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ngIRCd IRC server.
879d550408
The daemon only enlarged its connection pool when accepting new client connections, not when establishing new outgoing server links. Thanks to Lukas Braun (k00mi) for reporting this! In addition this patch streamlines the connection pool allocation, so that there is only one place in the code allocating the pool: the now updated Socket2Index() function. The name doesn't quite fit, but this existing and today quite useless function (because the mapping from socket number to connection index is 1:1 today) already became called in almost all relevant code paths, so I decided to reuse it to keep the patch small ...probably we want to fix the naming in a second patch? Closes #231. |
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README |
ngIRCd - Next Generation IRC Server http://ngircd.barton.de/ (c)2001-2017 Alexander Barton and Contributors. ngIRCd is free software and published under the terms of the GNU General Public License. -- README -- I. Introduction ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ngIRCd is a free, portable and lightweight Internet Relay Chat server for small or private networks, developed under the GNU General Public License (GPL; please see the file COPYING for details). It is simple to configure, can cope with dynamic IP addresses, and supports IPv6 as well as SSL. It is written from scratch and not based on the original IRCd. The name ngIRCd means next generation IRC daemon, which is a little bit exaggerated: lightweight Internet Relay Chat server most probably would be a better name :-) Please see the INSTALL document for installation and upgrade information! II. Status ~~~~~~~~~~~ ngIRCd should be quite feature complete and stable to be used as daemon in real world IRC networks. It is not the goal of ngIRCd to implement all the nasty behaviors of the original ircd, but to implement most of the useful commands and semantics specified by the RFCs that are used by existing clients. III. Features (or: why use ngIRCd?) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - Well arranged (lean) configuration file. - Simple to build, install, configure, and maintain. - Supports IPv6 and SSL. - Can use PAM for user authentication. - Lots of popular user and channel modes are implemented. - Supports "cloaking" of users. - No problems with servers that have dynamic IP addresses. - Freely available, modern, portable and tidy C source. - Wide field of supported platforms, including AIX, A/UX, FreeBSD, HP-UX, IRIX, Linux, Mac OS X, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris, and Windows with Cygwin. - ngIRCd is being actively developed since 2001. IV. Documentation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ More documentation can be found in the "doc/" directory and the homepage of ngIRCd: <http://ngircd.barton.de/>. V. Download ~~~~~~~~~~~ The homepage of the ngIRCd is <http://ngircd.barton.de/>; you will find the newest information about the ngIRCd and the most recent ("stable") releases there. Visit our source code repository at GitHub if you are interested in the latest development version: <https://github.com/ngircd/ngircd>. VI. Problems, Bugs, Patches ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please don't hesitate to contact us if you encounter problems: - On IRC: <irc://irc.barton.de/ngircd> - Via the mailing list: <ngircd-ml@ngircd.barton.de> See <http://ngircd.barton.de/support.php> for details. If you find bugs in ngIRCd (which will be there most probably ...), please report them to our issue tracker at GitHub: - Bug tracker: <https://github.com/ngircd/ngircd/issues> - Patches, "pull requests": <https://github.com/ngircd/ngircd/pulls> There you can read about known bugs and limitations, too.