ngIRCd - Next Generation IRC Server (c)2001-2003 by Alexander Barton, alex@barton.de, http://www.barton.de/ ngIRCd is free software and published under the terms of the GNU General Public License. -- Protocol.txt -- I. Compatibility ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The ngIRCd implements the Internet Relay Chat (IRC) protocol version 2.10 as defined in RFC ("request for comment") 1459 and 2810-2813. These (and probably further relevant RFCs) are listed in doc/RFC.txt. Unfortunately, even the "original" ircd doesn't follow these specifications 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 not: 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". II. The IRC+ Protocol ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Starting with version 0.5.0, the ngIRCd extends the original IRC protocol 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). II.1 Register new server link Command: PASS Parameters: [] Used by: servers only (with these parameters) is the password for this new server link as defined in the server configuration which is sent to the peer or received from it. consists of two parts and is at least 4, at most 14 characters long: the first four bytes contain the IRC protocol version number, whereas the first two bytes represent the major version, the last two bytes the minor version (the string "0210" indicates version 2.10, e.g.). 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. 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 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: "[:]". is an ASCII representation of the clear-text server version number, indicates the supported IRC+ protocol extensions (and may be empty!). The optional parameter is used to propagate server options as defined in RFC 2813, section 4.1.1. The following are defined at the moment: - 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. II.2 Exchange channel-modes, topics, and persistent channels Command: CHANINFO Parameters: + [] Used by: servers only CHANINFO is used by servers to inform each other about a channel: its modes, channel key, user limits and its topic. is optional. If the channel already exists on the server receiving the CHANINFO command, it only adopts the (or the ) if there are no modes (or topic) already set. It there are already values set the server ignores the corresponding parameter. If the channel doesn't exists at all it will be created. The parameter must be ignored if a channel has no key (the parameter doesn't list the "k" channel mode). In this case should contain "*" because the parameter is required by the CHANINFO syntax and therefore can't be omitted. The parameter must be ignored when a channel has no user limit (the parameter doesn't list the "l" channel mode). In this case should be "0". -- $Id: Protocol.txt,v 1.9 2003/04/21 12:48:40 alex Exp $