ngircd-tor/INSTALL

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ngIRCd - Next Generation IRC Server
(c)2001-2006 by Alexander Barton,
alex@barton.de, http://www.barton.de/
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ngIRCd is free software and published under the
terms of the GNU General Public License.
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-- INSTALL --
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I. Upgrade Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Differences to version 0.9.x
- The option of the configure script to enable support for Zeroconf/Bonjour/
Rendezvous/WhateverItIsNamedToday has been renamed:
--with-rendezvous -> --with-zeroconf
Differences to version 0.8.x
- The maximum length of passwords has been raised to 20 characters (instead
of 8 characters). If your passwords are longer than 8 characters then they
are cut at an other position now.
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Differences to version 0.6.x
- Some options of the configure script have been renamed:
--disable-syslog -> --without-syslog
--disable-zlib -> --without-zlib
Please call "./configure --help" to review the full list of options!
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Differences to version 0.5.x
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- Starting with version 0.6.0, other servers are identified using asynchronous
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passwords: therefore the variable "Password" in [Server]-sections has been
replaced by "MyPassword" and "PeerPassword".
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- New configuration variables, section [Global]: MaxConnections, MaxJoins
(see example configuration file "doc/sample-ngircd.conf"!).
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II. Standard Installation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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ngIRCd is developed for UNIX-based systems, which means that the installation
on modern UNIX-like systems that are supported by GNU autoconf and GNU
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automake ("configure") should be no problem.
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The normal installation procedure after getting (and expanding) the source
files (using a distribution archive or CVS) is as following:
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1) ./autogen.sh [only necessary when using CVS]
2) ./configure
3) make
4) make install
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(Please see details below!)
Now the newly compiled executable "ngircd" is installed in its standard
location, /usr/local/sbin/.
The next step is to configure and afterwards starting the daemon. Please
have a look at the ngircd(8) and ngircd.conf(5) manual pages for details
and all possible options.
If no previous version of the configuration file exists (the standard name
is /usr/local/etc/ngircd.conf), a sample configuration file containing all
possible options will be installed there. You'll find its template in the
doc/ directory: sample-ngircd.conf.
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1): "autogen.sh"
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The first step, autogen.sh, is only necessary if the configure-script isn't
already generated. This never happens in official ("stable") releases in
tar.gz-archives, but when using CVS.
This step is therefore only interesting for developers.
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autogen.sh produces the Makefile.in's, which are necessary for the configure
script itself, and some more files for make. To run autogen.sh you'll need
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GNU autoconf and GNU automake (use recent versions! autoconf 2.53 and
automake 1.6.1 are known to work).
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Again: "end users" do not need this step!
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2): "./configure"
The configure-script is used to detect local system dependencies.
In the perfect case, configure should recognise all needed libraries, header
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files and so on. If this shouldn't work, "./configure --help" shows all
possible options.
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In addition, you can pass some command line options to "configure" to enable
and/or disable some features of ngIRCd. All these options are shown using
"./configure --help", too.
Compiling a static binary will avoid you the hassle of feeding a chroot dir
(if you want use the chroot feature). Just do something like:
CFLAGS=-static ./configure [--your-options ...]
Then you can use a void directory as ChrootDir (like OpenSSH's /var/empty).
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3): "make"
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The make command uses the Makefiles produced by configure and compiles the
ngIRCd daemon.
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4): "make install"
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Use "make install" to install the server and a sample configuration file on
the local system. Normally, root privileges are necessary to complete this
step. If there is already an older configuration file present, it won't be
overwritten.
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This files will be installed by default:
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- /usr/local/sbin/ngircd: executable server
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- /usr/local/etc/ngircd.conf: sample configuration (if not already present)
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- /usr/local/share/doc/ngircd/: documentation
III. Additional features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The following optional features can be compiled into the daemon by passing
options to the "configure" script. Most options can handle a <path> argument
which will be used to search for the required libraries and header files in
the given paths ("<path>/lib/...", "<path>/include/...") in addition to the
standard locations.
* Syslog Logging (autodetected by default):
--with-syslog[=<path>] / --without-syslog
Enable (disable) support for logging to "syslog", which should be
available on most modern UNIX-like operating systems by default.
* ZLib Compression (autodetected by default):
--with-zlib[=<path>] / --without-zlib
Enable (disable) support for compressed server-server links.
The Z compression library ("libz") is required for this option.
* IO Backend (autodetected by default):
--with-select[=<path>] / --without-select
--with-poll[=<path>] / --without-poll
--with-devpoll[=<path>] / --without-devpoll
--with-epoll[=<path>] / --without-epoll
--with-kqueue[=<path>] / --without-kqueue
ngIRCd can use different IO "backends": the "old school" select() and poll()
API which should be supported by most UNIX-like operating systems, or the
more efficient and flexible epoll() (Linux >=2.6), kqueue() (BSD) and
/dev/poll APIs.
By default the IO backend is autodetected, but you can use "--without-xxx"
to disable a more enhanced API.
When using the epoll() API, support for select() is compiled in as well by
default to enable the binary to run on older Linux kernels (<2.6), too.
* IDENT-Support:
--with-ident[=<path>]
Include support for IDENT ("AUTH") lookups. The "ident" library is
required for this option.
* ZeroConf Support:
--with-zeroconf[=<path>]
Compile ngIRCd with support for ZeroConf multicast DNS service registration.
Either the Apple ZeroConf implementation (e. g. Mac OS X) or the Howl
library is required. Which one is available is autodetected.
* TCP-Wrappers:
--with-tcp-wrappers[=<path>]
Include support for Wietse Venemas "TCP Wrappers" to limit client access
to the daemon, for example by using "/etc/hosts.{allow|deny}".
The "libwrap" is required for this option.
IV. Useful make-targets
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The Makefile produced by the configure-script contains always these useful
targets:
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- clean: delete every product from the compiler/linker
next step: -> make
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- distclean: the above plus erase all generated Makefiles
next step: -> ./configure
- maintainer-clean: erase all automatic generated files
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next step: -> ./autogen.sh
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V. Sample configuration file ngircd.conf
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In the sample configuration file, there are comments beginning with "#" OR
";" -- this is only for the better understanding of the file.
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The file is separated in four blocks: [Global], [Operator], [Server], and
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[Channel].
In the [Global] section, there is the main configuration like the server
name and the ports, on which the server should be listening. IRC operators
of this server are defined in [Operator] blocks. [Server] is the section
where server links are configured. And [Channel] blocks are used to
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configure pre-defined ("persistent") IRC channels.
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The meaning of the variables in the configuration file is explained in the
"doc/sample-ngircd.conf", which is used as sample configuration file in
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/usr/local/etc after running "make install" (if you don't already have one)
and in the "ngircd.conf" manual page.
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VI. Command line options
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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These parameters could be passed to the ngIRCd:
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-f, --config <file>
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The daemon uses the file <file> as configuration file rather than
the standard configuration /usr/local/etc/ngircd.conf.
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-n, --nodaemon
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ngIRCd should be running as a foreground process.
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-p, --passive
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Server-links won't be automatically established.
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-t, --configtest
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Reads, validates and dumps the configuration file as interpreted
by the server. Then exits.
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Use "--help" to see a short help text describing all available parameters
the server understands, with "--version" the ngIRCd shows its version
number. In both cases the server exits after the output.
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--
$Id: INSTALL,v 1.25 2006/12/28 13:53:19 alex Exp $