5.9 KiB
uirc3
The unethical IRC trinity. This project consists of an experimental IRC client, daemon, and bot. It’s all you’re ever going to need for chatting, as long as you can make do with minimalist software.
All of them have these potentially interesting properties:
-
full IPv6 support
-
TLS support, including client certificates
-
lean on dependencies (with the exception of 'degesch')
-
compact and arguably easy to hack on
-
permissive license
degesch
The IRC client. 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.
This is the largest application within the project. It has most of the stuff you’d expect of an IRC client, such as being able to set up multiple servers, a powerful configuration system, integrated help, text formatting, CTCP queries, automatic splitting of overlong messages, autocomplete, logging to file, auto-away, command aliases and rudimentary support for Lua scripting.
kike
The IRC daemon. It is designed to be used as a regular user application rather 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 (why doesn’t everyone have this?), using secure defaults
-
IRCop authentication via TLS client certificates
-
epoll/kqueue support; this means that it should be able to handle quite a number of concurrent user connections
-
partial IRCv3 support
Not supported:
-
server linking (which also means no services); I consider existing protocols for this purpose ugly and tricky to implement correctly; I’ve also found no use for this feature yet
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online changes to configuration; the configuration system from degesch could be used to implement this feature if needed
-
limits of almost any kind, just connections and mode
+l
ZyklonB
The IRC bot. It builds upon the concept of my other VitaminA IRC bot. The main characteristic of these two bots is that they run plugins as coprocesses, which allows for enhanced reliability and programming language freedom.
While originally intended to be a simple rewrite of the original AWK bot in C, it fairly quickly became a playground, and it eventually got me into writing the rest of the package.
It survives crashes, server disconnects and timeouts, and also has native SOCKS support (even though socksify can add that easily to any program).
Packages
Regular releases are sporadic. git master should be stable enough. You can get a package with the latest development version from Archlinux’s AUR, or from openSUSE Build Service for the rest of mainstream distributions. Consult the list of repositories and their respective links at:
Building
Build dependencies: CMake, pkg-config, help2man, awk, sh, liberty (included)
Runtime dependencies: openssl
Additionally for degesch: curses, libffi, lua >= 5.3 (optional),
readline >= 6.0 or libedit >= 2013-07-12
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/pjanouch/uirc3.git $ mkdir uirc3/build $ cd uirc3/build $ cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug \ -DWANT_READLINE=ON -DWANT_LIBEDIT=OFF -DWANT_LUA=ON $ make
To install the application, you can do either the usual:
# make install
Or you can try telling CMake to make a package for you. For Debian it is:
$ cpack -G DEB # dpkg -i uirc3-*.deb
Usage
degesch has in-program configuration. Just run it and read the instructions.
For the rest you might want to generate a configuration file:
$ zyklonb --write-default-config $ kike --write-default-config
After making any necessary edits to the file (there are comments to aid you in doing that), simply run the appropriate program with no arguments:
$ zyklonb $ kike
ZyklonB stays running in the foreground, therefore I recommend launching it inside a Screen or tmux session.
kike, on the other hand, immediately forks into the background. Use the PID
file or something like killall
if you want to terminate it. You can run it
as a forking
type systemd user service.
Client Certificates
kike uses SHA1 fingerprints of TLS client certificates to authenticate users. To get the fingerprint from a certificate file in the required form, use:
$ openssl x509 -in public.pem -outform DER | sha1sum
Custom Key Bindings in degesch
The default and preferred frontend used in degesch is GNU Readline. This means that you can change your bindings by editing ~/.inputrc. For example:
# Preload with system-wide settings $include /etc/inputrc # Make M-left and M-right reorder buffers $if degesch "\e\e[C": move-buffer-right "\e\e[D": move-buffer-left $endif
Consult the source code and the GNU Readline manual for a list of available functions. Also refer to the latter for the exact syntax of this file. Beware that you can easily break the program if you’re not careful.
Contributing and Support
Use this project’s GitHub to report any bugs, request features, or submit pull requests. If you want to discuss this project, or maybe just hang out with the developer, feel free to join me at irc://irc.janouch.name, channel #dev.
Disclaimer
I am not an antisemitist, I’m just being an offensive asshole with the naming. And no, I’m not going to change the names.
License
uirc3 is written by Přemysl Janouch <p.janouch@gmail.com>.
You may use the software under the terms of the ISC license, the text of which is included within the package, or, at your option, you may relicense the work under the MIT or the Modified BSD License, as listed at the following site: