Update README

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Přemysl Eric Janouch 2022-08-27 16:17:47 +02:00
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@ -5,27 +5,23 @@ xK
daemon, and bot. It's all you're ever going to need for chatting,
so long as you can make do with slightly minimalist software.
They come with these potentially interesting properties:
- supporting IRCv3, SOCKS, IPv6, TLS (including client certificates)
- lean on dependencies
- compact and arguably easy to hack on
- maximally permissive license
They're all lean on dependencies, and offer a maximally permissive licence.
xC
--
The IRC client, and the core of 'xK'. It is largely defined by being built
on top of GNU Readline that has been hacked to death. Its interface should feel
somewhat familiar for weechat or irssi users.
The IRC client, and the core of 'xK'. It is largely defined by building on top
of GNU Readline or BSD Editline that have been hacked to death. Its interface
should feel somewhat familiar for weechat or irssi users.
image::xC.png[align="center"]
It has most of the stuff you'd expect of an IRC client, such as being
multiserver, a powerful configuration system, integrated help, text formatting,
automatic splitting of overlong messages, multiline editing, bracketed paste
support, decent word wrapping, autocomplete, logging, CTCP queries, auto-away,
command aliases, and basic support for Lua scripting. As a unique bonus,
you can launch a full text editor from within.
It has most features you'd expect of an IRC client, such as being multiserver,
a powerful configuration system, integrated help, text formatting, automatic
message splitting, multiline editing, bracketed paste support, word wrapping
that doesn't break links, autocomplete, logging, CTCP queries, auto-away,
command aliases, SOCKS proxying, SASL EXTERNAL authentication using TLS client
certificates, or basic support for Lua scripting. As a unique bonus, you can
launch a full text editor from within.
xD
--
@ -34,11 +30,9 @@ than a system-wide daemon. If all you want is a decent, minimal IRCd for
testing purposes or a small network of respectful users (or bots), this one will
do it just fine.
Notable features:
- TLS autodetection (I'm still wondering why everyone doesn't have this)
- IRCop authentication via TLS client certificates
- partial IRCv3 support
It autodetects TLS on incoming connections (I'm still wondering why everyone
doesn't have this), authenticates operators via TLS client certificate
fingerprints, and supports a number of IRCv3 capabilities.
Not supported: