ngircd-tor/INSTALL

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ngIRCd - Next Generation IRC Server
(c)2001-2004 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passwords: therefore the variable "Password" in [Server]-sections has been
replaced by "MyPassword" and "PeerPassword".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
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II. Useful make-targets
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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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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III. 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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IV. Command line options
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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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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--
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$Id: INSTALL,v 1.22 2005/07/08 16:23:00 alex Exp $