home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-05-14 | 81.9 KB | 2,173 lines |
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A short IRC primer
- ====================
-
- Written by:
- ~~~~~~~~~~
- Nicolas Pioch, (Nap on IRC)
- < Nicolas.Pioch@grasp.insa-lyon.fr >
-
- Text conversion by:
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Owe Rasmussen, (Sorg on IRC)
- < d1rasmus@dtek.chalmers.se >
-
- Edition 1.1b, February 28, 1993.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Abstract
- ~~~~~~~~
-
- Have you ever wanted to talk with other computer users in other parts
- of the world? Well guess what... You can! The program is called IRC,
- (Internet Relay Chat), and it is networked much over North America, Asia
- Europe, and Oceania. This program is a substitution for 'talk', and many
- other multiple talk programs you might have read about. When you are
- talking on IRC, everything you type will instantly be transmitted around
- the world to other users that might be watching their terminals at the
- time, they can then type something and respond to your messages, and vice
- versa. I should warn you that the program can be very addictive once you
- begin to make friends and contacts on IRC, especially when you learn how
- to discuss in 14 languages...
-
- Topics of discussion on IRC are varied, just like the topics of Usenet
- newsgroups are varied. Technical and political discussions are popular,
- especially when world events are in progress. IRC is also a way to
- expand your horizons, as people from many countries and cultures are on,
- 24 hours a day. Most conversations are in English, but there are always
- channels in German, Japanese, French, Finnish, and occasionally other
- languages.
-
- IRC gained international fame during the late Persian Gulf War, when
- updates from around the world came across the wire, and most people on
- IRC gathered on a single channel to hear these reports.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
- ~~~~~~~~~~
-
- 1. Getting started
-
- 1.1 Clients and Servers
- 1.2 How to Behave on IRC
- 1.3 Privacy on IRC
- 1.4 First Steps
- 1.5 Screen and Keyboard activity
-
-
- 2. Let's go!
-
- 2.1 General Commands
- 2.2 Communication and Private Conversations
- 2.3 Channels and Public Conversations
- 2.4 Channel and User Modes
- 2.5 Client to Client Protocol
- 2.6 Network Related Commands
- 2.7 Quick Reference Panel
- 2.8 Further into ircII Wizardry
- 2.9 Sample .ircrc
- 2.10 Writing Automatons
-
-
- 3. Frequently Asked Questions
-
- 3.1 How do I set up an IRC client?
- 3.2 Which server do I connect to?
- 3.3 What are good channels to try while using IRC?
- 3.4 How do I get nifty effects with ircII?
- 3.5 What if someone tells me to type something cryptic?
- 3.6 I get strange characters on my screen, what are they?
- 3.7 What about NickServ?
- 3.8 I'm being flooded and harassed by a jerk. Help!
- 3.9 How do I get rid of a ghosted IRC session?
- 3.10 About KILL usage.
- 3.11 Where can I find more?
-
-
- 4. Administrativia
-
- 4.1 Revision history
- 4.2 Release sites for the IRCprimer
- 4.3 Copyright (C) 1993 Nicolas PIOCH
- 4.4 Credits
-
-
-
- List of Tables
- --------------
-
- Table 1: Editing keys
- Table 2: Editing commands
- Table 3: Simple screen activity
- Table 4: General commands
- Table 5: Private conversation commands
- Table 6: Channel commands
- Table 7: Mode commands
- Table 8: Channel modes
- Table 9: User modes
- Table 10: Client to client commands
- Table 11: Network related commands
- Table 12: Setting environment tables
- Table 13: Environment variables
- Table 14: Advanced commands
- Table 15: FTP sites with IRC clients
- Table 16: Open telnet IRC clients
- Table 17: Open IRC servers
- Table 18: Highlighting ircII output
- Table 19: Nordic countries character translations
- Table 20: IRC related mailing lists
- Table 21: IRCprimer release sites
-
-
-
- 1. GETTING STARTED
- ==================
-
- 1.1 Clients and Servers
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- IRC (original code was written by Jarkko Oikarinen) is a multi-user,
- multi-channel chatting network. It allows people all over the internet
- to talk to one another in real-time. It is a functional replacement and
- improvement to 'talk'; 'talk' is an old, primitive, atrocious, minimalist
- sort of keyboard/screen conversation tool, using a grotesque, machine-
- dependent protocol (blah!). IRC does everything 'talk' does, but with
- better protocol, allowing more than 2 users to talk at once, with access
- across the aggregate Internet, and providing a whole raft of other useful
- features.
-
- There are two ways to enter IRC from a Unix system. If you are using
- the emacs (editor from Richard Stallman and the Free Software
- Foundation) lisp client, you just have to type "M-x irc", (if this
- doesn't work you may need to load the client into your emacs session).
- If you are using the C client, (easier for beginners), then you usually
- type "irc". Non-Unix boxes have special clients, each of which has to be
- configured using a special procedure. Check the manual or help screen for
- more information.
-
- If you wish to be known by a nickname which is not your login name,
- type "irc nickname" instead. Each IRC user, ("client"), chooses a
- nickname. All communication with another user is either by nickname or
- by the channel that they or you are on (more information about channels
- later on).
-
- The most important thing to remember about IRC is that you have to be
- willing to explore and learn to use it... Take you time, try not to get
- flustered, enjoy yourself, and you will soon be making new friends all
- over the world!
-
- IRC is based on a client-server model. Clients are programs that
- connect to a server, a server is a program that transports data,
- (messages), from a user client to another. There are clients running on
- many different systems, (Unix, emacs, VMS, MSDOS, VM...), that allow you
- to connect to an IRC server. The client which will be spoken of here is
- the most widespread: ircII, (originally designed by Michael Sandrof).
- Other clients are similar, and often accept ircII commands.
-
-
-
-
- 1.2 How to behave on IRC
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- The most widely understood and spoken language on IRC is English.
- However, as IRC is used in many different countries, English is by no
- means the only language. If you want to speak some other language than
- English, (for example with your friends), go to a separate channel and
- set the topic to indicate that. On the other hand, you should check the
- topic before you move to a channel to see if there are any restrictions
- about language. On a non-restricted channel, please speak a language
- everybody can understand. If you want to do otherwise,change channels and
- set the topic accordingly.
-
- It's not necessary to greet everybody on a channel personally.
- Usually one "Hello!" or equivalent is enough. And don't expect everybody
- to greet you back... On a channel with 20 people that would mean one
- screenful of hellos. It's sensible not to greet, in order not to be rude
- to the rest of the channel. If you must say hello to somebody you know,
- do it with a private message. The same applies to goodbyes.
-
- Also note that using your client facilities, (ircII "ON" command for
- instance), to automatically say hello or goodbye to people is extremely
- poor etiquette. Nobody wants to receive autogreets. They are not only
- obviously automatic, but even if you think you are polite you are
- actually sounding insincere and also interfering with the personal
- environment of the recipient when using autogreets. If somebody wants to
- be autogreeted on joining a channel, he will autogreet himself.
-
- Remember, people on IRC form their opinions about you only by your
- actions, writings and comments, so think before you type. If you use
- offensive words, you'll be frowned upon. Do not "dump" to a channel or
- user, (send large amounts of unwanted information). This is likely to
- get you kicked off the channel or killed off from IRC. Dumping causes
- network "burps", connections going down because servers cannot handle the
- large amount of traffic anymore. Other prohibited actions include:
-
- * Harassing another user. Harassment is defined as behavior
- towards another user with the purpose of annoying them.
-
- * Annoying a channel with constant beeping.
-
- * Any behavior reducing the functionality of IRC.
-
-
-
-
-
- 1.3 Privacy on IRC
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- You should always keep in mind that messages you send to someone over
- IRC are passed along all the servers between you and and the person you
- are writing to. When you're sending a letter to someone, any postman on
- the way could open it and read its contents...
-
- Well, it's the same on the network. Any IRC-Admin could compile its
- server in "debug" mode and log whatever messages are transmitted through
- his node, (it has already been done), so a good thumb rule is not to
- trust the servers.
-
- +-------------------------------------------+
- | IRC IS NOT A SECURE WAY OF COMMUNICATION! |
- +-------------------------------------------+
-
- How to establish direct communications between clients will be
- explained later, (see DCC CHAT in section 2.5). This should be used when
- you wouldn't want anybody else on IRC to intercept your private messages.
-
-
-
-
-
- 1.4 First Steps
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Note: ircII, the client most people are using, has most of this
- information online. If you are stuck, type "/HELP" and hit <return>. To
- escape from HELP mode, keep pressing <return> until your edit line, (the
- line at the bottom of the screen), is empty. Most of the information in
- this file can be found typing these commands: "/HELP INTRO" or "/HELP
- NEWUSER".
-
- +------------------------------------------------+
- | All ircII commands begin with a "/" character. |
- +------------------------------------------------+
-
- The slash is the default command character. Commands are not case
- sensitive, and can be abbreviated to their first letters: "/SI" and
- "/sign <text>" stand for /SIGNOFF and will both end your IRC session,
- (more in section 2.1).
-
- Anything that does not begin with "/" is assumed to be a message to
- someone and will be sent to your current channel, or to a person you are
- QUERYing, (the QUERY command will be detailed later on, maybe even
- section 2.2).
-
- If you are not sure about the spelling of an ircII command, type the
- prefix of that command, and press the ESCape key twice; ircII will give
- you a listing of commands and aliases that start with that prefix. Don't
- forget the "/" in front of the command though.
-
- /W <ESC><ESC>
- *** Commands:
- *** WAIT WALL WALLOPS WHICH
- *** WHILE WHO WHOIS WHOWAS
- *** WINDOW
- *** Aliases:
- *** W
-
- This is an example. Your screen may show more aliases, and less
- commands than shown here, or less aliases and more commands - in other
- words "your mileage may vary"...
-
-
-
-
- 1.5 Screen and Keyboard activity
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- IRC is a full-screen utility. It takes over the screen, with the bulk
- of activity happening in the top (N-2) lines, a status line, (vaguely
- emacs-like), on the next to last line, and your input being entered on
- the last line. When typing commands at ircII, you have a minimalist
- line-editing facility in an emacs style.
-
-
- Table 1: Editing keys
- ----------------------
- Key Effects
- ~~~ ~~~~~~~
- ^P recalls previous command line
- ^N recalls next command line
- ^F moves forward one character
- ^B moves backward one character
- ^A moves the cursor to the beginning of the line
- ^E moves the cursor to the end of the line
- ^D deletes the character under the cursor
- ^K kills from the cursor to the end
- ^Y reinserts the last stretch of killed text
- ^U clears the whole line
- ^L redraws the screen
-
-
- Table 2: Editing commands
- --------------------------
- Keyword Action
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
- ! recalls previous commands for re-editing
- HISTORY displays the command history
- LASTLOG lists the most recent messages
- CLEAR puts some white space on your screen
-
-
- The ! command is used to recall previous commands in your command
- history for re-execution. The ! command is unique in that when it is
- used, it leaves the matching history entry in the input line for
- re-editing. You can specify a history entry either by its number in the
- history list, or by a match with a given wildcard expression. For
- instance, "/!10" will put entry 10 in the history list into the input
- line. "/!/MSG" will search the history for a line beginning with a /MSG,
- (a "*" is implied at the end).
-
- /![<history number>|<history match>]
- Recalls previous commands for re-editing.
-
- The command history can be dumped using:
-
- /HISTORY [<number>]
- Displays the command history on the screen. You can specify the
- number of history entries you wish to view as well.
-
-
-
- Almost everything happens in the upper bulk of the screen. This
- includes both messages from other users, as well as the output of the
- control commands. Normal messages from other users appear with the
- originating nickname in <angle brackets>. Private messages arrive with
- the originating nickname in *asterisks*. Messages you send to everyone
- appear with a preceding "> " whereas messages you send privately to
- another user appear with "-> *nickname*". Other output (invitations
- from other users to join channels, and so forth), appears interspersed
- with other activity on the screen.
-
-
- Table 3: Simple screen activity
- --------------------------------
-
- What is displayed What you typed Sender Recipients
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~
- > Morning people Morning, people You Channel
- <some1else> hello some1else Channel
- -> *some1else* hi! /msg some1else hi! You some1else (only)
- *some1else* wassup? some1else You (only)
-
-
-
- Last ircII outputs can be recalled with:
-
- /LASTLOG [<number of entries>|<text> [<from entry>]]
- Displays the contents of the lastlog. This is a list of the most
- recent messages that have appeared on the screen, useful if you
- inadvertantly miss messages. If no arguments are given, the entire
- lastlog is displayed. If the first argument is a number, it determines
- how many log entries to show. Otherwise it is searched for in every
- lastlog entry. The second argument determines how many lines back to
- start display from.
-
- Example:
-
- /LASTLOG
- > Public message I send to all in the channel
- <some1else> Public message from some1else
- *some1else* Private message sent to me by some1else
- -> *some1else* Private message I send to some1else
-
- Finally, if your screen gets garbage from a 'talk', 'write', 'wall' or
- any other form of primitive communication (smirk), hit ^L to redraw it,
- or CLEAR it.
-
- /CLEAR
- Clears the screen.
-
-
-
-
-
- 2. LET'S GO!
- ============
-
- 2.1 General Commands
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Table 4: General commands
- --------------------------
- Keyword Action
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
- NICK changes your nickname
- QUIT exits your IRC session, (same as BYE, SIGNOFF and EXIT)
- HELP prints help on the given command
- WHOIS displays information about someone
- WHOWAS displays information about someone who just left
- AWAY leaves a message saying you're not paying attention
-
-
-
- /NICK [<nickname>]
- Changes your nickname to whatever you like.
-
- Everyone who wants to talk to you sees this name - also, at the
- moment, nicknames are limited to 9 characters max. Your nickname will be
- the same as your login name by default. You can also set an environment
- variable, IRCNICK, the value of which will be used instead. Nickname
- clashes are not allowed; this is enforced by the servers. If your
- intended nickname clashes with someone else's as you enter IRC, you will
- not be able to enter until you change it to something else.
-
- /NICK Nappy
- *** Nap is now known as Nappy
-
-
-
- /QUIT [<reason>]
- Exits your IRC session. You can also use BYE, SIGNOFF and EXIT. If a
- reason is supplied, it is displayed to other people on your channels.
-
- /QUIT Lunch Time!
- poly ~ >
-
-
-
- /HELP [<command>]
- Shows help on the given command.
-
- /HELP HELP
- Usage: HELP [command]
- Shows help on the given command. The help documentation is set
- up in a hierarchical fashion. That means that certain help
- topics have sub-topics under them.
- [boring stuff deleted]
-
-
-
- /WHOIS [<nickname>]
- Shows information about someone.
-
- /WHOIS Nap
- *** Nap is pioch@poly.polytechnique.fr (Klein bottle for sale...
- inquire within.)
- *** on channels: @#Twilight_Zone @#EU-Opers
- *** on via server poly.polytechnique.fr (Ecole Polytechnique,
- Paris, FRANCE ! )
- *** Nap has a connection to the twilight zone (is an IRC operator)
- *** Nap has been idle 0 seconds
-
- /WHOIS Nappy
- *** Nappy: No such nickname
-
-
- Sometimes WHOIS won't help you much, because the person you want to
- know more about just left IRC or changed nick. However, you can use
- WHOWAS to get this information for a while:
-
- /WHOWAS [[<server>] <nickname>]
- Shows information about who used the given nickname last, even if no
- one is currently using it.
-
- /WHOWAS Nappy
- *** Nappy was pioch@poly.polytechnique.fr (Artistic ventures
- highlighted. Rob a museum.) on channel *private*
- *** on irc via server poly.polytechnique.fr (Signoff: Mon Jun 22
- 20:15:23)
-
-
- Very often, an unsuccess call to WHOIS will lead you to try WHOWAS.
- That's why ircII allows you to "/SET AUTO_WHOWAS ON"; that way, a "***
- <nickname>: No such nickname" message will automagically generate a
- "/WHOWAS <nickname>". Try typing "/HELP SET AUTO_WHOWAS" for more
- information on this topic.
-
-
-
- /AWAY [<away message>]
- Leave a message explaining that you are not currently paying attention
- to IRC. Whenever someone sends you a MSG or does a WHOIS on you, they
- automatically see whatever message you set. Using AWAY with no
- parameters marks you as no longer being away.
-
- /AWAY Gone to get a cup of coffee.
- *** You have been marked as being away
-
- /AWAY
- *** You are no longer marked as being away
-
-
-
-
- 2.2 Communication and Private Conversation
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Table 5: Private conversation commands
- --------------------------------------
- Keyword Action
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
- MSG sends a private message
- QUERY starts a private conversation
- NOTICE sends a private message
- NOTIFY warns you of people logging in or out IRC
- IGNORE removes output from specific people off your screen
-
-
- You can use the MSG command, (usually "M" is an alias for it), to send
- someone a message that only that person can read.
-
- /MSG <nickname>|<channel> <text>
- Send a private message to specified nickname.
-
- /MSG Nap This message is for Nap only.
- -> *Nap* This message is for Nap only.
-
- On my screen will appear:
-
- *YourNick* This message is for Nap only.
-
-
- If you want to send a private message to more than one person, you can
- specify a list of nicknames separated by commas, (no spaces).
-
- /MSG Nap,Sorg This message for both Nap and Sorg.
- -> *Nap* This message for both Nap and Sorg.
- -> *Sorg* This message for both Nap and Sorg.
-
-
-
- Two special case nicknames are defined. If the nickname is "," (a
- comma), the message is sent to the last person who sent you a MSG. If
- the nickname is "." (a period), the message is sent to the last person to
- whom you sent a message.
-
- You can have a private conversation by only using /MSG. However,
- typing "/MSG <nick> <text>" or "/MSG . <text>" gets cumbersome. That's
- where the /QUERY command comes in handy.
-
-
- /QUERY [<nickname>|<channel>]
- Starts a private conversation with <nickname>.
-
- All text you type that would normally be sent to your channel now goes
- to the supplied nickname in the form of MSGs. To cancel a private
- conversation, use QUERY with no arguments.
-
- /QUERY Nap
- *** Starting conversation with Nap
-
- Blahblahblah
- -> *Nap* Blahblahblah
-
- /QUERY
- *** Ending conversation with Nap
-
-
-
- There is also another command to send messages, called NOTICE. Unlike
- MSGs, NOTICEs are surrounded by '-' when printed, and no automated
- responses, (such as generated by IGNORE or an automaton), will be sent in
- reply. Services, (robots), on IRC often use this form of interaction.
-
-
- /NOTICE <nickname>|<channel> <text>
- Sends a private message to the specified <nickname>.
-
- /NOTICE Nap Better use /MSG instead of /NOTICE.
- -> -Nap- Better use /MSG instead of /NOTICE.
-
- On my screen will appear:
-
- -YourNick- Better use /MSG instead of /NOTICE.
-
-
-
- As you begin to make new friends over IRC, you'll want to mark certain
- nicknames such that you will be warned when they signon or off.
-
- /NOTIFY [[-]<nickname>]
- Adds or removes <nickname> to the list of people you'll be warned when
- they enter or quit IRC (in ircII versions prior to 2.2, too many people
- in the NOTIFY list cause excessive slowness).
-
- /NOTIFY Nap Nappy
- *** Signon by Nap detected
-
- /NOTIFY
- *** Currently present: Nap
- *** Currently absent: Nappy
-
-
-
- Eventually, you may wish some day not to see messages from a specific
- user on your screen. This may happen when someone is dumping large
- amounts of garbage, or if someone is harassing you. The proper response
- to such a behavior is to IGNORE that person. IGNORE is a very powerful
- command, and can be used in many ways. However the basic usage of this
- tool is the following.
-
-
- /IGNORE [<nickname>|<user@host> [[-]<message type>]]
- Suppresses output from the given people from your screen. IGNORE can
- be set by nickname or by specifying a userid@hostname format. Wildcards
- may be used in all formats. Output that can be ignored includes MSGs,
- NOTICEs, PUBLIC messages, INVITEs, ALL or NONE. Preceding a type with a
- "-" indicates removal of ignoring of that type of message.
-
- /IGNORE *@cheshire.oxy.edu ALL
- *** Ignoring ALL messages from *@CHESHIRE.OXY.EDU
-
- /IGNORE
- *** Ignorance list:
- *** *@CHESHIRE.OXY.EDU ALL
-
- /IGNORE *@cheshire.oxy.edu NONE
- *** *@cheshire.oxy.edu removed from ignorance list
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.3 Channels and Public Conversations
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- On IRC, there are a lot of places where you can "hang out"; those
- places are called 'channels', (most of the information in this section
- can also be obtained by issuing "/HELP CHANNEL"). You can compare
- conversations on a channel to a conversation among a group of people:
- you see/hear everything that is said, and you can reply to anything
- that's said. What you type is received by everyone who's willing to
- listen - and everyone who is late will not hear what was said before,
- unless repeated by one of the ones who were there. (Who said "real
- life" ?)
-
- All channels on IRC have names: a "#" sign followed by some kind of
- text-string, like "#C++" or "#Asians" or "#EU-Opers". Usually, the name
- of the channel will indicate the type of conversation that's going on in
- there. Don't count on it, though.
-
- Table 6: Channel commands
- --------------------------
- Keyword Action
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
- LIST lists channels, number of users, topic
- NAMES shows the nicknames of the users on each channel
- JOIN sets your current channel, (same as CHANNEL)
- WHO gives a listing of users
- INVITE sends an invitation to another user
- LEAVE leaves a channel, (same as PART)
- KICK gets rid of someone on a channel
- TOPIC changes the topic of the channel
- ME sends anything about you to a channel or QUERY
- DESCRIBE sends anything about you to a person or channel
-
-
- Every channel has certain characteristics, called channel modes.
- These will also be explained below. Recall the NAMES and LIST
- commands; they will show you the names of the existing channels.
-
- /LIST [[<flags>] <channel mask>]
- Lists all current "channels", number of users, and topic. The
- displayed list may be quite long, so you can limit it using flags.
- "/LIST -MIN n" for instance removes channels with less than 'n' users of
- the output.
-
- Example:
-
- /LIST -MIN 5
- *** #aussies 5
- *** #amiga 5 Daily Amiga Silence...join&enjoy
- *** #hottub 21 Imagine sky, high above...
- *** #tuebingen 11 Happy Borthday CHUCK!!!
- *** #Christian 6 Jesus!
- *** #Twilight_ 15 The Oper Bar & Grill
- *** #initgame 5 More players needed!!!!!!!!!!!!
- *** #Taiwan 8 Welcome good friends.
- *** #espanol 6 EMERGENCIA SE Necesitan Mujeres!
- *** #sherwood 7
- *** #francais 6 on apprend le japonais (japanese welcome)
-
-
-
- /NAMES [[<flags>] <channel mask>]
- Shows the nicknames of all users on each "channel", (these may be very
- long. Remember to filter them with "-MIN n" or "-MAX n").
-
- /NAMES -MIN 5
- Pub: #twilight> Mycroft @sojge scorpio @Troy @Avalon @Nap phone
- Merlinus Lumberjak @tzoper
- Pub: #espanol Cacique Bonjovi leopardo Carina Miguel Cisco r2
- Pub: #amiga @gio @Radix @xterm @mama @AmiBot
- Pub: #aussies @Bleve @GrayElf @Insomniac @Morkeleb @titus
- Pub: #hottub baby @Aldur KnightOrc @Toasty Gwydion @Belkira
- @Aiken Edge @Spockobot @Nada @ZBot @Aurik @anna @RedBaron
- @Katzen @esashi IceWolf @Eniigma @Digger @TheHeck
-
-
-
- To join in the conversation on a certain channel you may use the JOIN
- command.
-
- /JOIN [<channel>]
- Sets your current channel to the supplied channel.
-
- /JOIN #Twilight_Zone
- *** Nap has joined channel #Twilight_Zone
- *** Topic: The Gernsback Continuum
- *** Users on #Twilight_Zone: Nap msa tober phone @julia @SirLance
- igh @Daemon @Avalon @Waftam @Trillian @tzoper
-
- The CHANNEL command has the same effects. Note that if no parameters
- are given, your current channel is displayed.
-
- Upon entering a channel, you are given useful details about it: list
- of users talking in that channel, topic... Joining a channel does not
- cause you to leave your previous channel unless NOVICE is set to ON. See
- "/HELP SET NOVICE".
-
-
-
- Once in a channel, you may wish to get a detailed list of the people
- IRCing inside. That's where the WHO command comes in handy:
-
- /WHO [<channel>|<wildcard expression>]
- Gives a listing of users. "/WHO *" for the list of users in your
- current channel.
-
- /WHO #Twilight_Zone
- Channel Nickname S User@Host (Name)
- #Twilight_ Nap H* pioch@poly.polytechnique.fr
- (Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur)
- #Twilight_ msa H msa@tel1.tel.vtt.fi (Markku Savela)
- #Twilight_ tober H ircuser@kragar.eff.org (tober)
- #Twilight_ phone H mrgreen@munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU (Third
- row seats to the Cure? WHO ME? nah.. *grin*)
- #Twilight_ julia G*@ julie@turing.acs.Virginia.EDU
- ( Future graduate of ACME Looniversity)
- #Twilight_ SirLance G*@ lancelot@tdsb-s.mais.hydro.qc.ca
- (Sir Lancelot)
- #Twilight_ igh G igh@micom1.servers.unsw.EDU.AU (igh)
- #Twilight_ Daemon G*@ frechett@spot.Colorado.EDU
- (-=Runaway Daemon=-)
- #Twilight_ Avalon H*@ avalon@coombs.anu.edu.au (Avalon...)
- #Twilight_ Waftam G*@ danielce@munagin.ee.mu.OZ.AU (Daniel
- Carosone)
- #Twilight_ Trillian G*@ hrose@rocza.eff.org ( I turn to
- stone when you are gone )
- #Twilight_ tzoper H*@ tzoper@azure.acsu.buffalo.edu (/msg
- tzoper help)
-
- The first field is the current channel, then nickname, status, real
- name (in internet user@host form), and a small witty comment you can set
- yourself with the environment variable IRCNAME, (this will be detailed in
- section 2.8). Status indicates if a user is "H"ere or "G"one, (see
- AWAY), if IRCop ("*"), and/or chanop ("@").
-
-
-
- It is also possible, when you are already on a channel, to ask someone
- to join your channel. The command is called INVITE.
-
- /INVITE <nickname> [<channel>]
- Invites another user to a channel. If no channel is specified, your
- current channel is used.
-
- /INVITE Nap
- *** Inviting Nap to channel #Twilight_Zone
-
- If you receive an INVITE message, you can type "/JOIN -INVITE" to join
- the channel to which you were last invited, or simply "/JOIN <channel>".
-
-
-
- To leave a channel, just issue a LEAVE command, (PART has the same
- effects):
-
- /LEAVE <channel>
- Leave a channel.
-
- /LEAVE #Twilight_Zone
- *** Nap has left #Twilight_Zone
-
-
-
- Well, you guessed it, if there is a way to invite someone on a
- channel, there's also the possibility to KICK someone out of it, for
- example if this person is behaving like a jerk, annoying people or
- flooding the channel with unwanted information:
-
- /KICK [<channel>] <nickname>
- Kicks named user off a given channel. Only 'channel operators' are
- privileged to use this command.
-
- /KICK #Twilight_Zone Target
- *** Target has been kicked off channel #Twilight_Zone by Nap
-
-
-
- Channels have topics, that indicate the current topic of conversation.
- You can change this topic on a channel with the TOPIC command.
-
- /TOPIC [[<channel>] <topic for channel>]
- Changes the topic for the channel.
-
- /TOPIC The silent channel.
- *** Nap has changed the topic on channel #EU-Opers to The silent
- channel.
-
-
-
- At times, you may want to send a description of what you are doing or
- how you are feeling or just anything concerning you to the current
- channel or query. It is absolutely good style to not forget the period
- at the end of the sentence!
-
- /ME <action description>
- Tells the current channel or query about what you are doing.
-
- /ME opens up the fridge.
- * Nap opens up the fridge.
-
- You can also use your own nickname as command, i.e. you can type
- the line with a leading slash:
-
- /Nap reaches out for the orange juice.
- * Nap reaches out for the orange juice.
-
-
- The same goal can be achieved towards a specific nickname using:
-
- /DESCRIBE <nickname>|<channel> <action description>
- Sends anything concerning you to the <nickname> or <channel> you pass
- as first argument.
-
-
- (Note: The look of the result depends on each client version, and might
- not be exactly the same as in the examples shown here.)
-
- These commands make use of CTCP, a client-to-client protocol crafted
- to perform specific actions, but not understood by all clients, (more
- about CTCP in section 2.5). If you get an error message, your
- description may not have arrived properly.
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.4 Channel and User Modes
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Channels can have additional constraints, which can be set by the MODE
- command, (most of the information in this section can also be obtained by
- issuing "/HELP MODE"). To understand this, recall that the first person
- to JOIN a channel effectively creates it and is initially "in charge" of
- the channel, ("Channel Operator" or "chanop"). He/She can subsequently
- add those constraints, make other people chanops at leisure.
-
- Table 7: Mode commands
- -----------------------
- Keyword Action
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
- MODE changes channel or user mode
-
-
- Public is the default mode for a channel. When someone is on a public
- channel, he can be seen by all other users, (if his own user mode permits
- this). Anyone can notice users on a public channel and join such a
- conversation.
-
- Private means that, although anyone can see members of such a channel,
- you can't tell what channel they are on unless you are already on that
- channel with them. They just appear as "Prv: *" in LIST or NAMES.
- Since the number of potential channels is in the billions, this is quite
- some security - all you give away is the acknowledgement that you're
- IRCing.
-
- If you are on a secret channel, someone who is not on the same channel
- can't even see that you are there. Your name does not show up in a LIST
- of active users. The only indication of your presence is that, when
- entering IRC, all new users are told that there are "NNNNN users on XXX
- servers". If someone checks on all users and finds less than NNNNN of
- them, he knows that other people are hiding on secret channels. But a
- secret channel user still cannot be found except by brute-force checking
- through all channels, a hopeless proposition in the face of the huge
- number of possible channel names. Security through obscurity finally
- means something.
-
-
-
- /MODE <channel>|<nickname> [[+|-]<modechars> [<parameters>]]
- Allows channel operators to change channel mode, or any user to change
- their personal mode, (don't use this command too often, it floods the net
- with worthless information).
-
- /MODE #Twilight_Zone +m
- *** Mode change "+m" on channel #Twilight_Zone by Nap
-
- /MODE Nap -i
- *** Mode change "-i" for user Nap by poly.polytechnique.fr
-
- And this is how to give 'chanop' status to someone on the channel
-
- /MODE #Twilight_Zone +o sojge
- *** Mode change "+o sojge" on channel #Twilight_Zone by Nap
-
-
-
- A + or - sign determines whether the mode should be added or deleted.
- Try typing "/HELP MODE" to get further information. Channels can be
- moderated (only chanops can talk), secret, private, with a limited number
- of users, anonymous, invite-only, topic-limited, with a list of banned
- users...
-
- The MODE command also allows you to modify your personal parameters,
- your "user mode". You can check your usermode with the command "/MODE
- <YourNick>" or sometimes "/UMODE". Note that user mode +i may be the
- default on some servers, in order to protect privacy of users. This
- should not be seen as a problem, since any user can change his/her
- personal mode whatever defaults a server may set.
-
-
- Table 8: Channel modes
- -----------------------
- ModeChar Effects on channels
- ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- b <person> ban somebody, <person> in "nick!user@host" form
- i channel is invite-only
- l <number> channel is limited, <number> users allowed max
- m channel is moderated, (only chanops can talk)
- n external /MSGs to channel are not allowed
- o <nick> makes <nick> a channel operator
- p channel is private
- s channel is secret
- t topic limited, only chanops may change it
-
-
- Table 9: User modes
- --------------------
- ModeChar Effects on nicknames
- ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- i makes yourself invisible to anybody that does
- not know the exact spelling of your nickname
- o IRC-operator status, can only be set
- by IRC-ops with OPER
- s receive server notices
- w receive wallops (abused and deprecated)
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.5 Client to Client Protocol
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- /CTCP <nickname> <command> [<argument>]
- Allows you to perform certain client specific actions on the network.
-
- /CTCP Nap VERSION
- *** CTCP VERSION reply from Nap: ircII 2.2 *IX
- :ircII 2.2, SL0 The one you thought you'd never see.
-
- This can be used to get information about how long a person has
- been idle:
-
- /CTCP Nap FINGER
- *** CTCP FINGER reply from Nap: PIOCH Nicolas - Nap on IRC, X90,
- (pioch@poly.polytechnique.fr) Idle 0 seconds
-
-
- Table 10: Client to Client Commands
- ------------------------------------
- Keyword Action
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
- CTCP performs certain client specific actions
- DCC handles direct connections to remote clients
- DCC SEND initiates a file transfer
- DCC GET accepts a file transfer
- DCC CLOSE ends a DCC connection or offer
- DCC LIST shows current DCC connections
- DCC CHAT initiates a secure chat between two clients
-
-
-
- There are many other CTCP commands, and new ones are introduced all
- the time. There is a mechanism for you to find out what you can use:
- CTCP CLIENTINFO. To find out about your own client services, execute a
- CLIENTINFO on yourself.
-
- /CTCP Nap CLIENTINFO
- *** CTCP CLIENTINFO reply from Nap: SED VERSION CLIENTINFO
- USERINFO ERRMSG FINGER TIME ACTION DCC UTC PING :Use
- CLIENTINFO <COMMAND> to get more specific information
-
- If you are interested in this powerful CTCP mechanism, have a look in
- the various ircII help files. "/HELP CTCP" might tell you more...
- However the client-to-client protocol has a very powerful feature:
- Allowing two people to exchange files.
-
- To send small text files, electronic mail is probably the best
- solution, (don't rely on the user@host given by the WHOIS command to send
- mail. For people registered on NickServ, you can "/MSG
- NickServ@Service.de WHOIS nick" to get their E-mail address). However,
- ircII provides you a way to establish Direct Client Connections ("DCC")
- to perform functions like sending and receiving files.
-
-
-
- If NickA wants to send a file to NickB, then NickA should type:
- /DCC SEND NickB filename
-
- On NickB's screen will appear:
- *** DCC SEND (filename) request received from NickA
-
- If he, (NickB), wants to get the file, he just needs to type:
- /DCC GET NickA filename
-
- A few seconds later
- *** DCC GET connection with NickA established
- *** DCC GET filename connection to NickA completed
- will inform both users that data transfer has been successfully
- completed.
-
-
-
- Here's a quick overview of the subject:
-
- /DCC <function> [<arguments>]
- Handles direct connections to remote clients. The behavior of DCC is
- determined by the specified <function>.
-
-
- /DCC SEND <nickname> <filename>
- Initiates a file transfer by direct client connection.
-
-
- /DCC GET <nickname> <filename>
- Accepts a file transfer by direct client connection. The sender must
- first have offered the file with DCC SEND.
-
-
- /DCC CLOSE <type> <nickname> [<arguments>]
- Ends an unwanted DCC connection or offer. The <type>, <nickname> and
- <arguments> must be the same as those shown by "/DCC LIST". If the
- arguments are not supplied, the oldest connection of the specified type
- is closed.
-
-
- /DCC LIST
- Shows current /DCC connections with their types, status and nicknames
- involved.
-
-
-
- More details can be found in ircII online help: try "/HELP DCC"...
- for more information.
-
- However, if someone asks you to send him a file, DON'T do it unless
- you EXACTLY know what you are doing. For instance, NEVER send the
- password file of your system to anybody. This could grant crackers
- illegal access to your machines, and put you and your system
- administrator in much trouble.
-
-
-
- DCC also allows two clients to establish a direct client connection for
- chat. This is a secure form of communication, since messages are not
- sent through the IRC network.
-
- /DCC CHAT
- Initiates a direct client connection chat to the given nick, who must
- repond with DCC CHAT. Once established, messages are sent over with
- "/MSG =Nickname ...".
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.6 Network Related Commands
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- If you encounter any problem, contact your local IRC-Administrator or
- an IRC-Operator. An IRC-Admin is a person who has access to all files
- concerning 'ircd' (the server program). An IRC-Operator or "IRC-op" is a
- person who has privileges given to him by an IRC-Admin and tries to
- maintain a fast reliable IRC network. Information on how you can find
- out who he/she is, can be found below.
-
- Each time you are prompted for a server name, remember you can supply
- the nickname of someone being connected on that server instead. This may
- be useful at times...
-
- Table 11: Network related commands
- -----------------------------------
- Keyword Action
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
- ADMIN displays information about a server
- LINKS shows the servers on the IRC network
- SERVER switches your primary server
- MOTD displays the server message-of-the-day
- USERS prints users logged on the server machine
- DATE shows server current date and time
- TIME shows server current date and time
- LUSERS gives a brief listing of users, servers and operators
- TRACE shows the server connections of the given server
- STATS shows some irc server usage statistics
- INFO shows useless information about IRC
- VERSION shows client and server version number
-
-
- /ADMIN [<server>]
- Displays the administrative details about the given server. If no
- server is supplied, the server you are connected to is used.
-
- /ADMIN
- ### Administrative info about poly.polytechnique.fr
- ### Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau, FRANCE
- ### IRC-Administrator Nicolas Pioch (Nap@IRC)
- ### <pioch@poly.polytechnique.fr>
-
-
- /LINKS [[<server>] <wildcard expression>]
- Shows a list of servers currently connected to the IRC network. If
- <wildcard expression> is given, /LINKS asks the given <server> for a list
- of servers matching the given expression, (this list can get very long!).
-
- /LINKS *po*
- *** nova.unix.portal.com 7 Cupertino California, USA
- *** poe.acc.Virginia.EDU 6 University of Virginia 2.7.1f
- *** polaris.utu.fi 9 University of Turku, Finland
- *** polaris.ctr.columbia.edu 6 Columbia University, New York City
- *** csd.postech.ac.kr 4 POSTECH Computer Science Dept.
- *** cdc853.cdc.polimi.it 2 Polytechnic of Milan, Italy
- *** poly.polytechnique.fr 0 Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, FRANCE
-
-
-
- /SERVER [<server>|<server number> [<port number>]]
- Switches your primary server to the supplied <server> at the specified
- <port number>. If no port number is given, the default port number is
- used (normally 6667).
-
- /SERVER poly.polytechnique.fr 6667
- *** Connecting to port 6667 of server poly.polytechnique.fr
- *** Welcome to the Internet Relay Network, Nap
- *** Your host is poly.polytechnique.fr, running version 2.7.2g.ID
- *** This server was created Sat Jan 16 1993 at 12:16:10 MET
-
-
- Occasionally, you can switch servers faster than the IRC network can
- send out the information that you have left your previous server. So
- don't be surprised if you are told your nickname is already in use...
- Just wait a moment and set it with /NICK again.
-
-
-
- /MOTD [<server>]
- Gives the Message-Of-The-Day for the named server. If no server is
- given, your server is used.
-
- /MOTD
- MOTD - poly.polytechnique.fr message of the day -
- MOTD - _____________________________________
- MOTD - /\ \
- MOTD - \_| Bienvenue sur le serveur |
- MOTD - | Internet Relay Chat |
- MOTD - | de l'Ecole Polytechnique, FRANCE |
- MOTD - | _________________________________|__
- MOTD - \_/___________________________________/
- MOTD -
- MOTD - | | | En cas de probleme,
- MOTD - )_) )_) )_) tapez / admin
- MOTD - )___))___))___)\
- MOTD - )____)____)_____)\\ Nicolas PIOCH
- MOTD - _____|____|____|____\\\__ Nap sur IRC
- MOTD - --\ Welcome on IRC ! /---------
- MOTD - ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^
- * End of /MOTD command
-
-
-
- /USERS [<server>]
- Shows the users logged into the machine where the server is running,
- (it's up to the server administrator to implement this feature or not.
- It may not work on some machines).
-
- /USERS
- *** UserID Terminal Host
- *** pioch ttyp9 rotule.polytechn
- *** pioch ttypc rotule.polytechn
- *** pioch ttyq0 rotule.polytechn
- *** pioch ttyq1 rotule.polytechn
-
-
-
- /DATE [<server>]
- /TIME [<server>]
- Shows the current time of day and date. If a server is specified, the
- time of day and date are reported from that server. DATE and TIME are
- identical.
-
- /DATE
- *** poly.polytechnique.fr Saturday June 20 1992 -- 02: 35 +01:00
-
-
-
- /LUSERS
- Gives a brief listing of the number of servers, operators and users
- matching the given <wildcard expression>, as seen from the specified
- <server>.
-
- /LUSERS
- *** There are 1008 users and 291 invisible on 135 servers
- *** 72 users have connection to the twilight zone
- *** There are 458 channels
- *** I have 16 clients and 4 servers
- *** 22 maximum connections, 19 clients
-
-
-
- /TRACE [<server>]
- Shows the server connections of the given <server>.
-
- /TRACE
- *** Serv Class[9] ==> 134S 1331C eff.org[192.88.144.3]
- *** Serv Class[8] ==> 1S 6C Julia.Enst.FR
- *** Serv Class[8] ==> 1S 6C Eurecom8.Cica.FR[192.70.34.208]
- *** Serv Class[1] ==> 2S 0C athina.cc.uch.gr[147.52.80.102]
- *** Serv Class[8] ==> 1S 5C dafne.mines.u-nancy.fr[192.70.66.2]
- *** Serv Class[8] ==> 1S 0C cnam.cnam.fr
- *** Class 0 Entries linked: 16
- *** Class 9 Entries linked: 1
- *** Class 8 Entries linked: 4
- *** Class 1 Entries linked: 1
-
-
-
- /STATS c|i|k|l|m|u|y [<server>]
- Shows some irc server usage statistics.
-
- /STATS u
- *** Server Up 12 days, 12:28:44
-
-
-
- /INFO [<server>]
- Shows information about the IRC creators, debuggers, slaves and a lot
- of other people who no longer have much to do with IRC.
-
-
-
- /VERSION
- Shows the ircII version number and the version number of the server.
-
- /VERSION
- *** Client: ircII 2.2
- *** Server poly.polytechnique.fr: ircd 2.7.2g.Nap+6(privacy).
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.7 Quick Reference Panel
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Keyword Action
- ------- ------
- ! recalls previous commands for re-editing
- ADMIN displays information about a server
- AWAY leaves a message saying you're not paying attention
- CLEAR puts some white space on your screen
- CTCP performs certain client specific actions
-
- DATE shows server current date and time
- DCC handles direct connections to remote clients
- DESCRIBE sends anything about you to a person or channel
- HELP prints help on the given command
- HISTORY displays the command history
-
- IGNORE removes output from specific people off your screen
- INFO shows useless information about IRC
- INVITE sends an invitation to another user
- JOIN sets your current channel
- KICK gets rid of someone on a channel
-
- LASTLOG lists the most recent messages
- LEAVE leaves a channel
- LINKS shows servers on the IRC network
- LIST lists channels, number of users, topic
- LUSERS gives a brief listing of users, servers and operators
-
- ME sends anything about you to a channel or QUERY
- MODE changes channel mode
- MOTD displays the server message-of-the-day
- MSG sends a private message
- NAMES shows the nicknames of users on each channel
-
- NICK changes your nickname
- NOTICE sends a private message
- NOTIFY warns you of people logging in or out IRC
- QUERY starts a private conversation
- QUIT exits your IRC session
-
- SERVER switches your primary server
- STATS shows some irc server usage statistics
- TIME shows server current date and time
- TOPIC changes the topic of the channel
-
- TRACE shows the server connections of the given machine
- USERS prints users logged on the server machine
- VERSION shows client and server version number
- WHO gives a listing of users
- WHOIS displays information about someone
-
- WHOWAS displays information about someone who just left
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.8 Further into ircII Wizardry
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Note: This part should be reserved for experienced IRC'ers.
-
-
- Because ircII is not a simple client program, but an Operating System,
- its programming language is just as simple as you could expect (it's
- horrendous), but if you want to get into it, here's a little note for
- you...
-
- There are a few Unix environment variables you can set in your shell
- configuration file, but you need to find out your shell name before that.
- "echo $SHELL" should give you a hint.
-
- Table 12: Setting environment variables
- ----------------------------------------
- Shell type Shell name Command
- ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~
- Bourne shells sh $ VARNAME="value" ; export VARNAME
- ksh $ export VARNAME="value"
- bash $ export VARNAME="value"
- C-shells csh % setenv VARNAME "value"
- tcsh > setenv VARNAME "value"
-
-
- Table 13: Environment variables
- --------------------------------
- Name Effects
- ~~~~ ~~~~~~~
- HOME where your home directory is
- IRCNAME any lunacy you want instead of your real name
- (text that appears between parentheses in a WHOIS)
- IRCNICK your default IRC nickname
- IRCPATH a directory path to LOAD scripts
- IRCRC a file to use instead of your $HOME/.ircrc
- IRCSERVER a default server list for ircII
- TERM your terminal type
-
-
-
- The command character, (usually "/"), is only necessary when you type
- commands interactively, when you program things it is no more needed, it
- used to be though.
-
-
- Table 14: Advanced commands
- ---------------------------
- Keyword Action
- ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
- # same as COMMENT except for the lenght
- @ performs variable expressions
- ALIAS creates command aliases
- ASSIGN creates user variables (expandable with $)
- BIND binds a keystroke sequence to a function
-
- CD changes ircII working directory
- COMMENT does nothing, but very useful. Strange, uh?
- ECHO displays all of its arguments
- EXEC allows you to start subprocesses
- FLUSH flushes all pending output from the server
-
- IF standard boolean expression checker
- LOAD loads an ircII command script file
- ON sets up actions to occur when certain events happen
- REDIRECT forwards the output from a command
- SAVE saves all ircII settings into a file
-
- SAY same as sending text to a channel
- SEND same as sending text to a channel
- SET sets a variable to a given value
- SLEEP suspends ircII for a few seconds
- TYPE simulates keystrokes
-
- WAIT waits for all server output to finish
- WHILE another control command to make loops
- WINDOW lets you manipulate multiple "windows" in ircII
- XECHO like ECHO, but takes flag arguments
-
-
-
- If you want to type to the channel from within an ALIAS or on BINDing,
- you have to use SAY or SEND.
-
- The ";" has a special meaning in ALIASes, BINDings and ONs: it's
- treated as command separator, that means you can execute multiple
- commands in a row separated by semicolons. The semicolons are not
- considered separators when you use them interactively, (to be able to
- type ";-)"), and within an ircII script file. You can escape the meaning
- of ";" in an ALIAS with "\;".
-
- When you use ircII on a (semi)regular basis, you will discover that
- every time you start the program you will issue the same initialization
- sequence. If that is the case, I have good news for you: you don't have
- to do that anymore! ircII will, at startup, load a file called ".ircrc",
- (full path: $HOME/.ircrc). It will treat each line in that file as if
- you typed it manually.
-
- For example, if the content of your .ircrc file is:
-
- JOIN #Twilight_Zone
-
- then each time you will start IRC, you will join this channel.
-
-
-
- Advanced commands may come in handy if you need them. Feel free to
- browse in ircII online help to find out more about them. A few of them
- are probably worth learning...
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.9 Sample .ircrc
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- As a sample, here's part of my .ircrc file. Since ircII2.2, this file
- can be found in the "script" directory, and loaded with "/load ircprimer"
-
- # Sample .ircrc script, from the IRCprimer v1.1
- # -------------------------------------------------------------------
- # IRCII sample configuration file (~/.ircrc) (Nicolas Pioch)
- # -------------------------------------------------------------------
- # The aim of this file is to shorten all useful commands to 1 letter.
-
- set NOVICE off
- set INPUT_ALIASES off
- set AUTO_WHOWAS on
- set SHOW_CHANNEL_NAMES on
- set SHOW_AWAY_ONCE on
-
- # Speeds up ircII display 2 times
- set SCROLL_LINES 2
-
- # Put Hack notices down under
- on ^SERVER_NOTICE "\*\*\* Notice -- Hack: *" set status_user Hack: $4-
-
- # Modified killpath script from YeggMan
- ALIAS kpath ECHO ### Last received KILL for $nkp.path
- @ nkp.path = [<empty>]
- ALIAS nkp.msg ECHO ### $Z -- KILL by $1 for $0 $2-
- ALIAS nkp.idx @ FUNCTION_RETURN = RINDEX(! $0) + 1
- ALIAS nkp.srv @ FUNCTION_RETURN = INDEX(. $MID($nkp.idx($0) 512 $0))
- ON ^SERVER_NOTICE "\*\*\* Notice -- Received KILL*" {
- # if (index(. $mid(${rindex(! $11) +1} 512 $11))
- IF ( nkp.srv($11) > -1 )
- { nkp.msg $7 $9 }
- { nkp.msg $7 $9 $12- }
- @ nkp.path = [$7-]
- }
-
- # Function to strip the less significant part of an internet hostname
- # $userdomain(username@host.subdomain.dom) returns username@subdomain.dom
- # This eliminates the hostname which may change frequently
- alias userdomain {
- @ function_return = LEFT($INDEX(@ $0) $0)##[@]##MID(${1+INDEX(. $0)} 99 $0)
- }
-
- # Who is that ?
- on ^msg * echo *$0!$userdomain($userhost())* $1-
-
- # /w [<nickname>] get info on someone
- # /q [<nickname>] query someone
- # /m <nickname> <text> send a message
- # /n <nickname> <text> send a notice
- # /r <text> reply to last message I got
- # /a <text> followup on my last message
-
- alias w whois
- alias q query
- alias m msg
- alias n notice
- alias r msg $,
- alias a msg $.
-
- # /j <channel> join a channel
- # /l <channel> list people in a channel
- # /ll list in the current channel
- # /i <nickname> [<channel>] invite someone
- # /hop leave the current channel
-
- alias j join
- alias l who
- alias ll who *
- alias i invite
- alias hop part $C
-
- # /o <nickname> [<nickname> <nickname>] give channel op status
- # /d <nickname> [<nickname> <nickname>] remove channel op status
- # /k <nickname> kick someone
- # /mo [+|-]<modechars> change current channel mode
-
- alias o mode $C +ooo
- alias d mode $C -ooo
- alias k kick $C
- alias mo mode $C
-
- # the "wrong person" alias! /oops <nickname> to resend message to
- alias oops {
- @ _whoops = [$B]
- msg $. Whooops ! Please ignore, that wasn't meant for you.
- msg $0 $_whoops
- }
-
- alias unset set -$*
- alias unalias alias -$*
- alias NickServ msg NickServ@Service.de
- alias NoteServ msg NoteServ@Service.de
-
- # -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-
- 2.10 Writing automatons
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- An automaton, (also called robot or service), is a program that is
- connected to the IRC network to provide services. Many people try to set
- that up with a few ircII commands like:
-
- on ^msg "% help" notice $0 This is LameBot 1.0
-
- However, you should know that setting up an automaton using ircII ON
- facilities is quick and dirty, and should be reserved for robots that
- rely on ircII specific features such as DCC (file servers for instance).
- Writing a program in C, perl or any decent programming language should
- take longer in the beginning, but your efforts will be rewarded. You can
- download skeletons of such programs on some ftp sites that keep IRC
- related stuff (check in the Frequently Asked Questions part).
-
-
- Although most robots-writers believe they have created a "smart
- thing", 99% of the robots online happen to be a nuisance to the IRC
- community, because a few simple rules were not respected by their owners.
- The main idea is that robots should neither be seen nor heard:
-
- * automatons should be clearly identified as such, having "bot",
- "serv" or "srv" in their nickname.
-
- * they should use NOTICES to communicate with the rest
- of the world, and not reply to NOTICES they get.
-
- * they should be able to always be killed (craziness is a
- frequent disease among robots).
-
- * they should be able to be killed remotely by their owner via IRC.
-
- * they should not give access to their owner's real files, (bandits
- have already been able to crack people's accounts through
- their robots).
-
- * they should not send messages to channels (unless the channel
- is dedicated to that robot).
-
- * they should not flood channels with MODE changes. Basically,
- if you have such a command as:
-
- on -JOIN "Lamer #BotTub" mode #BotTub +o Lamer
-
- then you are wrong. Because this is what you will get:
-
- *** Lamer (clueless@where.the.hell) has joined channel #bottub
- *** Mode change "+o Lamer" on channel #bottub by LameBot
- *** Mode change "+o Lamer" on channel #bottub by StupidSrv
- *** Mode change "+ooo Lamer Lamer Lamer" on channel #bottub by FloodServ
- *** Mode change "+o Lamer" on channel #bottub by Dumbbot
-
-
- And this will get boring very soon, so don't be surprised if such
- robots get banned from most channels. A good kludge is to wait until
- someone asks explicitly the robot to be opped on a channel. This could
- be:
- on -MSG "Lamer op me on #BotTub" mode #BotTub +o Lamer
-
-
- If you don't respect rules 2 and 6 above, this may happen too:
-
- *** TalkBot (clueless@where.the.hell) has joined channel #bottub
- <LameBot> Hi TalkBot!
- <TalkBot> Hello LameBot! How are you?
- *** Mode change "+o TalkBot" on channel #bottub by LameBot
- <LameBot> Fine thanx.
- <TalkBot> Thank you for the op, LameBot.
- <LameBot> No problem, TalkBot.
- *** Signoff: Talkbot (ircserver.irc.edu where.the.hell)
- *** TalkBot (clueless@where.the.hell) has joined channel #bottub
- *** Mode change "+o TalkBot" on channel #bottub by where.the.hell
- *** Mode change "+o LameBot" on channel #bottub by TalkBot
- *** Mode change "+o TalkBot" on channel #bottub by LameBot
- <TalkBot> Thank you for the op, LameBot.
- <LameBot> No problem, TalkBot.
- ...
-
-
- See? Remember the golden rule:
-
- +--------------------------------------------------------------+
- | A smart bot won't act unless explicitly asked by someone to. |
- +--------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 3. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
- =============================
-
- 3.1 How do I set up an IRC client?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Here is a list of FTP sites from which you can download a client for
- your specific Operating System.
-
-
- Table 15: FTP sites with IRC clients
- -------------------------------------
- UNIX ircII
- ~~~~~~~~~~
- cs.bu.edu - /irc/clients
- ftp.acsu.buffalo.edu - /pub/irc
- slopoke.mlb.semi.harris.com - /pub/irc
- plod.cmbe.unsw.oz.au - /pub
- coombs.anu.edu.au - /pub/irc
- nic.funet.fi - /pub/unix/irc/ircII
- ftp.informatik.tu-muenchen.de - /pub/net/irc
-
-
- EMACS elisp
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
- cs.bu.edu - /irc/clients/elisp
- slopoke.mlb.semi.harris.com - /pub/irc/emacs
- nic.funet.fi - /pub/unix/irc/Emacs
- lehtori.cc.tut.fi - /pub/irchat
- ftp.informatik.tu-muenchen.de - /pub/net/irc
-
-
- VMS
- ~~~
- cs.bu.edu - /irc/clients/vms
- coombs.anu.edu.au - /pub/irc/vms
- nic.funet.fi - /pub/unix/irc/vms
- ftp.informatik.tu-muenchen.de - /pub/net/irc
-
-
- REXX for VM
- ~~~~~~~~~~~
- ftp.informatik.uni-oldenburg.de - /pub/irc/rxirc
- ftp.informatik.tu-muenchen.de - /pub/net/irc/VM
- cs.bu.edu - /irc/clients/rxirc
- coombs.anu.edu.au - /pub/irc/rxirc
- nic.funet.fi - /pub/unix/irc/rxirc
-
-
- MSDOS
- ~~~~~
- cs.bu.edu - /irc/clients
- nic.funet.fi - /pub/unix/irc/msdos
-
-
- Macintosh
- ~~~~~~~~~
-
- cs.bu.edu - /irc/clients
- nic.funet.fi - /pub/unix/irc/mac
- sumex.stanford.edu - /info-mac/comm
- ftp.ira.uka.de - /pub/systems/mac
-
-
- For Unix machines, you either compile the source yourself, or have
- someone else on your machine compile the source for you. The current
- "official" ircII release is version 2.2.1. That means that it is said to
- be quite bugfree (Hehe, you never know...) In addition to this "official"
- distribution, you may find preversions of the client to come floating
- around, for people who like to track down bugs and taste things to come.
- However, you should be aware of that those clients are being worked on,
- and may not have full features working properly.
-
- Here are the commands to type to setup an ircII client:
-
- ~ > ftp
- ftp> verbose off
- Verbose mode off.
- ftp> open cs.bu.edu
- Name (cs.bu.edu:yourname) : ftp
- Password: yourname@yourhost
- ftp> cd irc/clients
- ftp> bin
- ftp> get ircII2.2.1.2.tar.Z "|zcat|tar xf -"
- ftp> get ircII2.2.1help.tar.Z "|zcat|tar xf -"
- ftp> quit
- ~ >
-
- You now have to go into ircII2.2.1 and read the files explaining how
- to achieve a successful installation. Have a look at README and INSTALL,
- edit config.h to define DEFAULT_SERVER, edit Makefile to define
- INSTALL_EXECUTABLE, IRCII_LIBRARY and the C compiler you will be using,
- then type make install and wait...
-
- If you can't set up a client on any local machine, you can still use
- any telnet client:
-
- Table 16: Open telnet clients
- ------------------------------
- Area Command login name
- ~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~
- America telnet bradenville.andrew.cmu.edu
- telnet chatsubo.nersc.gov bbs
-
- Asia telnet cc.nsysu.edu.tw irc
-
- Europe telnet ircclient.itc.univie.ac.at 6668
- telnet irc.ibmpcug.co.uk 9999
-
- Please only use telnet when you have no other way of reaching IRC, as
- this resource is quite limited.
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.2 Which server do I connect to?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- It's usually best to try and connect to one geographically close, even
- though that may not be the best. You can always ask when you get on IRC.
- Here's a list of servers available for connection:
-
- Table 17: Open IRC servers
- ---------------------------
- America Canada ug.cs.dal.ca
- ~~~~~~~ USA csa.bu.edu
- ucsu.coloradu.edu
- irc.caltech.edu
-
- Europe Finland nic.funet.fi
- ~~~~~~ France poly.polytechnique.fr
- Germany noc.belwue.de
- Sweden irc.nada.kth.se
-
- Oceania Australia munagin.ee.mu.oz.au
- ~~~~~~~
-
- This is by no means, a comprehensive list, but merely a start.
- Connect to the closest of these servers and join the channel
- #Twilight_Zone or, if you are in Europe, #EU-Opers. When you are there,
- immediately ask what you want. Don't say "I have a question" because
- then everyone will ignore you until you say it a few times, and then
- they'll jump down your throat and rip your lungs out. No one knows if he
- can answer your question until you ask it.
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.3 What are good channels to try while using IRC?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- #Hottub and #initgame are almost always teeming with people. #Hottub
- is meant to simulate a hot tub, and #initgame is a non-stop game of
- "inits" (initials). Just join the fun and find out! (German users may
- try channels named after German university towns...)
-
- Many IRC Operators are in #Twilight_Zone, while European Operators
- concentrate in #EU-Opers... So if you join an Operator channel and don't
- hear much talking, don't worry, it's not because you joined, Operators
- don't talk much on such channels anyways!
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.4 How do I get nifty effects with ircII?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- You can highlight messages you send using control chars: parts of
- text surrounded by control-b (^B) will appear in video reverse to most
- ircII users for instance. However the appearance of such effects relies
- on the terminal abilities of the user you're writing to.
-
- In some cases keys are already bound to something. For instance, ^B
- is normally bound to BACKWARD_CHARACTER, so you will need to define a
- "quote-character" key: just enter "/BIND ^W QUOTE_CHARACTER" then "/BIND
- ^W^B SELF_INSERT" and it may work...
-
- Table 18: Highlighting ircII output
- ------------------------------------
- Key Effect
- ~~~ ~~~~~~
- ^B Video reverse
- ^V Underline
- ^_ Bold
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.5 What if someone tells me to type something cryptic?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- NEVER type anything anyone tells you to without knowing what it is.
- There is a problem with typing a certain command with the ircII client
- that gives anyone immediate control of your client, (and thus can alter
- your account environment also). Look in the ircII on-line help each time
- you can.
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.6 I get strange characters on my screen, what are they?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- IRC has quite a lot of people from Scandinavian countries, }{|][\ are
- letters in their alphabet (IRC is supposed to support the ISO Latin-1
- 8-bit character set, but your client must be able to display them...)
- This has been explained on IRC about a thousand and one times, so read
- the following, do not ask it on IRC:
-
- Table 19: Nordic countries character translations
- --------------------------------------------------
- Character Description
- ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~
- [, { 'a' with two dots over it
- ], } 'a' with a small circle above it
- \, | 'o' with two dots over it, or a dash ("/") through it
- ("[", "]", and "\" = upper case)
-
- In addition to that, Japanese IRC'ers use a special ANSI escape
- control sequences to transmit their Kanji alphabet. This may also look
- funny if you get some of it... Here's a sample: [$B$?$K$7[$B;$m$K#
- (nice, uh?)
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.7 What about NickServ?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- To quote from NickServ's help text, NickServ's purpose is to help
- avoiding nickname confusions on IRC. There's no such thing as "nickname
- ownership", however NickServ sends a warning to anyone else who signs on
- with your nickname. If you don't use IRC for 10 weeks, your nickname
- registration expires for reuse.
-
- Only a NickServ operator can change your NickServ password. To find
- out which NickServ operators are on-line, send
-
- /MSG NickServ@Service.de OPERWHO
-
- Nicknames with a "*" next to them are online at the time.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.8 I'm being flooded or harassed by a jerk. HELP!
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- If somebody is behaving like a jerk on IRC, like dumping to a channel
- Mb's of garbage, then he should be KICKed and eventually banned from the
- channel, (see "/HELP MODE" for details).
-
- If it's a matter of personal harassment, then you should set a proper
- IGNORE on that person, (preferably on his userid@hostname). Remember you
- can use wildcard expressions for IGNORE. More about this in section 2.2.
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.9 How do I get rid of a ghosted IRC session?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Sometimes you may have a "ghosted" IRC session, a process still
- running on your machine you would like to get rid of, but can't control
- anymore to issue a QUIT command. Going back to a unix shell, try listing
- your processes: ("ps -ux" or "ps -f" depending on your system)
-
- poly ~ > ps -ux
- USER PID %CPU %MEM SZ RSS TT STAT TIME COMMAND
- pioch 10410 1.4 0.2 839 402 pf S 0:00 /usr/local/bin/emacs
- pioch 25441 0.6 0.9 2888 1908 ? S 0:32 xterm -ls
- pioch 25444 0.4 0.2 550 341 pf S 0:17 -tcsh (tcsh)
- pioch 10404 0.1 0.3 897 624 pf S 0:00 irisVx 5 4 10403
- pioch 25634 0.0 0.3 1022 678 p6 S 0:22 irc
- pioch 25451 0.0 0.2 953 326 ? S 0:07 xmailbox
- pioch 25452 0.0 0.1 386 147 ? S 0:00 xdaliclock
- pioch 25459 0.0 0.3 1109 617 ? S 0:02 xman
- pioch 10403 0.0 0.1 574 124 pf I 0:00 mapleV
- pioch 10423 0.0 0.2 614 459 pf R 0:00 /bin/ps -ux
-
- Locate the line about your lost IRC session, (irc should appear in the
- COMMAND field of the line), and its PID, (process number, second field of
- the line here). In this example the PID is 25634, as shown here:
-
- USER PID %CPU %MEM SZ RSS TT STAT TIME COMMAND
- pioch 25634 0.0 0.3 1022 678 p6 S 0:22 irc
-
- All you then need to type is "kill -KILL" or "kill -9" immediatly
- followed by the PID found above: "kill -kill 25634" here.
-
- You can get more details about the commands involved here in the
- standard unix manual, ("man 1 ps" or "man 1 kill").
-
- If your machine crashed, and your nick is still in use on the IRC
- network, you'll have to wait 4 to 5 minutes for your server to recognize
- the fact. Getting an Operator to kill the ghost is almost never
- necessary, just sign on as another nickname and wait for the "Ping
- timeout" or "Bad link" message, then you can change your nick back...
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.10 About KILL usage.
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- KILL is a command restricted to IRC-Operators to deal with protocol
- errors heavily reducing the IRC network functionality. It's to be used
- with extreme caution, if at all.
-
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
- | KILL should never interfere with channel-operator status. |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------+
-
- If you op someone on a channel, you take the consequences. If someone
- joins #Whatever, you op them, then they kick everyone and lock the
- channel with some "Mode change +ib *!*@*", then suffer it: it's your
- fault, don't go whining to an IRC-op to fix it. If a channel is locked,
- you should start a new one.
-
- Effective methods to deal with obnoxious people are IGNORE, KICK and
- various MODEs on channels, such as +i and/or +b.
-
- If you have been abusively killed by an IRC-Operator, abusing his
- power to gain illegal channel-operator status for instance, yell! Mail a
- log to his server IRC-Administrator, (see ADMIN), join #Twilight_Zone or
- #EU-Opers for European-related problems, and explain what happened.
-
-
-
-
-
- 3.11 Where can I find more?
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Should your question not be listed above, you may want to check the
- "Frequently Unasked Questions", (FUQ) list, which will be shipping real
- soon now, featuring replies to:
-
- <lamer1> Are there any good FTP sites? (1)
- <lamer2> How do I join a channel?
- <lamer3> How do I become an IRCop?
-
-
- If you have access to Usenet News, (usually through a program called
- rn, trn, xrn or nn), you may want to join alt.irc debates, flamings and
- whinings.
-
- You can also join various IRC related mailing lists. "Operlist"
- discusses current (and past) server code, routing and protocol. Mail
- operlist-request@eff.org to join. Another mailing list,
- ircd-three@eff.org exists to discuss protocol revisions for the 3.0
- release of ircd, currently in planning. Mail ircd-three-request@eff.org
- to be added to that. There is also low-traffic mailing-lists for ircII
- vmsirc and irchat clients.
-
- Table 20: IRC related mailing lists
- ------------------------------------
- E-mail for subscriptions What's being talked about
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- operlist-request@eff.org Server code, routing and protocol.
- ircd-three-request@eff.org ircd 3.0 protocol
- listserv@grasp1.univ.lyon1.fr European IRC-Operators mailing list
- dl2p+@andrew.cmu.edu ircII mailing list
- vmsirc-request@vax1.elon.edu VMS IRC mailing list
- irchat-request@cc.tut.fi irchat mailing list
-
-
- ((1) 129.0.0.1 but you already know that.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 4. ADMINISTRATIVIA
- ===================
-
- 4.1 Revision history
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- This is version 1.1 of this paper. Version 1.0 of the IRCprimer was
- released in postscript form in June 1992 because I was sick of people
- asking for an IRC or ircII manual (and it was a good way to learn
- LaTeX!). During summer 1992 Owe Rasmussen did a very nice text
- conversion of the paper. Due to the support and many remarks I got, a
- new version is finally completed (special thanks to Olaf Titz !), along
- with Owe's plain ascii conversion.
-
- The primer is available in 3 formats:
-
- IRCprimer.ps.Z: Postscript version
- IRCprimer.txt: Plain text version
- IRCprimer.tex.Z: Source code.
-
-
-
-
-
- 4.2 Release sites for the IRCprimer
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- The latest version of the primer can be found on the following ftp
- sites, thanks to their admins:
-
- Table 21: IRCprimer release sites
- ---------------------------------
- ftp site location
- ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~
- nic.funet.fi /pub/unix/irc
- cs.bu.edu /irc/support
- coombs.anu.edu.au /pub/irc/docs
-
-
- Here's how to get the latest primer postscript version for example:
-
- ~ > ftp
- ftp> verbose off
- Verbose mode off.
- ftp> open cs.bu.edu
- Name (cs.bu.edu:yourname): ftp
- Password: yourname@yourhost
- ftp> cd irc/support
- ftp> bin
- ftp> get IRCprimer.ps.Z
- ftp> quit
- ~ > uncompress IRCprimer.ps.Z
- ~ >
-
-
-
-
-
- 4.3 Copyright (C) 1993 Nicolas PIOCH
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- This manual is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
- the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
- Software Foundation; either version 2 of the license, or (at your option)
- any later version.
-
- This manual is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
- WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General
- Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with this manual; if not, write to the
-
-
- Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
- 675 Mass Ave,
- Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
-
-
-
-
-
- 4.4 Credits
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Interesting informations contained in this paper are due to the work
- of various people interested in IRC improvement; I'm only responsible for
- omissions and mistakes :-)
-
- It's impossible to give here a full list, however special thanx are
- due to (in analphabetical order):
-
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Real life (uh ?) IRC E-mail |
- | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~ |
- | Christopher Davis ckd ckd@eff.org |
- | Christophe Wolfhugel Zolf wolf@grasp.insa-lyon.fr |
- | Darren Reed Avalon avalon@coombs.anu.edu.au |
- | Greg Lindahl, Wumpus gl8f@virginia.edu |
- | Helen Rose Trillian hrose@eff.org |
- | Ian Frechette Daemon frechett@spot.colorado.edu |
- | Jarkko Oikarinen WiZ jto@tolsun.oulu.fi |
- | Jeff Trim jtrim@orion.cair.du.edu |
- | Jonathon E. Tidswell Ernie jont@cs.su.oz.au |
- | Karl Kleinpaste poptart KarlKleinpaste@cs.cmu.edu |
- | Matthew Alderson thecure thecure@mullian.ee.mu.oz.au |
- | Matthew Green phone phone@coombs.anu.edu.au |
- | Mauri Haikola Mauri mjh@stekt.oulu.fi |
- | Michael Sandrof BigCheese ms5n+@andrew.cmu.edu |
- | Olaf Titz praetorius stitz@ira.uka.de |
- | Ove Ruben R. Olsen Gnarfer rubenro@viggo.blh.no |
- | Ronald van Loon rvl rvloon@cv.ruu.nl |
- | Troy Rollo Troy troy@cbme.unsw.edu.au |
- +---------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
- Feel free to bug me with your comments, I hope I'll have enough time
- to reply.
-
- Paris, February 21, 1993,
- Ecole Polytechnique,
-
- Nicolas PIOCH.
-