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RELEASE.NOTES
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RELEASE.NOTES
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Release notes for ircu2.10.12
Last updated: 1 Sep 2005
Written by Michael Poole <[email protected]>
Based on earlier documents by Kev <[email protected]> and
Braden <[email protected]>.
This document briefly describes changes in ircu2.10.12 relative to
ircu2.10.11. ircu2.10.12 is only compatible with servers that
implement the P10 protocol. It has been tested to link against
ircu2.10.11, but some features (notably IPv6 support and oplevels) are
not supported by ircu2.10.11.
Semantic Changes (TAKE NOTE):
Channel keys and passwords (see the "oplevels" enhancement below)
listed in a JOIN are now only checked against the corresponding
channel. In ircu2.10.11, "JOIN #a,#b key" would attempt to use "key"
as the key for both #a and #b. ircu2.10.12 will only attempt to use
it as the key for #a. ircu2.10.12's behavior matches that documented
in RFC 1459.
Enhancements:
The configuration file format has changed to one that is easier to
read. It is based on the configuration parser found in ircd-hybrid.
As usual, an example configuration file can be found in the doc
subdirectory.
ircu now supports IPv6 clients. If your operating system provides
IPv6 socket support, ircu can accept connections on IPv6 addresses.
Even if your operating system does not support IPv6 sockets, you can
link (using IPv4) to a server that has IPv6 clients, and ircu will
treat the IPv6 clients correctly.
The DNS resolver has been replaced with a streamlined version (also
from ircd-hybrid) that avoids some of the complications from using
the full libresolv or adns libraries.
The server can query an IAUTH external authorization server. The
protocol is described in doc/readme.iauth. This allows an external
program to accept or reject any client that connects to the server
and allows that external program to assign an account stamp to the
incoming user.
A new feature called "oplevels" has been added. It uses new channel
keys (+A for the administrator, +U for users) to grant chanop status
when you join using those keys. Part of this channel protection is
that you cannot be deopped in channel by someone who you opped.
A new channel mode, +D, has been added for auditorium-style channels.
These are channels where most users listen but do not speak or receive
ops or voice. The effect of +D is that the server waits to send the
JOIN message for new users until the user gets ops or voice or sends a
message to the channel. A list of join-delayed users in a channel may
be retrieved by using /NAMES -d #channel. The response to /NAMES -d
uses the same format as numeric 353, but uses numeric 355 instead. If
an op removes +D while there are still join-delayed users, the server
automatically sets mode +d, and removes +d when the last user's join
is shown. It is not possible to set channel mode +d manually; its
purpose is to warn channel users that there are "hidden" users in the
channel.
More than one hashing mechanism is now supported for oper passwords,
and a new tool (ircd/umkpasswd) is provided to generate them.
Commands that send messages to specified services may be defined in
the configuration file by using Pseudo blocks. This lets users use
commands like /X or /CHANSERV from their client, without tying the
admin to a particular arrangement or naming of services.
The /stats command accepts string identifiers in addition to
single-character identifiers. For example, "/stats access" shows the
same data as "/stats i". Supported names are shown by /stats. New
/stats options are: /stats a (nameservers), to list DNS nameservers in
use; /stats L (modules), to list loaded modules; and /stats R
(mappings), to list privmsg helper commands defined by Pseudo blocks.
By default, all of these are hidden from normal users.
Client blocks (previously I: lines), Operator blocks (previously O:
and o: lines), channel bans and silences may use CIDR notation instead
of simple wildcards. You may also have silence exceptions by putting
'~' before the mask; for example, if you wish to silence everyone
except X, you could use SILENCE *!*@*,[email protected].
The server will no longer kick "net riders" in keyed (+k) channels if
both sides of the net join have the same key.
IP masks (as used in bans, G-lines, etc) are now parsed in a more
forgiving manner. 127.0.0.0/8, 127.* and 127/8 are all accepted and
mean the same thing. Ambiguous expressions like 127/8 are interpreted
as IPv4 masks; to interpret it as an IPv6 mask, use 127:/8.
Configuration Changes:
As mentioned above, the configuration file format has changed
radically. Please consult doc/example.conf for details on the
new format. Some prominent changes follow.
The old contents of H: lines have been merged into the Connect block
that describes the peer server(s) that should be allowed to hub.
Two default virtual host addresses may be specified, one for IPv4
sockets and one for IPv6 sockets.
Nickname jupes have their own blocks, and do not share structure with
UWorld server declarations.
Operator connection classes and individual operator blocks may be
assigned privileges, rather than having them controlled globally.
Because of this, the feature settings that controlled the privileges
globally have been removed.
The maximum number of clients allowed per IP may be set in a Client
block (the equivalent of C: lines).
New feature settings (see doc/readme.features for explanations):
ANNOUNCE_INVITES, HIS_STATS_L, HIS_STATS_a, HIS_STATS_R,
LOCAL_CHANNELS, TOPIC_BURST.
Deleted features, since they had no effect even in 2.10.11: AUTOHIDE,
HIS_DESYNCS, TIMESEC.
Deleted features since they are now controlled by other configuration
entries: VIRTUAL_HOST, oper and locop privilege features.
Deleted feature since it no longer applies: HIS_STATS_h.
Compile Time Options:
A listing of supported compile-time options may be seen by running
"./configure --help". The defaults should be sane. In particular,
you should NOT compile with --enable-debug or with --disable-symbols
on a production network.
Otherwise Undocumented Features:
Despite our preferences to keep these undocumented, they are
occasionally useful, and are described here for users who may
need them.
To enable these, you need to add them to CFLAGS prior to running
./configure, usually as in: CFLAGS="-O2 -D<option>" ./configure
-DNICKLEN=20
This allows you change the maximum nick length from 15 to 20 (or
whatever number you use at the end). It MUST be the same on all
servers on your network, or bad things will happen. You should also
use the NICKLEN feature in ircd.conf.
-DNOTHROTTLE
This disables the throttling code. This is used for debugging
*only*. It lets you connect up to 255 clients from one host with no
time considerations. If this is enabled on a production server Kev will
personally drive your server into the ground. You have been warned.
Operating System and Kernel Requirements:
If you plan allowing more than 1000 clients on your server, you may
need to adjust your kernel resource limits for networking and
I/O. There are two things you will need to pay particular attention
to, the number of file descriptors available and the number of buffers
the kernel has available to read and write data to the file
descriptors.
To calculate kernel buffer requirements a good place to start is to
multiply the expected number connections expected on the machine by
the amount of data we buffer for each connection. Doubling the result
of the above calculation and dividing it by the size of the buffers
the kernel uses for I/O should give you a starting place.
The server uses 2K kernel buffers for clients, and 64K kernel buffers
for servers (actual use may be somewhat higher).
c_count - number of clients expected
c_q - number of bytes buffered for each client
s_count - number of servers expected
s_q - number of bytes buffered for each server
buffer count = (2 * (c_count * c_q + s_count * s_q)) / kernel buffer size
If the client count is 2000 and the server count is 1 (normal leaf)
and your server uses 2K as an I/O buffer size:
You need (2 * (2000 * 2048 + 1 * 65536)) / 2048 or a minimum of 4064
buffers available, if the kernel uses 512 byte buffers you will need a
minimum of 16256 kernel buffers.
These settings may be a bit light for net-breaks under full client
load you will need to experiment a bit to find the right settings for
your server.
FreeBSD --WildThang
You may want to increase your kernel resources if you want to put a
lot of clients on your machine here are a few values to start with:
CHILD_MAX=4096
OPEN_MAX=4096
FD_SETSIZE=4096
NMBCLUSTERS=8096
If you have trouble connecting *out* from your machine try:
sysctl -w net.inet.ip.portrange.last=10000
Solaris 2.6 --Tar
Increase the default hard limit for file descriptors in /etc/system:
set rlim_fd_max = 4096
The server will raise the soft limit to the hard limit.
Linux 2.2 -- [Tri]/Isomer
The kernel has a kernel destination cache size of 4096. If the kernel
sees more than 4096 IP's in 60s it warns 'dst cache overflow'. This
limit can be changed by modifying /proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/max_size.
A patch to select is also recommended if you have regular poll/select
errors.