3
0
mirror of https://github.com/jlu5/PyLink.git synced 2024-12-30 14:42:50 +01:00
PyLink/docs/faq.md
James Lu 484822e5d7 docs: various fixes pointed out by @MrBenC
- Clarify the project's goals of being an IRC services *framework*
- Briefly mention in the FAQ that the relay plugin is needed for...well, relay!

[skip ci]
2018-02-17 00:50:12 -08:00

5.9 KiB
Raw Blame History

PyLink FAQ

Startup errors

You are missing dependencies - re-read https://github.com/GLolol/PyLink/blob/master/README.md#installation

I get errors like “yaml.scanner.ScannerError: while scanning for the next token, found character that cannot start any token”

You must use spaces and not tabs to indent your configuration file! (\t is the escaped code for a tab, which is not allowed in YAML)

I get errors like “ParserError: while parsing a block mapping … expected <block end>, but found <block sequence start>

This likely indicates an indentation issue. When you create a list in YAML (PyLinks config format), all entries must be indented consistently. For example, this is bad:

# This will cause an error!
someblock:
    - abcd
    - def
  - ghi

This is good:

someblock:
    - abcd
    - def
    - ghi

Linking / Connection issues

As a general guide, you should check the following before asking for support:

  • Is the target networks IRCd showing failed connection attempts?
    • If not:
      1. Is PyLink connecting to the right port (i.e. one the IRCd is listening on?)
      2. Is the target networks IRCd actually binding to the port youre trying to use? If there is a port conflict with another program, the IRCd may fail to bind but still start on other ports that are free.
      3. Is the target port firewalled on the target machine?
      4. Is there a working connection between the source and target servers? Use ping to test this, as routing issues between providers can cause servers to become unreachable.
        • If your servers are purposely blocking ping, its up to you to figure this out yourself… 😬
    • If so:
      1. Check for recvpass/sendpass/server hostname/IP mismatches - usually the IRCd will tell you if youre running into one of these, provided you have the right server notices enabled (consult your IRCd documentation for how to do this).
      2. Make sure youre not connecting with SSL on a non-SSL port, or vice versa.

If these steps havent helped you so far, maybe theres a bug somewhere. :)

My networks keep disconnecting with SSL errors!

See https://github.com/GLolol/PyLink/issues/463 - this seems to be caused by a regression in OpenSSL 1.0.2, which ships with distros such as Ubuntu 16.04 LTS. Unfortunately, the only workarounds so far are to either disable SSL/TLS, or wrap a plain IRC connection in an external service (stunnel, OpenVPN, etc.)

PyLink does not support inbound connections - much like regular services such as Atheme or Anope, it only connects outwards to IRCds. (If you dont understand what this means, it means you should turn autoconnect off for PyLink)

Relay issues

No! Only the PyLink administrator needs to host a PyLink instance with the relay plugin loaded, as each instance can connect to multiple networks. Everyone else only needs to add a link block on their IRCd.

InterJanus-style links between PyLink daemons are not supported yet; see https://github.com/GLolol/PyLink/issues/99 for any progress regarding that.

PyLink provides, in no particular order: - More complete support for modern IRCds (UnrealIRCd 4.x, InspIRCd 2.0, charybdis 4, Nefarious IRCu, etc.). - A flexible, maintainable codebase extensible beyond Relay. - Proper protocol negotiation leading to fewer SQUIT/DoS possibilities: - Better support for channel modes such as +fjMOR, etc. - Proper support for nick length limits with relayed users.

My IRCd SQUITs the relay server with errors like “Bad nickname introduced”!

First, check whether the SQUIT message includes the nick that triggered the netsplit. If this nick includes any characters not allowed in regular IRC, such as the slash (“/”), or is otherwise an invalid nick (e.g. beginning with a hyphen or number), this likely indicates a bug in PyLink Relay. These problems should be reported on the issue tracker.

However, if the nick mentioned is legal on IRC, this issue is likely caused by a max nick length misconfiguration: i.e. the relay server is introducing nicks too long for the target network. This can be fixed by setting the maxnicklen option in the affected networks PyLink server: block to the same value as that networks 005 NICKLEN (that is, the NICKLEN=<num> value in /raw version).

Clientbot doesnt relay both ways!

Load the relay_clientbot plugin. https://github.com/GLolol/PyLink/blob/e1fab8c/example-conf.yml#L303-L306

Relay is occasionally dropping users from channels!

This usually indicates a serious bug in either Relay or PyLinks protocol modules, and should be reported as an issue. When asking for help, please state which IRCds your PyLink instance is linking to: specifically, which IRCd the missing users are from and which IRCd the users are missing on. Also, be prepared to send debug logs as you reproduce the issue! - Another tip in debugging this is to run showchan on the affected channels. If PyLink shows users in showchan that arent in the actual user list, this is most likely a protocol module issue. If showchans output is correct, it is instead probably a relay issue where users arent spawning correctly.

This indicates either a bug in PyLinks protocol module or (less commonly) a bug in your IRCd. Hint: ENDBURST is not being sent or received properly, which causes service bot spawning to never trigger.

Make sure youre using an officially supported IRCd before requesting help, as custom IRCd code can potentially trigger S2S bugs and is not something we can support.