UnrealIRCd 3.4-beta1 Release Notes =================================== This is the first 'beta' version of UnrealIRCd 3.4. We plan to have a 'stable' UnrealIRCd 3.4 release by Q4 2015. IMPORTANT REMARKS: * The ending of the 'alpha' stage means that most features we want are in 3.4 now. During 'beta' stage we will work towards getting a stable IRC server. * Because this is the very first beta version, the process of 'stabilizing' the IRCd has only just begun. The IRCd can have crash or hang issues. * Linking with 3.2.x servers is supported but highly untested. Therefore: * You should never run 3.4-beta1 as a production server * You should not link 3.4-beta1 with a production 3.2.x network (yet) Please do: * Install 3.4-beta1 to play around, show to your friends, have fun with the latest features and improvements, test things. * Report any problems, bugs, issues and other feedback on https://bugs.unrealircd.org/ so we can improve 3.4.x! Finally: * If you are moving from 3.2.x then be sure to read 'CONFIGURATION CHANGES' which explains the new directory structure and how to make UnrealIRCd convert your existing 3.2.x configuration file to the 3.4.x format. ==[ DOCUMENTATION ]== UnrealIRCd 3.4.x documentation is now located in a wiki online at: * https://www.unrealircd.org/docs/ The old unreal32docs.*html files have been removed. ==[ CONFIGURATION CHANGES ]== UnrealIRCd 3.4 uses a new directory structure. *NIX: If you are not on Windows then this means you must now choose a target directory to install UnrealIRCd to. ./Config will ask this and it's ~/unrealircd by default (eg: /home/nerd/unrealircd). You also need to run 'make install' after 'make' now. After compiling, you should leave your Unreal3.4-beta1 directory and change to ~/unrealircd as everything takes place there. For example to start UnrealIRCd you run './unrealircd start' (again, from the /home/xxxx/unrealircd directory). The new directory structure is as follows (both on Windows and *NIX): conf/ contains all configuration files logs/ for log files modules/ all modules (.so files on *NIX, .dll files on Windows) tmp/ temporary files data/ persistent data such as ircd.tune cache/ cached remote includes It is possible to use your existing 3.2.x configuration file, but it needs to be 'upgraded' to the new 3.4.x syntax. UnrealIRCd can do this for you. Simply place your unrealircd.conf (and any other .conf's you use) in the conf/ directory and then: * On *NIX run './unrealircd upgrade-conf' (from /home/xxxx/unrealircd) * On Windows simply try to boot and watch all the errors, click OK and you will be asked if UnrealIRCd should upgrade your configuration file. On either OS, after running the step from above, simply start UnrealIRCd again and it should boot up fine with your converted configuration file(s). Note: UnrealIRCd can only convert *working* 3.2.x configuration files! If your 3.2.x configuration contains mistakes or errors then the upgrade process will likely fail or the resulting config file will fail to load. You may still be interested in the configuration changes, they are listed on: https://www.unrealircd.org/docs/Upgrading_from_3.2.x ==[ GENERAL INFORMATION ]== * Below you will see a summary of all changes. Changes may be tagged when a change was made in a specific version, e.g. "(A3)" means 3.4-alpha3 and "(B1)" means 3.4-beta1. For a complete list of changes (600+) use 'git log' or have a look at: https://github.com/unrealircd/unrealircd/commits/unreal34 ==[ NEW ]== * We moved a lot of functionality, including most channel modes, user modes and all extended bans into 145 separate modules. This makes it... A) possible to fully customize what exact functionality you want to load. You could even strip down UnrealIRCd to get something close to the basic RFC1459 features from the 1990s. (No idea why you would want that, but it's possible) B) easier for coders to see all source code related to a specific feature C) possible to fix bugs and just reload rather than restart the IRCd. Have a look at modules.default.conf which contains the "default" set of modules that you can load if you just want to load all functionality. If you want to customize the list of modules to load then simply make a copy of that file, give it a different name, and include that one instead. Since the file is fully documented, you can just comment out or delete the loadmodule lines of things you don't want to load. * Oper permissions have changed completely: (A4+) * All previous oper levels/ranks no longer exist (Netadmin, Admin, ..) * oper::flags has been removed. Instead you must specify an operclass in oper::operclass (for example, 'operclass netadmin'). * In operclass block(s) you define the privileges. You can now control exactly what an IRCOp can and cannot do. Have a look at operclass.default.conf which ships with UnrealIRCd, it contains a number of default operclass blocks suitable for the most common situations. See also the operclass block documentation: https://www.unrealircd.org/docs/Operclass_block * If you ask UnrealIRCd to convert your 3.2.x configuration file then it will try to select a suitable operclass for the oper. This will not always 100% match your current oper block rights, though. * Channel Mode +A (Admin Only) has been removed. You can use the new extended ban ~O:. This allows you to, for example, create an operclass 'netadmin' only channel: /MODE #chan +iI ~O:netadmin* * set::hosts has been removed, use oper::vhost instead. * Since oper levels have been removed you no longer see things like "OperX is a Network Administrator" in /WHOIS by default. If you want that, then you can set oper::swhois to "is a Network Administrator" (or any other text). * Entirely rewritten I/O and event loop. This allows the IRCd to scale more easily to tens of thousands of clients by using kernel-evented I/O mechanisms such as epoll and kqueue. * Memory pooling has been added to improve memory allocation efficiency and performance. * On-connect DNSBL/RBL checking via the new blacklist block. (B1) * The local nickname length can be modified without recompiling the IRCd * Channel Mode +d: This will hide joins/parts for users who don't say anything in a channel. Whenever a user speaks for the first time they will appear to join. Chanops will still see everyone joining normally as if there was no +d set. * If you connect with SSL/TLS with a client certificate then your SSL Fingerprint (SHA256 hash) can be seen by yourself and others through /WHOIS. The fingerprint is also shared with all servers on the network. * ExtBan ~S: for ban exceptions / invex. This can be used like +iI ~S:000000000etc. * bcrypt has been added as a password hashing algorithm and is now the preferred algorithm (A3) * './unreal mkpasswd' will now prompt you for the password to hash (A3) * Protection against SSL renegotiation attacks (A3) * When you link two servers the current timestamp is exchanged. If the time differs more than 60 seconds then servers won't link and it will show a message that you should fix your clock(s). This requires version 3.4-alpha3 (or later) on both ends of the link (A3) * Configuration file converter that will upgrade your 3.2.x conf to 3.4.x. On *NIX run './unreal upgrade-conf'. On Windows simply try to boot and after the config errors screen UnrealIRCd offers the conversion. (A3) * The IRCd can now better handle unknown channel modes which expect a parameter. This can be useful in a scenario where you are slowly upgrading all your servers. * If you want to unset a vhost but keep cloaked then use /MODE yournick -t ==[ CHANGED ]== * Numerics have been removed. Instead we now use SIDs (Server ID's) and UIDs (User ID's). SIDs work very similar to server numerics and UIDs help us to fix a number of lag-related race conditions / bugs. * The module commands.so / commands.dll has been removed. All commands (those that are modular) are now in their own module. * Self-signed certificates are now generated using 4096 bits, a SHA256 hash and validity of 10 years. (A2) * Building with SSL (OpenSSL) is now mandatory (A2) * The link { } block has been restructured, see https://www.unrealircd.org/docs/Upgrading_from_3.2.x#Link_block (A3) * Better yet, check out our secure server linking tutorial: https://www.unrealircd.org/docs/Tutorial:_Linking_servers * If you have no set::throttle block you now get a default of 3:60 (A3) * password entries in the conf no longer require specifying an auth-type like password "..." { md5; };. UnrealIRCd will now auto-detect. (A3) * You will now see a warning when you link to a non-SSL server. (A3) * Previously we used POSIX Regular expressions in spamfilters and at some other places. We have now moved to PCRE Regular expressions. They look very similar, but PCRE is a lot faster. For backwards-compatibility we still compile with both regex engines. (A3) * Spamfilter command syntax has been changed, it now has an extra option to indicate the matching method: /SPAMFILTER [add|del|remove|+|-] [method] [type] .... Where 'method' can be one of: * -regex: this is the new fast PCRE2 regex engine * -simple: supports just strings and ? and * wildcards (super fast) * -posix: the old regex engine for compatibility with 3.2.x. (A3) * If you have both 3.2.x and 3.4.x servers on your network then the 3.4.x server will only send spamfilters of type 'posix' to the 3.2.x servers because 3.2.x servers don't support the other two types. So in a mixed network you probably want to keep using 'posix' for a while until all your UnrealIRCd servers are on 3.4.x. (A3) * set::oper-only-stats now defaults to "*" * oper::from::userhost and vhost::from::userhost are now called oper::mask and vhost::mask. The usermask@ part is now optional and it supports two syntaxes. For one entry you can use: mask 1.2.3.*; For multiple entries the syntax is: mask { 192.168.*; 10.*; }; * Because having both allow::ip and allow::hostname in the same allow block was highly confusing (it was an OR-match) you must now choose between either allow::ip OR allow::hostname. (A3) * cgiirc block is renamed to webirc and the syntax has changed (A4) * set::pingpong-warning is removed, warning always off now (A4) * More helpful configuration file parse error messages (A4) * You can use '/OPER username' without password if you use SSL certificate (fingerprint) authentication. The same is true for '/VHOST username'. (A4) * You must now always use 'make install' on *NIX (A4) * Changed (default) directory structure entirely, see the section titled 'CONFIGURATION CHANGES' about 100 lines up. (A4) * badword quit { } is removed, we use badword channel for it. (A4) * badwords.*.conf is now just one badwords.conf * To load all default modules you now include modules.default.conf. This file was called modules.conf in earlier alpha's. The file has been split up in sections and a lot of comments have been added to aid the user in deciding whether to load or not to load each module. (A4) * Snomask +s is now (always) IRCOp-only. (A4) * Previously there was little logic behind what modes halfops could set. Now the idea is as follows: halfops should be able to help out in case of a flood but not be able to change any 'policy decission modes' such as +G, +S, +c, +s. Due to this change halfops can now set modes +beiklmntIMKNCR (was: +beikmntI). (A4) * If no link::hub or link::leaf is specified then assume hub "*". (B1) * SWHOIS (Special whois title) has been extended in a number of ways: * We now "track" who or what set an swhois. This allows us to remove the swhois received via oper/vhost on de-oper/de-vhost. * You can now have multiple swhois lines * Multiple oper::swhois and vhost::swhois items are supported. (B1) ==[ MODULE CODERS / DEVELOPERS ]== * A lot of technical documentation for module coders has been added at https://www.unrealircd.org/docs/ describing things like how to write a module from scratch, the User & Channel Mode System, Commands, Command Overrides, Hooks, attaching custom-data to users/channels, and more. (A2+) * For commands: do not read from parv[0] anymore, doing so will lead to a crash. Use sptr->name instead. This change is necessary as the "name" in parv[0] could possibly point to a UID/SID rather than a nick name. Thus, if you would send parv[0] to a non-UID or non-SID capable server this would lead to serious issues (not found errors). * Added MOD_OPT_PERM_RELOADABLE which permits reloading (eg: upgrades) but disallows unloading of a module (A3) * There have been *a lot* of source code cleanups (ALL) * We now use the information from PROTOCTL CHANMODES= for parameter skipping if the channel mode is unknown. Also, when channel modes are loaded or unloaded we re-broadcast PROTOCTL CHANMODES=. (B1) ==[ MAJOR BUGS FIXED ]== * Crash bug on-boot in alpha1 (A2) * IRCOp commands such as /GLINE were not always working (A2) * link::outgoing::options::autoconnect did not work (A4) * This is still an alpha release, so likely contains major issues * If the IRCd could not bind to any ports it started anyway (A4) * alpha3 did not compile on x86 (32 bit) systems (A4) ==[ MINOR BUGS FIXED ]== * Errors in example configuration files (A2) * Some fixes in delayjoin (Channel mode +d) (A2) * Deal with services who allow you to log in by account name (A3) * Detect "IRCd not running" situations better (A4) * './unrealircd restart' will now always try to start UnrealIRCd, so also if it wasn't running previously. (A4) * alpha4's upgrade-conf could get confused by set::host block (B1) * ExtBan ~a (account) did not work with +I (B1) * On Windows we didn't create the data/ directory resulting in a "Unable to write tunefile" error in alpha4. (B1) * A number of minor (<1K total) memory leaks on /REHASH. (B1) ==[ REMOVED / DROPPED ]== * Numeric server IDs, see above. (A1) * PROTOCTL TOKEN and SJB64 are no longer implemented. (A1) * Ziplinks have been removed. (A1) * WebTV support. (A3) * Channel Mode +j was removed and replaced by the configuration setting set::anti-flood::join-flood (default: 3 per 90 seconds). (B1) * /CHATOPS: use /GLOBOPS instead which does the same /ADCHAT & /NACHAT: gone as we don't have such oper levels anymore Your opers should actually be in an #opers channel. If you also want special classes of oper channels like #admins then use +iI ~O:*admin* * User modes: * +N (Network Administrator): see 'Oper permissions' under NEW as for why * +a (Services Administrator): same * +A (Server Administrator: same * +C (Co Administrator): same * +O (Local IRC Operator): same * +h (HelpOp): all this did was add a line "is available for help" in WHOIS. You can use a vhost block with vhost::swhois as a replacement or for opers just add an oper::swhois item. * +g (failops): we already have snomasks and the +o usermode for this * +v (receive infected DCC SEND rejection notices): moved to snomask +D