For example, Interix is missing this function, which prevented
ngIRCd to build on this platform. When setgroups(3) isn't available,
a warning message is issued when ngIRCd starts up.
lightIRC and other clients expecting RPL_LISTSTART should now behave correctly.
Closes#207.
(cherry picked from commit 0680ce5fd99bc643651d1433bcdaf271aeb73c46)
Up to now, only the the string ("haystack") became lowercased and was
the compared to the pattern ("needle") -- which failed, when the pattern
itself wasn't all lowercase ...
- Update documentation in ngircd.conf(5)
- LIST: Don't hide channels for IRC Ops when "MorePrivacy" is in effect
- WHOIS: Don't hide IP addresses/hostnames when "MorePrivacy" is in effect
Closes#198
Implement ERR_USERNOTONSERV(504) numeric and make sure that the
target user is on the same server when inviting other users to
local ("&") channels.
ircd-ratbox uses the ERR_USERNOTONSERV(504) numeric for this, and I
think this is a good idea -- other IRC daemons (like ircu) silently
drop such impossible invites, but thats not a big benefit ...
Idea by Cahata, thanks! Closes#183.
Up to now when receiving a MODE command, ngIRCd only reported the channel
creation time to clients that were members of the channel. This patch
reports the channel creation time to all clients, regardless if they are
joined to that channel or not.
At least ircd-seven behaves like this.
This closes#188. Thanks Cahata!
No other IRC daemon seems to do this (today?), don't remember why
ngIRCd did it in the first place ...
Closes#185.
Reported by Cahata in #ngircd, thanks!
The logic is reversed ...
This bug has been introduced by commit c74115f2, "Simplify mode checking on
channels and users within a channel", ngIRCd releases 21, 21.1, and 22 are
affected :-(
Problem reported by Cahata in #ngircd, Thanks!
Up to now, ban, invite, and G-Line lists have been synced between servers
while linking -- but obviously nobody noticed that except list have been
missing ever since. Until now.
Thanks to "j4jackj", who reported this issue in #ngircd.
David Binderman <dcb314@hotmail.com> reported the following compiler warning,
which is a real bug in ngIRCd, thanks!
conn.c:2077:55: warning: logical not is only applied to the left hand
side of comparison [-Wlogical-not-parentheses]
The "SYSLOG" #define isn't related to "Conf_ScrubCTCP" at all, so
initialize the latter even when "SYSLOG" isn't #define'd.
Pointed out by wowaname on #ngircd, thanks!
There are installations out there that would like to configure more
than 16 links per server, so increase this limit. Best would be to
get rid of MAX_SERVERS altogether and make if fully dynamic, but
start with this quick and dirty hack ...
Different operating systems do behave quite differently when doing DNS
lookups, for example "127.0.0.1" sometimes resolves to "localhost" and
sometimes to "localhost.localdomain" (for example OpenBSD). And other
systems resolve "localhost" to the real host name (for example Cygwin).
So not using DNS at all makes the test site much more portable.
Let IRC_MODE() detect that the "fake" MODE command originated on the local
sever, which enables all modes to be settable using "DefaultUserModes"
that can be set by regular MODE commands, including modes only settable by
IRC Operators.
ngIRCd relaxes its flood protection for users having the user mode "F" set
and allows them to rapidly send data to the daemon. This mode is only
settable by IRC Operators and can cause problems in the network -- so be
careful and only set it on "trusted" clients!
User mode "F" is used by Bahamut for this purpose, for example, see
<http://docs.dal.net/docs/modes.html#4.9>.
ngIRCd uses "command throttling" and "bps throttling" (bytes per second).
The states are detected in different functions, Conn_Handler() and
Read_Request(), but handle the actual "throttling" in a common function:
this enables us to guarantee consistent behavior and to disable throttling
for special connections in only one place, eventually.
Change all #define's to follow the form
#define DEBUG_xxx {0|1}
to disable (0, default) or enable (1) additional debug messages.
And somewhat enhance some DEBUG_BUFFER messages.
This partially reverts commit b130b35f4, "Update #include's: remove
unused and add missing ones", but fixes the following compiler and
analyzer warnings of Apple Xcode 5:
"Semantic issue: No previous prototype for function 'yyy'"
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