Updated, corrected and extended (examples!) protocol documentation.

This commit is contained in:
Alexander Barton 2003-11-30 20:30:56 +00:00
parent 606cdb69bf
commit d329a961bd
1 changed files with 18 additions and 11 deletions

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@ -22,9 +22,10 @@ in all details. But because the ngIRCd should be a fully compatible
replacement for this server ("ircd") it tries to emulate these differences.
If you don't like this behavior please ./configure the ngIRCd using the
"--enable-strict-rfc" command line option. But please note: not all IRC
clients are compatible with such an server, some can't even connect at all!
Therefore this option isn't desired for "normal operation".
"--enable-strict-rfc" command line option. But keep in mind: not all IRC
clients are compatible with a server configured that way, some can't even
connect at all! Therefore this option usually isn't desired for "normal
server operation".
II. The IRC+ Protocol
@ -35,8 +36,8 @@ as defined in RFC 2810-2813. This enhanced protocol is named "IRC+". It is
backwards compatible to the "plain" IRC protocol and will only be used by
the ngIRCd if it detects that the peer supports it as well.
The "PASSV" command is used to detect the protocol and peer versions (see
RFC 2813, section 4.1.1).
The "PASS" command is used to detect the protocol and peer versions see
RFC 2813 (section 4.1.1) and below.
II.1 Register new server link
@ -57,9 +58,11 @@ The following optional(!) 10 bytes contain an implementation-dependent
version number. Servers supporting the IRC+ protocol as defined in this
document provide the string "-IRC+" here.
Example for <version>: "0210-IRC+".
<flags> consists of two parts separated with the character "|" and is at
most 100 bytes long. The first part contains the name of the implementation
(ngIRCd sets this to "ngIRCd", the original ircd to "IRC", e.g.). The second
(ngIRCd sets this to "ngircd", the original ircd to "IRC", e.g.). The second
part is implementation-dependent and should only be parsed if the peer
supports the IRC+ protocol as well. In this case the following syntax is
used: "<serverversion>[:<serverflags>]".
@ -68,15 +71,19 @@ used: "<serverversion>[:<serverflags>]".
number, <serverflags> indicates the supported IRC+ protocol extensions (and
may be empty!).
The optional parameter <options> is used to propagate server options as
defined in RFC 2813, section 4.1.1.
The following <serverflags> are defined at the moment:
- C: The server supports the CHANINFO command.
- o: IRC operators are allowed to change channel- and channel-user-modes
even if they aren't channel-operator of the affected channel.
- C: The server supports the CHANINFO command.
- Z: Compressed server links are supported by the server.
Example for a complete <flags> string: "ngircd|0.7.5:CZ".
The optional parameter <options> is used to propagate server options as
defined in RFC 2813, section 4.1.1.
II.2 Exchange channel-modes, topics, and persistent channels
@ -104,4 +111,4 @@ channel mode). In this case <limit> should be "0".
--
$Id: Protocol.txt,v 1.10 2003/04/29 13:37:36 goetz Exp $
$Id: Protocol.txt,v 1.11 2003/11/30 20:30:56 alex Exp $