The "deheader" tool (<http://www.catb.org/~esr/deheader/>) has been
used to find unused #include directives as well as missing ones.
Tested on:
- A/UX 3.1.1
- ArchLinux (2014-03-17)
- Debian GNU/Hurd
- Debian GNU/Linux 6.0.9
- Debian GNU/Linux 7.4
- Fedora 20
- FreeBSD 9.2
- OpenBSD 4.8
- OpenBSD 5.1
- OS X 10.9
- Solaris 11
All places where Client_OperByMe() is used can either be converted to
Client_HasMode(Client, 'o') or Op_Check().
And Op_Check() itself can use the connection handle for deciding whether
the IRC Operator is a local user or not.
This patch introduces a new field in the CLIENT structure, "ipa_text",
which points to an optional textual representation of the client IP
address (or NULL) which can be used to store the "real" IP address
information of a client using the "WEBIRC" protocol.
Without this patch, ngIRCd ignored the <ip-address> paramater ...
In addition, the functions Client_SetIPAText() and Client_IPAText()
have been introduced to set and get the textual representation of the
client IP address.
Client_IPAText() can be used even when no "IP address text" has been
set before, it then returns the real IP address of the connection.
Closes bug #159.
This function is used to send "error messages", including numerics,
back to clients and to automatically enforce a 2 second penalty. With
this patch, all error results enforces a delay for the client.
All callers of IRC_WriteStrClient(ERR_xxx) have been converted.
Please note that this patch prolongs the time "make check" needs
to complete its tests, because of lots of new enforced penalties ...
Move Announce_User() to client.c and rename it to Client_Announce().
Use this in cb_introduceClient() instead of duplicating the code.
This fix the certificate fingerprint announcement for new clients.
Also ensure the certificate fingerprint is only announced if the
client supports it (`M' flag).
This function returns the server structure of a client or a given "mask";
it is useful for implemention handlers for commands like "COMMAND *.net",
which should work on a server matching "*.net".
Please note that the local server is always returned when it matches the
mask, but besides that, the order is completely arbitrary.
Make sure that all log messages end with a correct punctuation mark.
The rules for formatting log messages are:
1. Add punctuation marks to all messages passed to the actual logging
functions like Log() and LogDebug().
2. Don't add any punctuation marks to messages that are stored in
variables for later use or are passed over the network.
3. IP addresses, DNS host names and IRC server names should be quoted.
4. Messages originating in the network should be quoted (at least if
they are "untrusted" or variable).
Most probably this patch doesn't fix all mistakes, but it should be a
good starting point ...
Now ngIRCd uses two fields internally, one to store the "real" hostname
and one to save the "cloaked" hostname. And both fields can be set
independently using the "METADATA host" and "METADATA cloakhost" commands.
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.
A client for which a METADATA command has been received from one of
its peers got the client flag "M" set. So it's safe to assume that
such a client gets "METADATA host" commands for its cloaked hostname
and the server must not cloak the hostname on its own, even when the
client mode "+x" is set.
Not only cloak the hostname in Client_MaskCloaked(), but also in
Client_HostnameCloaked() -- so move the actual cloaking to this function
and call it in Client_MaskCloaked() to get the (cloaked) hostname.
This fixes USERHOST not displaying the correctly cloaked hostname,
for example.
This patch series converts the statically allocated password buffer in the
CLIENT structure into a dynamically (and only when needed) allocated buffer
which is referenced by the CONNECTION structure.
This a) saves memory for clients not using passwords at all and b) allows
for "arbitrarily" long passwords.
By Brett Smith (5) and Alexander Barton (2).
* 'move-connection-password' of git://arthur.barton.de/ngircd-alex:
Login_User(): use "conn" insted of calling Client_Conn(Client)
Free already saved password when storing a new one
Indentation and style fixes.
Connection password is not constant.
Implementation clean-ups.
Dynamically allocate memory for connection password.
Move client password from the Client to the Connection struct.
This patch introduces the new function Conf_NickIsBlocked() which checks
if a given nick name matches with the "service mask" of a configured server.
And Client_CheckNick() uses this information to deny such names for regular
IRC users.
So nick names intended for IRC services are more protected and can't be used
by regular users even when the "services pseudo-server" isn't connected to
the network.
But please note:
Up to now, there can be only one "ServiceMask" pattern per server, which
most probably blocks much more nick names than really required ...
So "ServiceMask" should allow more than one pattern which can be more
specific, and most probably it should be possible to block nick names in
the global server configuration as well.
Nick names introduced by other servers/services are never restricted.
This is a relatively naive implementation, basically doing the bare minimum
necessary to make the switchover go. Subsequent commits can focus on
improving the implementation.
Implemented support for hashed hostnames for CloakHost. The admin can
use '%x' in both the CloakHost and CloakHostModeX setting. The config
option CloakHostModeX was renamed to CloakHostSalt. This salt is used
for both cloaking options.
CloakHostModeX can now contain '%x'. It will be replace by the hash of
the original client hostname. The new config option CloakHostModeXSalt
defines the salt for the hash function. When CloakHostModeXSalt is not
set a random salt will be generated after each server restart.
Spelling fix in defines.h
Citing an email from Florian to the ngIRCd mailing list:
"I wonder what the expected behaviour is when Conf_MorePrivacy is changed
from 'yes' to 'no' and the config is reloaded.
At the moment, WHOWAS will start giving out information on Users that
were connected during Conf_MorePrivacy=yes period. If this is not
wanted, Client_RegisterWhowas() should be changed to not store a record
when Conf_MorePrivacy is enabled."
And I think it is "not wanted" :-)
this patch contains:
* Fix for Conf_CloakUserToNick to make it conceal user details
* Adds MorePrivacy-feature
MorePrivacy censors some user information from being reported by the
server. Signon time and idle time is censored. 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.