" (+z) has been implemented:
- Only clients using a SSL encrypted connection to the server are allowed
- to join such a channel.
- But please note three things: a) already joined clients are not checked
- when setting this mode, b) IRC operators are always allowed to join
- every channel, and c) remote clients using a server not supporting this
- mode are not checked either and therefore always allowed to join.
- ngIRCd Release 15 (2009-11-07)
- ngIRCd 15~rc1 (2009-10-15)
- - Do not add default listening port (6667) if SSL ports were specified, so
- ngIRCd can be configured to only accept SSL-encrypted connections now.
- - Enable IRC operators to use the IRC command SQUIT (insted of the already
- implemented but non-standard DISCONNECT command).
- - New configuration option "AllowRemoteOper" (disabled by default) that
- enables remote IRC operators to use the IRC commands SQUIT and CONNECT
- on the local server.
- - Enforce upper limit on maximum number of handled commands. This implements
- a throttling scheme: an IRC client can send up to 3 commands or 256 bytes
- per second before a one second pause is enforced.
- ngIRCd Release 14.1 (2009-05-05)
- - Security: fix remotely triggerable crash in SSL/TLS code.
- - Debian: build ngircd-full-dbg package.
- - Allow ping timeout quit messages to show the timeout value.
- ngIRCd Release 14 (2009-04-20)
- ngIRCd 14~rc1 (2009-03-29)
- - Allow creation of persistent modeless channels.
- - The INFO command reports the compile time now (if available).
- - Support individual channel keys for pre-defined channels: introduce
- new configuration variable "KeyFile" in [Channel] sections in ngircd.conf,
- here a file can be configured for each pre-defined channel which contains
- individual channel keys for different users.
- - Remove limit on maximum number of predefined channels in ngircd.conf.
- ngIRCd Release 13 (2008-12-25)
- ngIRCd 13~rc1 (2008-11-21):
- - New version number scheme :-)
- - Initial support for IRC services, using a RFC1459 style interface,
- tested with IRCServices (http://www.ircservices.za.net/) version 5.1.13.
- For this to work, ngIRCd now supports server-server links conforming
- to RFC 1459. New ngircd.conf(5) option: ServiceMask.
- - Support for SSL-encrypted server-server and client-server links using
- OpenSSL (configure: --with-openssl) or GNUTLS (configure: --with-gnutls).
- New ngircd.conf(5) options: SSLPorts, SSLKeyFile, SSLKeyFilePassword,
- SSLCertFile, SSLDHFile, and SSLConnect.
- - Server local channels have been implemented, prefix "&", that are only
- visible to users of the same server and are not visible in the network.
- In addition ngIRCd creates a "special" channel &SERVER on startup and logs
- all the messages to it that a user with mode +s receives.
- - New make target "osxpkg" to build a Mac OS X installer package.
- - New configuration option "NoIdent" to disable IDENT lookups even if the
- daemon is compiled with IDENT support.
- ngIRCd 0.12.1 (2008-07-09)
- - Add option aliases -V (for --version) and -h (for --help).
- - Make Listen parameter a comma-separated list of addresses. This also
- obsoletes ListenIPv4 and ListenIPv6 options. If Listen is unset, it
- is treated as Listen="::,0.0.0.0".
- Note: ListenIPv4 and ListenIPv6 options are still recognized,
- but ngircd will print a warning if they are used in the config file.
- ngIRCd 0.12.0 (2008-05-13)
- ngIRCd 0.12.0-pre2 (2008-04-29)
- - IPv6: Add config options to disable ipv4/ipv6 support.
- ngIRCd 0.12.0-pre1 (2008-04-20)
- - Add IPv6 support.
- - Install a LaunchDaemon script to start/stop ngIRCd on Mac OS X.
- - Implemented IRC commands INFO, SUMMON (dummy), and USERS (dummy) and
- enhanced test suite to check these commands. (Dana Dahlstrom)
- - IRC_WHO now supports search patterns and will test this against user
- nickname/server name/host name, etc. as required by RFC 2812, Section 3.6.1.
- (reported by Dana Dahlstrom)
- - Implement RFC 2812 handling of "0" argument to 'JOIN': must be treated
- as if the user had sent PART commands for all channels the user is a
- member of. (Dana Dahlstrom)
- - Allow NOTICEs to be sent to a channel. (Fabian Schlager)
- ngIRCd 0.11.0 (2008-01-15)
- - Add support for /STAT u (server uptime) command.
- - New [Server] configuration Option "Bind" allows to specify
- the source IP address to use when connecting to remote server.
- - New configuration option "MaxNickLength" to specify the allowed maximum
- length of user nicknames. Note: must be unique in an IRC network!
- - Numeric 317: implemented "signon time" (displayed in WHOIS result).
- - Added new server configuration option "Passive" for "Server" blocks to
- disable automatic outgoing connections (similar to -p option to ngircd,
- but only for the specified server). (Tassilo Schweyer)
- - Added support for the WALLOPS command. Usage is restricted to IRC
- operators.
- ngIRCd 0.10.2 (2007-06-08)
- - Predefined channel configuration now allows specification of channel key
- (mode k) and maximum user count (mode l): variables "Key" and "MaxUsers".
- - When using the epoll() IO interface, compile in the select() interface as
- well and fall back to it when epoll() isn't available on runtime.
- - Added support for IO APIs "poll()" and "/dev/poll".
- ngIRCd 0.10.1 (2006-12-17)
- - Allow PASS syntax defined in RFC 1459 for server links, too.
- - New configuration option "PredefChannelsOnly": if set, clients can only
- join predefined channels.
- ngIRCd 0.10.0 (2006-10-01)
- ngIRCd 0.10.0-pre1 (2006-08-02)
- - Enhanced DIE to accept a single parameter ("comment text") which is sent
- to all locally connected clients before the server goes down.
- - JOIN now supports more than one channel key at a time.
- - Implemented numeric "333": Time and user name who set a channel topic.
- - Channel topics are no longer limited to 127 characters: now the only limit
- is the maximum length of an IRC command, i. e. 512 bytes (in practice, this
- limits the topic to about 490 characters due to protocol overhead).
- - Reverse DNS lookup code now checks the result by doing an additional
- lookup to prevent spoofing.
- - Added new IO layer which (optionally) supports epoll() and kqueue() in
- addition to the select() interface.
- ngIRCd 0.9.0 (2005-07-24)
- - Never run with root privileges but always switch the user ID.
- - Make "netsplit" messages RFC compliant.
- - Implemented the IRC function "WHOWAS".
- - New configuration option "OperServerMode" to enable a workaround needed
- when running an network with ircd2 servers and "OperCanUseMode" enabled
- to prevent the ircd2 daemon to drop mode changes of IRC operators.
- Patch by Florian Westphal, <westphal@foo.fh-furtwangen.de>.
- - Implemented support for "secret channels" (channel mode "s").
- - New configuration option "Mask" for [Operator] sections to limit OPER
- commands to users with a specific IRC mask. Patch from Florian Westphal.
- - New configuration variable "PidFile", section "[Global]": if defined,
- the server writes its process ID (PID) to this file. Default: off.
- Idea of Florian Westphal, <westphal@foo.fh-furtwangen.de>.
- - Added support for the Howl (http://www.porchdogsoft.com/products/howl/)
- Rendezvous API, in addition to the API of Apple (Mac OS X). The available
- API will be autodetected when you call "./configure --with-rendezvous".
- ngIRCd 0.8.0 (2004-06-26)
- - Two new configuration options: "ChrootDir" and "MotdPhrase", thanks to
- Benjamin Pineau <ben@zouh.org>. Now you can force the daemon to change
- its root and working directory to something "safe". MotdPhrase is used
- to define an "MOTD string" instead of a whole file, useful if the
- "real" MOTD file would be outside the "jail".
- - INVITE- and BAN-lists become synchronized between IRC+ servers when
- establishing new connections, if the peer supports this as well.
- - The type of service (TOS) of all sockets is set to "interactive" now.
- - Added short command line option "-t" as alternative to "--configtest".
- - Added optional support for "IDENT" lookups on incoming connections. You
- have to enable this function with the ./configure switch "--with-ident".
- The default is not to do IDENT lookups.
- ngIRCd 0.7.5 (2003-07-11)
- - New configuration variable "MaxConnectionsIP" to limit the number of
- simultaneous connections from a single IP that the server will accept.
- This configuration options lowers the risk of denial of service attacks
- (DoS), the default is 5 connections per client IP.
- - Added new configuration variable "Listen" to bind all listening
- sockets of the server to a single IP address.
-
- ngIRCd 0.7.1 (2003-07-18)
- - Added support for GNU/Hurd.
- ngIRCd 0.7.0 (2003-05-01)
- - New command CONNECT to enable and add server links. The syntax is not
- RFC-compatible: use "CONNECT <name> <port>" to enable and connect an
- configured server and "CONNECT <name> <port> <host> <mypwd> <peerpwd>"
- to add a new server (ngIRCd tries to connect new servers only once!).
- - Added DISCONNECT command ("DISCONNECT <name>") to disable servers.
- - New command TRACE (you can trace only servers at the moment).
- - New command HELP that lists all understood commands.
- - ngIRCd can register itself with Rendezvous: to enable support pass the
- new switch "--with-rendezvous" to configure.
- - Added support for TCP Wrappers library: pass "--with-tcp-wrappers" to
- configure to enable it.
- - Changed some configure options to use "--with"/"--without" as prefix
- instead of "--enable"/"--disable": "--without-syslog", "--without-zlib",
- "--with-tcp-wrappers", and "--with-rendezvous".
- - Enhanced manual pages ngircd(8) and ngircd.conf(5).
- - Documentation is now installed in $(datadir)/doc/ngircd.
- Older news (sorry, only available in german language):
- ngIRCd 0.6.0, 2002-12-24
- - beim Schliessen einer Verbindung zeigt der Server nun vor dem ERROR
- noch eine Statistik ueber die empfangene und gesendete Datenmenge an.
- - Connection-Strukturen werden nun "pool-weise" verwaltet; der Pool wird
- bei Bedarf bis zu einem konfigurierten Limit vergroessert.
- - Mit der neuen Konfigurationsvariable "MaxConnections" (Sekion "Global")
- kann die maximale Anzahl gleichzeitiger Verbindungen begrenzt werden.
- Der Default ist -1, "unlimitiert".
- - der Server erkennt nun, ob bereits eine eingehende Verbindung von einem
- Peer-Server besteht und versucht dann nicht mehr, selber eine eigene
- ausgehende Verbindung zu diesem auufzubauen. Dadurch kann nun auf beiden
- Servern in der Konfiguration ein Port fuer den Connect konfiguriert
- werden (beide Server versuchen sich dann gegenseitig zu connectieren).
- - Server identifizieren sich nun mit asynchronen Passwoertern, d.h. das
- Passwort, welches A an B schickt, kann ein anderes sein als das, welches
- B als Antwort an A sendet. In der Konfig.-Datei, Abschnitt "Server",
- wurde "Password" dazu durch "MyPassword" und "PeerPassword" ersetzt.
- - Der Server kann nun zur Laufzeit die Konfiguration neu einlesen: dies
- macht er nach dem Befehl REHASH oder wenn ein HUP-Signal empfangen wird.
- - Server-Server-Links koennen nun komprimiert werden, dazu wird die zlib
- (www.zlib.org) benoetigt. Unterstuetzt die Gegenseite die Komprimierung
- nicht, wird automatisch unkomprimiert kommuniziert. Das Verfahren ist
- kompatibel mit dem Original-ircd 2.10.3, d.h. beide Server koennen
- miteinander ueber komprimiert Links kommunizieren.
- - neue Konfigurations-Variable "MaxJoins": Hiermit kann die maximale Zahl
- der Channels, in denen ein User Mitglied sein kann, begrent werden.
- - neue Channel-Modes l (User-Limit) und k (Channel-Key) implementiert.
- ngIRCd 0.5.0, 20.09.2002
- - AIX (3.2.5), HP-UX (10.20), IRIX (6.5), NetBSD (1.5.3/m68k) und Solaris
- (2.5.1, 2.6) gehoeren nun auch zu den unterstuetzten Platformen.
- - Unter A/UX (und evtl. weiteren Systemen) kompiliert der ngIRCd nun mit
- dem "nativen" (ggf. pre-ANSI) Compiler.
- - "persistente Channels" (Mode 'P') implementiert: diese koennen in der
- Konfigurationsdatei definiert werden (Sektion "Channel", vgl. Beispiel-
- Konfiguration "sample-ngircd.conf") und bleiben auch dann bestehen,
- wenn kein User mehr im Channel ist.
- - neue IRC-Befehle: KICK, INVITE, ADMIN, CHANINFO; LIST wurde erweitert.
- Mit dem neuen Befehl CHANINFO synchronisieren Server, die das IRC+-
- Protokoll unterstuetzen, Channel-Modes und Topics. Fuer den ADMIN-Befehl
- gibt es neue Konfigurationsoptionen (Sektion "Global"): "AdminInfo1",
- "AdminInfo2" und "AdminEMail".
- - Invite- und Ban-Lists implementiert.
- - neue Konfigurationsoption "OperCanUseMode" (Sektion "Global"):
- ist sie aktiv, koennen IRC-Operatoren immer Channel-Modes setzen.
- - "Test-Suite" begonnen: mit "make check" wird sie durchlaufen.
- ngIRCd 0.4.2, 29.04.2002
- - IRC-Funktion LIST implementiert; bisher werden allerdings noch keine
- Regular Expressions (bis auf "*") unterstuetzt.
- ngIRCd 0.4.0, 01.04.2002
- - WHO implementiert (bisher ohne komplette Unterstuetzung von Masks).
- - stderr wird nun in eine Datei umgelenkt (/ngircd-<PID>.err).
- Laeuft der Server nicht im Debug-Modus, so wird diese bei Programm-
- ende geloescht. Sollte der Server abstuerzen, finden sich hier evtl.
- zusaetzliche Informationen.
- - Server-Gruppen implementiert: es wird immer nur zu einem Server in
- einer Gruppe eine Verbindung aufgebaut, klappt es beim ersten Server
- nicht, so wird der naechste probiert.
- - Clients und Channels werden nicht mehr ueber ihren Namen, sondern
- einen Hash-Wert gesucht: sollte deutlich schneller sein.
- - neuer Kommandozeilen-Parameter "--configtest": die Konfiguration wird
- gelesen und die dann verwendeten Werte angezeigt.
- - Client-Mode "s" (Server Notices) implementiert.
- - mit dem neuen Kommandozeilen-Parameter "--config"/"-f" kann eine
- alternative Konfigurationsdatei angegeben werden.
- - nach dem Start kann der ngIRCd, wenn er mit root-Rechten laeuft,
- zu einer anderen User-ID und Group-ID wechseln.
- ngIRCd 0.3.0, 02.03.2002
- - bekommt der Server ein HUP-Signal, so startet er neu -- genau so, wie
- er auf den IRC-Befehl RESTART reagiert.
- - neuer Kommandozeilen-Schalter "--passive" (-p): wird er angegeben, so
- verbindet sich der ngIRCd nicht mehr automatisch zu anderen Servern.
- Zum Debuggen manchmal ganz praktisch :-)
- - neue Befehle VERSION und KILL implementiert. NAMES korrigiert.
- - Anpassungen an A/UX: gehoert nun auch zu den unterstuetzten Platformen.
- - AWAY (und der User-Mode 'a') ist nun implementiert.
- - der ngIRCd unterstuetzt nun Channel-Topics (TOPIC-Befehl).
- - Channel- und Nicknames werden nun ordentlich validiert.
- ngIRCd 0.2.0, 15.02.2002
- - Begonnen Channel-Modes und User-Channel-Modes zu implementieren: der
- Server versteht an User-Modes o und v, beachtet letzteres allerdings
- noch nirgends. Bekannte (aber nicht beachtete!) Channel-Modes sind
- bisher a, m, n, p, q, s und t. Diese Modes werden von Usern ange-
- nommen, von anderen Servern werden auch unbekannte Modes uebernommen.
- - Nach dem Connect eines Users werden LUSERS-Informationen angezeigt.
- ngIRCd 0.1.0, 29.01.2002
- - Channels implementiert, bisher jedoch noch ohne Channel-Modes, d.h.
- es gibt keine Channel-Ops, kein Topic, kein "topic lock" etc. pp.
- Chatten in Channels ist aber natuerlich moeglich ;-)
- Dadurch zum Teil groessere Aenderungen an bisherigen Funktionen.
- - neue Befehle fuer Channles: JOIN, PART und NJOIN.
- - FAQ.txt in doc/ begonnen.
- ngIRCd 0.0.3, 16.01.2002
- - Server-Links vollstaendig implementiert: der ngIRCd kann nun auch
- "Sub-Server" haben, also sowohl als Leaf-Node als auch Hub in einem
- IRC-Netzwerk arbeiten.
- - WHOIS wird nun immer an den "Original-Server" weitergeleitet.
- - Parser handhabt Leerzeichen zw. Parametern nun etwas "lockerer".
- - Kommandozeilen-Parser: Debug- und No-Daemon-Modus, Hilfe.
- - ngIRCd wandelt sich nun in einen Daemon (Hintergrundprozess) um.
- - neue Befehle: LUSERS, LINKS.
- ngIRCd 0.0.2, 06.01.2002
- - neuer Aufbau der Konfigurationsdatei,
- - mehrere IRC-Operatoren koennen konfiguriert werden,
- - Server-Links teilweise implementiert. Bisher kann der ngIRCd jedoch
- nur "leafed server" sein, d.h. keine "Client-Server" haben.
- ngIRCd 0.0.1, 31.12.2001
- - erste oeffentliche Version von ngIRCd als "public preview" :-)
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