irc | ||
.gitignore | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
oragono.go | ||
oragono.motd | ||
oragono.yaml | ||
README.md |
Oragono
Oragono is a very early, extremely experimental fork of the Ergonomadic IRC daemon. Ergonomadic looks cool, and this is something I can experiment on. Hopefully most of the stuff I do in this can be merged back into Ergonomadic! Also see the mammon IRC daemon for something similar written in Python.
This project adheres to Semantic Versioning. For the purposes of versioning, we consider the “public API” to refer to the configuration files, CLI interface and database format.
NOTE: Things are probably very broken right now. The
THEATER
command does not work, and I’m currently most of
the way through rearchitecting the command handling. It should be
finished apart from the THEATER
command, but things are
probably still broken.
Features
- UTF-8 nick and channel names
- yaml configuration
- server password (PASS command)
- channels with most standard modes
- IRC operators (OPER command)
- passwords stored in bcrypt format
- channels that persist between restarts (+P)
- messages are queued in the same order to all connected clients
What about SSL/TLS?
There is inbuilt TLS support using the Go TLS implementation. However, stunnel version 4.56 with haproxy’s PROXY protocol may also be used. This will allow the server to get the client’s original addresses for hostname lookups.
Installation
go get
go install
cp oragono.yaml ircd.yaml
vim ircd.yaml # modify the config file to your liking
oragono initdb
oragono createcerts
Configuration
See the example oragono.yaml
.
Passwords are stored using bcrypt. You can generate encrypted password
strings for use in the config with the genpasswd
subcommand.
oragono genpasswd
Running the server
oragono run
Credits
- Jeremy Latt, creator of Ergonomadic, https://github.com/jlatt
- Edmund Huber, maintainer of Ergonomadic, https://github.com/edmund-huber
- Niels Freier, added WebSocket support to Ergonomadic, https://github.com/stumpyfr
- Daniel Oakley, maintainer of Oragono, https://github.com/DanielOaks
- apologies to anyone I forgot.