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Ergo IRCd Manual
https://ergo.chat/
Copyright © Daniel Oaks daniel@danieloaks.net, Shivaram Lingamneni slingamn@cs.stanford.edu
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Installing
- Features
- Frequently Asked Questions
- IRC over TLS
- Modes
- Commands
- Working with other software
- Acknowledgements
Introduction
This document goes over the Ergo IRC server, how to get it running and how to use it once it is up and running!
If you have any suggestions, issues or questions, feel free to submit
an issue on our GitHub
repo or ask in our channel #ergo
on
irc.ergo.chat or #ergo
on
irc.libera.chat.
Project Basics
Ergo is an ircd written “from scratch” in the Go language, i.e., it shares no code with the original ircd implementation or any other major ircd. It began as ergonomadic, which was developed by Jeremy Latt between 2012 and 2014. In 2016, Daniel Oaks forked the project under the name Oragono, in order to prototype IRCv3 features and for use as a reference implementation of the Modern IRC specification. Oragono 1.0.0 was released in February 2019; the project switched to its current name of Ergo in June 2021.
Ergo’s core design goals are:
- Being simple to set up and use
- Combining the features of an ircd, a services framework, and a bouncer (integrated account management, history storage, and bouncer functionality)
- Bleeding-edge IRCv3 support, suitable for use as an IRCv3 reference implementation
- High customizability via a rehashable (i.e., reloadable at runtime) YAML config
In addition to its unique features (integrated services and bouncer, comprehensive internationalization), Ergo also strives for feature parity with other major servers. Ergo is a mature project with multiple communities using it as a day-to-day chat server — we encourage you to consider it for your organization or community!
Scalability
We believe Ergo should scale comfortably to 10,000 clients and 2,000 clients per channel, making it suitable for small to medium-sized teams and communities. Ergo does not currently support server-to-server linking (federation), meaning that all clients must connect to the same instance. However, since Ergo is implemented in Go, it is reasonably effective at distributing work across multiple cores on a single server; in other words, it should “scale up” rather than “scaling out”. (Horizontal scalability is planned but is not scheduled for development in the near term.)
Even though it runs as a single instance, Ergo can be deployed for high availability (i.e., with no single point of failure) using Kubernetes. This technique uses a k8s LoadBalancer to receive external traffic and a Volume to store the embedded database file. See Hashbang’s implementation for a “worked example”.
If you’re interested in deploying Ergo at scale or for high
availability, or want performance tuning advice, come find us on #ergo
on
Libera, we’re very interested in what our software can do!
Installing
In this section, we’ll explain how to install and use the Ergo IRC server.
Windows
To get started with Ergo on Windows:
- Make sure you have the latest release downloaded.
- Extract the zip file to a folder.
- Copy and rename
default.yaml
toircd.yaml
. - Open up
ircd.yaml
using any text editor, and then save it once you’re happy. - Open up a
cmd.exe
window, thencd
to where you have Ergo extracted. - Run
ergo mkcerts
if you want to generate new self-signed SSL/TLS certificates (note that you can’t enable STS if you use self-signed certs).
To start the server, type ergo run
and hit enter, and
the server should start!
macOS / Linux / Raspberry Pi
To get started with Ergo on macOS, Linux, or on a Raspberry Pi:
- Make sure you have the latest release for your OS/distro downloaded.
- Extract the tar.gz file to a folder.
- Copy and rename
default.yaml
toircd.yaml
. - Open up
ircd.yaml
using any text editor, and then save it once you’re happy. - Open up a Terminal window, then
cd
to where you have Ergo extracted. - Run
./ergo mkcerts
if you want to generate new self-signed SSL/TLS certificates (note that you can’t enable STS if you use self-signed certs).
To start the server, type ./ergo run
and hit enter, and
the server should be ready to use!
Docker
- Pull the latest version of Ergo:
docker pull ghcr.io/ergochat/ergo:stable
- Create a volume for persistent data:
docker volume create ergo-data
- Run the container, exposing the default ports:
docker run -d --name ergo -v ergo-data:/ircd -p 6667:6667 -p 6697:6697 ghcr.io/ergochat/ergo:stable
For further information and a sample docker-compose file see the separate Docker documentation.
Building from source
You’ll need an up-to-date
distribution of the Go language for your OS and architecture. Once
you have that, just clone the repository and run
make build
. If everything goes well, you should now have an
executable named ergo
in the base directory of the
project.
Becoming an operator
Many administrative actions on an IRC server are performed “in-band”
as IRC commands sent from a client. The client in question must be an
IRC operator (“oper”, “ircop”). The easiest way to become an operator on
your new Ergo instance is first to pick a strong, secure password, then
“hash” it using the ergo genpasswd
command (run
ergo genpasswd
from the command line, then enter your
password twice), then copy the resulting hash into the
opers
section of your ircd.yaml
file. Then you
can become an operator by issuing the IRC command:
/oper admin mysecretpassword
.
The operator defined in the default configuration file is named
admin
and has full administrative privileges on the server;
see the oper-classes
and opers
blocks for
information on how to define additional operators, or less privileged
operators.
Rehashing
The primary way of configuring Ergo is by modifying the configuration file. Most changes to the configuration file can be applied at runtime by “rehashing”, i.e., reloading the configuration file without restarting the server process. This has the advantage of not disconnecting users. There are two ways to rehash Ergo:
- If you are an operator with the
rehash
capability, you can issue the/REHASH
command (you may have to/quote rehash
, depending on your client) - You can send the
SIGHUP
signal to Ergo, e.g., viakillall -HUP ergo
Rehashing also reloads TLS certificates and the MOTD. Some
configuration settings cannot be altered by rehash. You can monitor
either the response to the /REHASH
command, or the server
logs, to see if your rehash was successful.
Environment variables
Ergo can also be configured using environment variables, using the following technique:
- Find the “path” of the config variable you want to override in the
YAML file, e.g.,
server.websockets.allowed-origins
- Convert each path component from “kebab case” to “screaming snake
case”, e.g.,
SERVER
,WEBSOCKETS
, andALLOWED_ORIGINS
. - Prepend
ERGO
to the components, then join them all together using__
as the separator, e.g.,ERGO__SERVER__WEBSOCKETS__ALLOWED_ORIGINS
. - Set the environment variable of this name to a JSON (or YAML) value
that will be deserialized into this config field, e.g.,
export ERGO__SERVER__WEBSOCKETS__ALLOWED_ORIGINS='["https://irc.example.com", "https://chat.example.com"]'
However, settings that were overridden using this technique cannot be rehashed — changing them will require restarting the server.
Productionizing with systemd
The recommended way to operate ergo as a service on Linux is via
systemd. This provides a standard interface for starting, stopping, and
rehashing (via systemctl reload
) the service. It also
captures ergo’s loglines (sent to stderr in the default configuration)
and writes them to the system journal.
The only major distribution that currently packages Ergo is Arch Linux; the aforementioned AUR package includes a systemd unit file. However, it should be fairly straightforward to set up a productionized Ergo on any Linux distribution. Here’s a quickstart guide for Debian/Ubuntu:
- Create a dedicated, unprivileged role user who will own the ergo
process and all its associated files:
adduser --system --group ergo
. This user now has a home directory at/home/ergo
. To prevent other users from viewing Ergo’s configuration file, database, and certificates, restrict the permissions on the home directory:chmod 0700 /home/ergo
. - Copy the executable binary
ergo
, the config fileircd.yaml
, the databaseircd.db
, and the self-signed TLS certificate (fullchain.pem
andprivkey.pem
) to/home/ergo
. (If you don’t have anircd.db
, it will be auto-created as/home/ergo/ircd.db
on first launch.) Ensure that they are all owned by the new ergo role user:sudo chown ergo:ergo /home/ergo/*
. Ensure that the configuration file logs to stderr. - Install our example ergo.service
file to
/etc/systemd/system/ergo.service
. - Enable and start the new service with the following commands:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl enable ergo.service
systemctl start ergo.service
- Confirm that the service started correctly with
systemctl status ergo.service
On a non-systemd system, ergo can be configured to log to a file and
used logrotate(8),
since it will reopen its log files (as well as rehashing the config
file) upon receiving a SIGHUP. To rehash manually outside the context of
log rotation, you can use killall -HUP ergo
or
pkill -HUP ergo
. See distrib/init
for init scripts and related tools for non-systemd systems.
Using valid TLS certificates
The other major hurdle for productionizing (but one well worth the effort) is obtaining valid TLS certificates for your domain, if you haven’t already done so:
- The simplest way to get valid TLS certificates is from Let’s Encrypt with Certbot. The correct procedure will
depend on whether you are already running a web server on port 80. If
you are, follow the guides on the Certbot website; if you aren’t, you
can use
certbot certonly --standalone --preferred-challenges http -d example.com
(replaceexample.com
with your domain). - At this point, you should have certificates available at
/etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com
(replacingexample.com
with your domain). You should servefullchain.pem
as the certificate andprivkey.pem
as its private key. However, these files are owned by root and the private key is not readable by the ergo role user, so you won’t be able to use them directly in their current locations. You can write a post-renewal hook for certbot to make copies of these certificates accessible to the ergo role user. For example, install the following script as/etc/letsencrypt/renewal-hooks/post/install-ergo-certificates
, again replacingexample.com
with your domain name, and chmod it 0755:
#!/bin/bash
set -eu
umask 077
cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/fullchain.pem /home/ergo/
cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/example.com/privkey.pem /home/ergo/
chown ergo:ergo /home/ergo/*.pem
# rehash ergo, which will reload the certificates:
systemctl reload ergo.service
Executing this script manually will install the certificates for the first time and perform a rehash, enabling them.
If you are using Certbot 0.29.0 or higher, you can also change the
ownership of the files under /etc/letsencrypt
so that the
ergo user can read them, as described in the UnrealIRCd
documentation.
Upgrading to a new version of Ergo
As long as you are using official releases or release candidates of Ergo, any backwards-incompatible changes should be described in the changelog.
In general, the config file format should be fully backwards and forwards compatible. Unless otherwise noted, no config file changes should be necessary when upgrading Ergo. However, the “config changes” section of the changelog will typically describe new sections that can be added to your config to enable new functionality, as well as changes in the recommended values of certain fields.
The database is versioned; upgrades that involve incompatible changes
to the database require updating the database. If you have
datastore.autoupgrade
enabled in your config, the database
will be backed up and upgraded when you restart your server when
required. Otherwise, you can apply upgrades manually:
- Stop your server
- Make a backup of your database file
- Run
ergo upgradedb
(from the same working directory and with the same arguments that you would use when runningergo run
) - Start the server again
If you want to run our master branch as opposed to our releases, come find us in our channel and we can guide you around any potential pitfalls.
Features
In this section, we’ll explain and go through using various features of the Ergo IRC server.
User Accounts
In most IRC servers you can use NickServ
to register an
account. You can do the same thing with Ergo, by default, with no other
software needed!
To register an account, use:
/NS REGISTER <password>
or
/msg nickserv register <password>
This is the way to go if you want to use a regular password.
<password>
is your password, your current nickname
will become your username. Your password cannot contain spaces, but make
sure to use a strong one anyway.
If you want to use a TLS client certificate instead of a password to
authenticate (SASL EXTERNAL
), then you can use the command
below to do so. (If you’re not sure what this is, don’t worry – just use
the above password method to register an account.)
/NS REGISTER *
Once you’ve registered, you’ll need to set up SASL to login. One of the more complete SASL instruction pages is libera.chat’s page here. Open up that page, find your IRC client and then setup SASL with your chosen username and password!
If your client doesn’t support SASL, you can typically use the
“server password” (PASS
) field in your client to log into
your account automatically when connecting. Set the server password to
accountname:accountpassword
, where accountname
is your account name and accountpassword
is your account
password.
Account/Nick Modes
Ergo supports several different modes of operation with respect to accounts and nicknames.
Nick equals account
In this mode (the default), registering an account gives you privileges over the use of the account name as a nickname. The server will then enforce several invariants with regard to your nickname:
- Only you can use your nickname, i.e., clients cannot use your nickname unless they are logged into your account
- You must use your nickname, i.e., if you are logged into your account, then the server will require you to use your account name as your nickname
- If you unregister your account, your nickname will be permanently unreclaimable (thus preventing people from impersonating you)
In this mode, it is very important that end users authenticate to
their accounts as part of the initial IRC handshake (traditionally
referred to as “connection registration”); otherwise they will not be
able to use their registered nicknames. The preferred mechanism for this
is SASL, which is
supported by most modern clients. As a fallback, this can also be done
via the PASS
(server password) command; set the “server
password” field of the client to AzureDiamond:hunter2
,
where AzureDiamond
is the account name and
hunter2
is the account password.
As an end user, if you want to change your nickname, you can register
a new account and transfer any channel ownerships to it using
/msg ChanServ transfer
.
To enable this mode as the server operator, set the following configs
(note that they are already set in default.yaml
):
accounts.registration.enabled = true
accounts.authentication-enabled = true
accounts.nick-reservation.enabled = true
accounts.nick-reservation.method = strict
accounts.nick-reservation.allow-custom-enforcement = false
accounts.nick-reservation.force-nick-equals-account = true
Lenient nick reservation
In this mode (implemented in the traditional.yaml
config
file example), nickname reservation is available, but end users must opt
into it using /msg NickServ set enforce strict
. Moreover,
you need not use your nickname; even while logged in to your account,
you can change nicknames to anything that is not reserved by another
user. You can reserve some of your alternate nicknames using
/msg NickServ group
.
To enable this mode as the server operator, set the following configs
(they are set in traditional.yaml
):
accounts.registration.enabled = true
accounts.authentication-enabled = true
accounts.nick-reservation.enabled = true
accounts.nick-reservation.method = optional
accounts.nick-reservation.allow-custom-enforcement = true
accounts.nick-reservation.force-nick-equals-account = false
No nick reservation
This makes Ergo’s services act similar to Quakenet’s Q bot. In this
mode, users cannot own or reserve nicknames. In other words, there is no
connection between account names and nicknames. Anyone can use any
nickname (as long as it’s not already in use by another running client).
However, accounts are still useful: they can be used to register
channels (see below), and some IRCv3-capable clients (with the
account-tag
or extended-join
capabilities) may
be able to take advantage of them.
To enable this mode, set the following configs:
accounts.registration.enabled = true
accounts.authentication-enabled = true
accounts.nick-reservation.enabled = false
SASL-only mode
This mode is comparable to Slack, Mattermost, or similar products intended as internal chat servers for an organization or team. In this mode, clients cannot connect to the server unless they log in with SASL as part of the initial handshake. This allows Ergo to be deployed facing the public Internet, with fine-grained control over who can log in.
In this mode, clients must not be allowed to register their own
accounts, so user-initiated account registration must be disabled.
Accordingly, an operator must do the initial account creation, using the
SAREGISTER
command of NickServ. (For more details,
/msg NickServ help saregister
.) To bootstrap this process,
you can make an initial connection from localhost, which is exempt (by
default) from the requirement, or temporarily add your own IP to the
exemption list. You can also use a more permissive configuration for
bootstrapping, then switch to this one once you have your account.
Another possibility is permanently exempting an internal network, e.g.,
10.0.0.0/8
, that only trusted people can access.
To enable this mode, use the configs from the “nick equals account”
section (i.e., start from default.yaml
) and make these
modifications:
accounts.registration.enabled = false
accounts.require-sasl.enabled = true
Email verification
By default, account registrations complete immediately and do not
require a verification step. However, like other service frameworks,
Ergo’s NickServ can be configured to require email verification of
registrations. The main challenge here is to prevent your emails from
being marked as spam, which you can do by configuring SPF, DKIM,
and DMARC. For
example, this configuration (when added to the
accounts.registration
section) enables email verification,
with the emails being signed with a DKIM key and sent directly from
Ergo:
email-verification:
enabled: true
sender: "admin@my.network"
require-tls: true
helo-domain: "my.network" # defaults to server name if unset
dkim:
domain: "my.network"
selector: "20200229"
key-file: "dkim.pem"
You must create the corresponding TXT record
20200229._domainkey.my.network
to hold your public key.
You can also use an external SMTP server (“MTA”, “relay”, or
“smarthost”) to send the email, in which case DKIM signing can be
deferred to that server; see the mta
section of the example
config for details.
Channel Registration
Once you’ve registered an account, you can also register channels. If you own a channel, you’l be opped whenever you join it, and the topic/modes will be remembered and re-applied whenever anyone rejoins the channel.
To register a channel, make sure you’re joined to it and logged into your account. If both those are true, you can send this command to register your account:
/CS REGISTER #channelname
For example, /CS REGISTER #channel
will register the
channel #channel
to my account. If you have a registered
channel, you can use /CS OP #channel
to regain ops in it.
Right now, the options for a registered channel are pretty sparse, but
we’ll add more as we go along.
If your friends have registered accounts, you can automatically grant
them operator permissions when they join the channel. For more details,
see /CS HELP AMODE
.
Language
Ergo supports multiple languages! Specifically, once you connect you’re able to get server messages in other languages (messages from other users will still be in their original languages, though).
To see which languages are supported, run this command:
/QUOTE CAP LS 302
In the resulting text, you should see a token that looks something like this:
draft/languages=11,en,~ro,~tr-TR,~el,~fr-FR,~pl,~pt-BR,~zh-CN,~en-AU,~es,~no
That’s the list of languages we support. For the token above, the supported languages are:
en
: Englishen-AU
: Australian Englishel
: Greekes
: Spanishfr-FR
: Frenchno
: Norwegianpl
: Polishpt-BR
: Brazilian Portugesero
: Romaniantr-TR
: Turkishzh-CN
: Chinese
To change to a specific language, you can use the
LANGUAGE
command like this:
/LANGUAGE ro zh-CN
The above will change the server language to Romanian, with a
fallback to Chinese. English will always be the final fallback, if
there’s a line that is not translated. Substitute any of the other
language codes in to select other languages, and run
/LANGUAGE en
to get back to standard English.
Our language and translation functionality is very early, so feel free to let us know if there are any troubles with it! If you know another language and you’d like to contribute, we’ve got a CrowdIn project here: https://crowdin.com/project/oragono
Multiclient (“Bouncer”)
Traditionally, every connection to an IRC server is separate must use a different nickname. Bouncers are used to work around this, by letting multiple clients connect to a single nickname. With Ergo, if the server is configured to allow it, multiple clients can share a single nickname without needing a bouncer. To use this feature, both connections must authenticate with SASL to the same user account and then use the same nickname during connection registration (while connecting to the server) – once you’ve logged-in, you can’t share another nickname.
To enable this functionality, set
accounts.multiclient.enabled
to true
. Setting
accounts.multiclient.allowed-by-default
to
true
will allow this for everyone. If
allowed-by-default
is false
(but
enabled
is still true
), users can opt in to
shared connections using
/msg NickServ SET multiclient true
.
You can see a list of your active sessions and their idle times with
/msg NickServ sessions
(network operators can use
/msg NickServ sessions nickname
to see another user’s
sessions).
Ergo now supports “always-on clients” that remain present on the
server (holding their nickname, subscribed to channels, able to receive
DMs, etc.) even when no actual clients are connected. To enable this as
a server operator, set accounts.multiclient.always-on
to
either opt-in
, opt-out
, or
mandatory
. To enable or disable it as a client (if the
server setting is opt-in
or opt-out
respectively), use /msg NickServ set always-on true
(or
false
).
History
Ergo supports two methods of storing history, an in-memory buffer
with a configurable maximum number of messages, and persistent history
stored in MySQL (with no fixed limits on message capacity). To enable
in-memory history, configure history.enabled
and associated
settings in the history
section. To enable persistent
history, enter your MySQL server information in
datastore.mysql
and then enable persistent history storage
in history.persistent
.
Unfortunately, client support for history playback is still patchy. In descending order of support:
- The IRCv3 chathistory specification offers the most fine-grained control over history replay. It is supported by Kiwi IRC, and hopefully other clients soon.
- We emulate the ZNC playback module for clients that support it. You may need to enable support for it explicitly in your client (see the “ZNC” section below).
- If you set your client to always-on (see the previous section for
details), you can set a “device ID” for each device you use. Ergo will
then remember the last time your device was present on the server, and
each time you sign on, it will attempt to replay exactly those messages
you missed. There are a few ways to set your device ID when connecting:
- You can add it to your SASL username with an
@
, e.g., if your SASL username isalice
you can sendalice@phone
- You can add it in a similar way to your IRC protocol username
(“ident”), e.g.,
alice@phone
- If login to user accounts via the
PASS
command is enabled on the server, you can provide it there, e.g., by sendingalice@phone:hunter2
as the server password
- You can add it to your SASL username with an
- If you only have one device, you can set your client to be always-on
and furthermore
/msg NickServ set autoreplay-missed true
. This will replay missed messages, with the caveat that you must be connecting with at most one client at a time. - You can manually request history using
/history #channel 1h
(the parameter is either a message count or a time duration). (Depending on your client, you may need to use/QUOTE history
instead.) - You can autoreplay a fixed number of lines (e.g., 25) each time you
join a channel using
/msg NickServ set autoreplay-lines 25
.
Persistent history with MySQL
On most Linux and POSIX systems, it’s straightforward to set up MySQL (or MariaDB) as a backend for persistent history. This increases the amount of history that can be stored, and ensures that message data will be retained on server restart (you can still use the configuration options to set a time limit for retention). Here’s a quick start guide for Ubuntu based on Digital Ocean’s documentation:
- Install the
mysql-server
package - Run
mysql_secure_installation
as root; this corrects some insecure package defaults - Connect to your new MySQL server as root with
mysql --user root
- In the MySQL prompt, create a new
ergo
user (substitute a strong password of your own forhunter2
):CREATE USER 'ergo'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'hunter2';
- Create the database that history will be stored in:
CREATE DATABASE ergo_history;
- Grant privileges on the database to the new user:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON ergo_history.* to 'ergo'@'localhost';
- Enable persistent history in your Ergo config file. At a minimum,
you must set
history.persistent.enabled = true
. You may want to modify the other options underhistory.persistent
andhistory
. - Configure Ergo to talk to MySQL (again, substitute the strong
password you chose previously for
hunter2
):
mysql:
enabled: true
socket-path: "/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock"
user: "ergo"
password: "hunter2"
history-database: "ergo_history"
timeout: 3s
IP cloaking
Unlike many other chat and web platforms, IRC traditionally exposes the user’s IP and hostname information to other users. This is in part because channel owners and operators (who have privileges over a single channel, but not over the server as a whole) need to be able to ban spammers and abusers from their channels, including via hostnames in cases where the abuser tries to evade the ban.
IP cloaking is a way of balancing these concerns about abuse with concerns about user privacy. With cloaking, the user’s IP address is deterministically “scrambled”, typically via a cryptographic MAC, to form a “cloaked” hostname that replaces the usual reverse-DNS-based hostname. Users cannot reverse the scrambling to learn each other’s IPs, but can ban a scrambled address the same way they would ban a regular hostname.
Ergo supports cloaking, which is enabled by default (via the
server.ip-cloaking
section of the config). However, Ergo’s
cloaking behavior differs from other IRC software. Rather than
scrambling each of the 4 bytes of the IPv4 address (or each 2-byte pair
of the 8 such pairs of the IPv6 address) separately, the server
administrator configures a CIDR length (essentially, a fixed number of
most-significant-bits of the address). The CIDR (i.e., only the most
significant portion of the address) is then scrambled atomically to
produce the cloaked hostname. This errs on the side of user privacy,
since knowing the cloaked hostname for one CIDR tells you nothing about
the cloaked hostnames of other CIDRs — the scheme reveals only whether
two users are coming from the same CIDR. We suggest using 32-bit CIDRs
for IPv4 (i.e., the whole address) and 64-bit CIDRs for IPv6, since
these are the typical assignments made by ISPs to individual
customers.
Setting server.ip-cloaking.num-bits
to 0 gives users
cloaks that don’t depend on their IP address information at all, which
is an option for deployments where privacy is a more pressing concern
than abuse. Holders of registered accounts can also use the vhost system
(for details, /msg HostServ HELP
.)
Moderation
Ergo shares some server operator moderation tools with other ircds. In particular:
/SAMODE
can be used to grant or remove channel privileges. For example, to create an operator in a channel that has no operators:/SAMODE #channel +o nickname
/SAJOIN
lets operators join channels despite restrictions, or forcibly join another user to a channel. For example,/SAJOIN #channel
or/SAJOIN nickname #channel
.
However, Ergo’s multiclient and always-on features mean that abuse prevention (at the server operator level) requires different techniques than a traditional IRC network. Server operators have two principal tools for abuse prevention:
/UBAN
, which can disable user accounts and/or ban offending IPs and networks/DEFCON
, which can impose emergency restrictions on user activity in response to attacks
See the /HELP
(or /HELPOP
) entries for
these commands for more information, but here’s a rough workflow for
mitigating spam or other attacks:
- Subscribe to the
a
snomask to monitor for abusive registration attempts (this is set automatically in the default operator config, but can be added manually with/mode mynick +s u
) - Given abusive traffic from a nickname, use
/UBAN INFO <nickname>
to find out information about their connection - If they are using an account, suspend the account with
/UBAN ADD <account>
, which will disconnect them - If they are not using an account, or if they’re spamming new
registrations from an IP, you can add a temporary ban on their
IP/network with
/UBAN ADD <ip | network>
- When facing a flood of abusive registrations that cannot be stemmed
with
/DLINE
, use/DEFCON 4
to temporarily restrict registrations. (At/DEFCON 2
, all new connections to the server will require SASL, but this will likely be disruptive to legitimate users as well.)
For channel operators,
/msg ChanServ HOWTOBAN #channel nickname
will provide
similar information about the best way to ban a user from a channel.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I submit a suggestion?
Awesome! We love getting new suggestions for features, ways to improve the server and the tooling around it, everything.
There are two ways to make suggestions, either:
- Submit an issue on our bug tracker.
- Talk to us in the
#ergo
channel on irc.ergo.chat or irc.libera.chat.
Why can’t I oper?
If you try to oper unsuccessfully, Ergo will disconnect you from the network. If you’re unable to oper, here are some things to double-check:
- Did you correctly generate the hashed password with
ergo genpasswd
? - Did you add the password hash to the correct config file, then save the file?
- Did you rehash or restart Ergo after saving the file?
The config file accepts hashed passwords, not plaintext passwords.
You must run ergo genpasswd
, type your actual password in,
and then receive a hashed blob back (it will look like
$2a$04$GvCFlShLZQjId3dARzwOWu9Nvq6lndXINw2Sdm6mUcwxhtx1U/hIm
).
Enter that into the relevant opers
block in your config
file, then save the file.
After that, you must rehash or restart Ergo to apply the config change. If a rehash didn’t accomplish the desired effects, you might want to try a restart instead.
Why is Ergo ignoring my ident response / USER command?
The default/recommended configuration of Ergo does not query remote
ident servers, and furthermore ignores any user/ident sent with the
USER
command. All user/ident fields are set to a constant
~u
. There are a few reasons for this:
- Remote ident lookups slow down connection initiation and pose privacy and security concerns (since they transmit usernames over the Internet in plaintext).
- Ignoring user/ident simplifies bans; in general, a channel ban in
Ergo should target either the nickname or the hostname. As a channel
operator,
/msg ChanServ HOWTOBAN #channel nick
will recommend a way of banning any given user. - Ident is commonly used to distinguish users connecting from the same trusted shell host or shared bouncer. This is less important with Ergo, which can act as a bouncer itself.
- Because of limitations of the IRC protocol, every character of the user/ident field counts against the maximum size of a message that can be sent.
As an operator, you can modify this behavior if desired; see the
check-ident
and coerce-ident
settings in the
config file.
Why can’t I change nicknames?
The default/recommended configuration of Ergo does not allow authenticated users to change their nicknames; an authenticated user must use their account name as their nickname. There are a few reasons for this:
- Assigning a consistent nickname prevents certain “split-brain”
scenarios that break Ergo’s “multiclient” functionality. In brief, if
two clients are connecting to the same account/identity, but only one of
them issues a
/NICK
command, and then one of them subsequently loses and regains its connection to the server, they “break apart”: they will have separate identities and channel memberships on the network, and it’s difficult to bring them back together again. - The use of a consistent nickname reduces the possibility of edge cases in history playback.
- The use of a consistent nickname simplifies offline messaging (which is a first-class concept for always-on clients).
- Ergo eliminates the cases in conventional IRC servers that necessitate nickname changes. In particular, you can always claim your nickname, even if the server is still waiting for an old client to time out, and you can connect arbitrarily many clients to the same nickname.
As an operator, you can disable this behavior using the
force-nick-equals-account
setting, but this is discouraged
because it has no effect on always-on clients; always-on clients must
use their account names as their nicknames regardless of this
setting.
How do I make a private channel?
We recommend that server administrators set the following recommended defaults:
nick-reservation-method: strict
force-nick-equals-account: true
These settings imply that any registered account name can be treated as synonymous with a nickname; anyone using the nickname is necessarily logged into the account, and anyone logged into the account is necessarily using the nickname.
Under these circumstances, users can follow the following steps:
- Register a channel
(
/msg ChanServ register #example
) - Set it to be invite-only (
/mode #example +i
) - Add the desired nick/account names to the invite exception list
(
/mode #example +I alice
) - Anyone with persistent half-operator status or higher will also be
able to join without an invite
(
/msg ChanServ amode #example +h alice
)
Similarly, for a public channel (one without +i
), users
can ban nick/account names with /mode #example +b bob
. (To
restrict the channel to users with valid accounts, set it to
registered-only with /mode #example +R
.)
How do I send an announcement to all connected users?
Ergo supports a simplified form of the “global notice” or “wallops”
capabilities found in other ircds. With the massmessage
operator capability, you can
/NOTICE $$* text of your announcement
, and it will be sent
to all connected users. If you have human-readable hostnames enabled (in
the default/recommended configuration they are not), you can also
/NOTICE $#wild*card.host.name
.
IRC over TLS
IRC has traditionally been available over both plaintext (on port
6667) and SSL/TLS (on port 6697). We recommend that you make your server
available exclusively via TLS, since exposing plaintext access allows
for unauthorized interception or modification of user data or passwords.
The default config file no longer exposes a plaintext port, so if you
haven’t modified your listeners
section, you’re good to
go.
For a quickstart guide to obtaining valid TLS certificates from Let’s Encrypt, see the “productionizing” section of the manual above.
How can I “redirect” users from plaintext to TLS?
The STS
specification can be used to redirect clients from plaintext to TLS
automatically. If you set server.sts.enabled
to
true
, clients with specific support for STS that connect in
plaintext will disconnect and reconnect over TLS. To use STS, you must
be using certificates issued by a generally recognized certificate
authority, such as Let’s Encrypt.
Many clients do not have this support. However, you can designate port 6667 as an “STS-only” listener: any client that connects to such a listener will receive both the machine-readable STS policy and a human-readable message instructing them to reconnect over TLS, and will then be disconnected by the server before they can send or receive any chat data. Here is an example of how to configure this behavior:
listeners:
":6667":
sts-only: true
# These are loopback-only plaintext listeners on port 6668:
"127.0.0.1:6668": # (loopback ipv4, localhost-only)
"[::1]:6668": # (loopback ipv6, localhost-only)
":6697":
tls:
cert: fullchain.pem
key: privkey.pem
sts:
enabled: true
# how long clients should be forced to use TLS for.
duration: 1mo2d5m
Reverse proxies
Ergo supports the use of reverse proxies (such as nginx, or a Kubernetes LoadBalancer) that sit between it and the client. In these deployments, the PROXY protocol is used to pass the end user’s IP through to Ergo. These proxies can be used to terminate TLS externally to Ergo, e.g., if you need to support versions of the TLS protocol that are not implemented natively by Go, or if you want to consolidate your certificate management into a single nginx instance.
The first step is to add the reverse proxy’s IP to
proxy-allowed-from
and ip-limits.exempted
.
(Use localhost
to exempt all loopback IPs and Unix domain
sockets.)
After that, there are two possibilities:
- If you’re using a proxy like nginx or stunnel that terminates TLS, then forwards a PROXY v1 (ASCII) header ahead of a plaintext connection, no further Ergo configuration is required. You need only configure your proxy to send the PROXY header. Here’s an example nginx config.
- If you’re using a cloud load balancer that either sends a PROXY v1
header ahead of unterminated TLS (like DigitalOcean)
or sends a PROXY v2 (binary) header (like the AWS
“Network Load Balancer”), Ergo must be configured to expect a PROXY
header ahead of the connection. Add
proxy: true
to the listener config block, e.g.,
":6697":
tls:
cert: fullchain.pem
key: privkey.pem
proxy: true
Client certificates
Ergo supports authenticating to user accounts via TLS client
certificates. The end user must enable the client certificate in their
client and also enable SASL with the EXTERNAL
method. To
register an account using only a client certificate for authentication,
connect with the client certificate and use /NS REGISTER *
(or /NS REGISTER * email@example.com
if email verification
is enabled on the server). To add a client certificate to an existing
account, obtain the SHA-256 fingerprint of the certificate (either by
connecting with it and looking at your own /WHOIS
response,
in particular the 276 RPL_WHOISCERTFP
line, or using the
openssl command
openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -sha256 -in example_client_cert.pem
),
then use the /NS CERT
command).
Client certificates are not supported over websockets due to a Chrome bug.
SNI
Ergo supports SNI; this is useful if you have multiple domain names for your server, with different certificates covering different domain names. Configure your TLS listener like this:
":6697":
tls-certificates:
-
cert: cert1.pem
key: key1.pem
-
cert: cert2.pem
key: key2.pem
If multiple certificates are applicable, or the client does not send SNI, the server will offer the first applicable certificate in the list.
Modes
On IRC, you can set modes on users and on channels. Modes are basically extra information that changes how users and channels work.
In this section, we give an overview of the modes Ergo supports.
User Modes
These are the modes which can be set on you when you’re connected.
+i - Invisible
If this mode is set, you’re marked as ‘invisible’. This means that
your channels won’t be shown when users /WHOIS
you (except
for IRC operators, they can see all the channels you’re in).
To set this mode on yourself:
/mode dan +i
+o - Operator
If this mode is set, you’re marked as an ‘IRC Operator’. This means
that you’re an admin of some sort on the server and have some special
powers regular users don’t have. To set this mode, you authenticate
(oper-up) using the /OPER
command.
+R - Registered-Only
If this mode is set, you’ll only receive messages from other users if they’re logged into an account. If a user who isn’t logged-in messages you, you won’t see their message.
To set this mode on yourself:
/mode dan +R
To unset this mode and let anyone speak to you:
/mode dan -R
+s - Server Notice Masks (“snomasks”)
This is a special ‘list mode’. If you’re an IRC operator, this mode
lets you see special server notices that get sent out. See
/helpop snomasks
(as an operator) for more information on
this mode.
+Z - TLS
This mode is automatically set if you’re connecting using SSL/TLS. There’s no way to set this yourself, and it’s automatically set or not set when you connect to the server.
+B - Bot
If this mode is set, you are marked as a ‘Bot’. The bot can set this mode on itself. This adds additional information in response to WHOIS
/WHOIS Bot
will return an extra response of RPL_WHOISBOT
with the
numeric 335
which can be used to identify said Bot.
+T - No CTCPs
If this mode is set, you will not recieve CTCP messages.
To set this mode on yourself:
/mode dan +T
To unset this mode and recieve CTCP messages:
/mode dan -T
Channel Modes
These are the modes that can be set on channels when you’re a channel operator!
+b - Ban
With this channel mode, you can change and see who’s banned from the channel. Specifically, you can ban ‘masks’, or a set of nickname, username and hostname.
Here’s an example of banning a user named bob from channel #test:
/MODE #test +b bob!*@*
Let’s say that bob is connecting from the address
192.168.0.234
. You could also do this to ban him:
/MODE #test +b *!*@192.168.0.234
Banning bob in this way means that nobody from that address can connect.
To remove a ban, you do the same thing with -b
instead
of +b
.
To view the bans that exist on the channel, you can do this instead:
/MODE #test b
Extended Bans
Users can be muted rather than banned by prefixing a ban mask with
m:
. This prevents matching users from speaking in the
channel, without kicking them or preventing them from joining the
channel. For example, to mute a user named bob in the
channel #test:
/MODE #test +b m:bob!*@*
The mute can be removed with -b
instead of
+b
.
+e - Ban-Exempt
With this channel mode, you can change who’s allowed to bypass bans. For example, let’s say you set these modes on the channel:
/MODE #test +b *!*@192.168.0.234
/MODE #test +e bob!*@*
This means that bob will always be able to join,
even if he’s connecting from 192.168.0.234
.
For everything else, this mode acts like the +b - Ban
mode.
+f - Forward
This channel mode takes another channel as its parameter. Users who are unable to join this channel are forwarded to the provided channel instead.
You need be a channel operator in both channels in order to set this mode.
/MODE #test +f #foo
This means that users who attempt to join #test
, but
cannot due to another channel mode like +i
or
+l
, will be forwarded to #foo
instead.
+i - Invite-Only
If this channel mode is set on a channel, users will only be able to
join if someone has /INVITE
’d them first.
To set a channel to invite-only:
/MODE #test +i
To unset the mode and let anyone join:
/MODE #test -i
+I - Invite-Exempt
With this channel mode, you can change who’s allowed to join the
channel when the +i - Invite-Only
mode is enabled.
For example, let’s say you set these modes on the channel:
/MODE #test +i
/MODE #test +I bob!*@*
This means that bob will be able to join even
without being /INVITE
’d.
For everything else, this mode acts like the +b - Ban
mode.
+k - Key
This channel mode lets you set a ‘key’ that other people will need to join your channel. To set a key:
/MODE #test +k p4ssw0rd
Then, to join users will need to do
/JOIN #test p4ssw0rd
. If they try to join without the key,
they will be rejected.
To unset the key:
/MODE #test -k
+l - Limit
This mode lets you restrict how many users can join the channel.
Let’s say that #test
currently has 5 users in it, and
you run this command:
/MODE #test +l 6
Only one more user will be able to join the channel. If anyone tries to join the channel when there’s already six people on it, they will get rejected.
Just like the +k - Key
mode, to unset the limit:
/MODE #test -l
+m - Moderated
This mode lets you restrict who can speak in the channel. If the
+m
mode is enabled, normal users won’t be able to say
anything. Users who are Voice, Halfop, Channel-Op, Admin and Founder
will be able to talk.
To set this mode:
/MODE #test +m
To unset this mode (and let everyone speak again):
/MODE #test -m
+n - No Outside Messages
This mode is enabled by default, and means that only users who are joined to the channel can send messages to it.
If this mode is unset, users who aren’t on your channel can send messages to it. This can be useful with, for example, GitHub or notification bots if you want them to send messages to your channel but don’t want them to clutter your channel with by joining and leaving it.
+R - Only Registered Users Can Join or Speak
If this mode is set, only users that have logged into an account will be able to join and speak on the channel. If this is set and a regular, un-logged-in user tries to join, they will be rejected.
Unregistered users already joined to the channel will not be kicked automatically. They will no longer be able to send messages to the channel, unless they have been voiced (+v). If they leave, they would not be allowed to rejoin.
To set this mode:
/MODE #test +R
To unset this mode:
/MODE #test -R
+M - Only Registered Users Can Speak
If this mode is set, only users that have logged into an account will be able to speak on the channel. Unregistered users may still join the channel, unless they are restricted from doing so by another channel mode like +R. When an unregistered user tries to speak, they will be rejected. Users who have been voiced (+v) are excepted from this restriction.
To set this mode:
/MODE #test +M
To unset this mode:
/MODE #test -M
+s - Secret
If this mode is set, it means that your channel should be marked as
‘secret’. Your channel won’t show up in /LIST
or
/WHOIS
, and non-members won’t be able to see its members
with /NAMES
or /WHO
.
To set this mode:
/MODE #test +s
To unset this mode:
/MODE #test -s
+t - Op-Only Topic
This mode is enabled by default, and means that only channel
operators can change the channel topic (using the /TOPIC
command).
If this mode is unset, anyone will be able to change the channel topic.
+C - No CTCPs
This mode means that client-to-client
protocol messages other than ACTION
(/me
)
cannot be sent to the channel.
+u - Auditorium
This mode means that JOIN
, PART
, and
QUIT
lines for unprivileged users (i.e., users without a
channel prefix like +v
or +o
) re not sent to
other unprivileged users. In conjunction with +m
, this is
suitable for “public announcements” channels.
+U - Op-Moderated
This mode means that messages from unprivileged users are only sent
to channel operators (who can then decide whether to grant the user
+v
).
Channel Prefixes
Users on a channel can have different permission levels, which are represented by having different characters in front of their nickname. This section explains the prefixes and what each one means.
+q (~) - Founder
This prefix means that the given user is the founder of the channel.
For example, if ~dan
is on a channel it means that
dan founded the channel. The ‘founder’ prefix only
appears on channels that are registered.
Founders have complete administrative control of the channel. They can take any action and modify anyone else’s privileges.
+a (&) - Admin
This prefix means that the given user is an admin on the channel. For
example, if &tom
is on a channel, then
tom is an admin on it. The ‘admin’ prefix only appears
on channels that are registered.
Admins have the same moderation privileges as channel operators (see below), but they can’t be kicked or demoted by other admins or channel operators.
+o (@) - Channel Operator
This prefix means that the given user is an operator on the channel
(chanop, for short). For example, if @ruby
is on a channel,
then ruby is an op.
Chanops are the default type of channel moderators. They can change the channel modes, ban/kick users, and add or remove chanop (or lower) privileges from users.
+h (%) - Halfop
This prefix means that the given user is a halfop on the channel
(half-operator). For example, if %twi
is on a channel, then
twi is a halfop.
Halfops have some moderation privileges: they can kick users (but not ban them), change the channel topic, and grant voice privileges (see below).
+v (+) - Voice
This prefix means that the given user is ‘voiced’ on the channel. For
example, if +faust
is on a channel, then
faust is voiced on that channel.
Voiced users can speak when the channel has +m
(moderated) mode enabled. They get no other special privileges or any
moderation abilities.
Commands
The best place to look for command help is on a running copy or Ergo itself!
To see the integrated command help, simply spin up a copy of Ergo and then run this command:
/HELPOP <command>
If that doesn’t work, you may need to run this instead:
/QUOTE HELP <command>
We may add some additional notes here for specific commands down the line, but right now the in-server docs are the best ones to consult.
Working with other software
Ergo should interoperate with most IRC-based software, including bots. If you have problems getting your preferred software to work with Ergo, feel free to report it to us. If the root cause is a bug in Ergo, we’ll fix it.
One exception is services frameworks like Anope or Atheme; we have our own services implementations built directly into the server, and since we don’t support federation, there’s no place to plug in an alternative implementation. (If you are already using Anope or Atheme, we support migrating your database — see below.)
If you’re looking for a bot that supports modern IRCv3 features, check out bitbot!
Kiwi IRC and Gamja
We recommend two web-based clients for use with Ergo: Kiwi IRC and Gamja. Both clients are 100% static files (HTML and Javascript), running entirely in the end user’s browser without the need for a separate server-side backend. They can connect directly to Ergo, using Ergo’s support for native websockets. Both clients support Ergo’s server-side history features; for a demonstration, see the Ergo testnet (click here for Kiwi or here for Gamja).
For best interoperability with firewalls, you should run an externally facing web server on port 443 that can serve both the static files and the websocket path, then have it reverse-proxy the websocket path to Ergo. For example, configure the following listener in ircd.yaml:
"127.0.0.1:8067":
websocket: true
then the following location block in your nginx config (this proxies
only /webirc
on your server to Ergo’s websocket
listener):
location /webirc {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8067;
proxy_read_timeout 600s;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "Upgrade";
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
}
then add the following startupOptions
to Kiwi’s
static/config.json
file (see the Ergo testnet’s
config.json for a fully functional example):
"startupOptions" : {
"websocket": "wss://domain.example.com/webirc",
"channel": "#chat",
"nick": "kiwi-n?"
},
or with Gamja, create a new config.json
(in the base
directory of the Gamja install, alongside Gamja’s
index.html
) file along these lines:
{
"server": {
"url": "wss://domain.example.com/webirc",
"autojoin": "#chat",
"auth": "optional"
}
}
Migrating from Anope or Atheme
You can import user and channel registrations from an Anope or Atheme database into a new Ergo database (not all features are supported). Use the following steps:
- Obtain the relevant migration tool from the latest stable release: anope2json.py or atheme2json.py respectively.
- Make a copy of your Anope or Atheme database file. (You may have to stop and start the services daemon to get it to commit all its changes.)
- Convert the database to JSON, e.g., with
python3 ./anope2json.py anope.db output.json
- Copy your desired Ergo config to
./ircd.yaml
(make any desired edits) - Run
ergo importdb ./output.json
- Run
ergo mkcerts
if necessary to generate self-signed TLS certificates - Run
ergo run
to bring up your new Ergo instance
Hybrid Open Proxy Monitor (HOPM)
hopm can be used to monitor your server for connections from open proxies, then automatically ban them. To configure hopm to work with Ergo, add operator blocks like this to your Ergo config file, which grant hopm the necessary privileges:
# operator classes
oper-classes:
# hopm
"hopm":
# title shown in WHOIS
title: Proxy Monitor
# capability names
capabilities:
- "kill"
- "ban"
- "nofakelag"
# ircd operators
opers:
# operator named 'hopm'
hopm:
# which capabilities this oper has access to
class: "hopm"
# custom hostname
vhost: "proxymonitor.hopm"
# modes are the modes to auto-set upon opering-up
modes: +is c
# password to login with /OPER command
# generated using "ergo genpasswd"
password: "$2a$04$JmsYDY6kX3/wwyK3ao0L7.aGJEto0Xm4DyL6/6zOmCpzeweIb8kdO"
Then configure hopm like this:
/* ergo */
connregex = ".+-.+CONNECT.+-.+ Client Connected \\[([^ ]+)\\] \\[u:([^ ]+)\\] \\[h:([^ ]+)\\] \\[ip:([^ ]+)\\] .+";
/* A DLINE example for ergo */
kline = "DLINE ANDKILL 2h %i :Open proxy found on your host.";
Tor
Ergo has code support for adding an .onion address to an IRC server, or operating an IRC server as a Tor onion service (“hidden service”). This is subtle, so you should be familiar with the Tor Project and the concept of an onion service.
There are two possible ways to serve Ergo over Tor. One is to add a
.onion address to a server that also serves non-Tor clients, and whose
IP address is public information. This is relatively straightforward.
Add a separate listener, for example 127.0.0.2:6668
, to
Ergo’s server.listeners
, then configure it with
tor: true
. Then configure Tor like this:
HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/ergo_hidden_service
HiddenServicePort 6667 127.0.0.2:6668
# these are optional, but can be used to speed up the circuits in the case
# where the server's own IP is public information (clients will remain anonymous):
HiddenServiceNonAnonymousMode 1
HiddenServiceSingleHopMode 1
Tor provides end-to-end encryption for onion services, so there’s no
need to enable TLS in Ergo for the listener (127.0.0.2:6668
in this example). Doing so is not recommended, given the difficulty in
obtaining a TLS certificate valid for an .onion address.
The second way is to run Ergo as a true hidden service, where the server’s actual IP address is a secret. This requires hardening measures on the Ergo side:
- Ergo should not accept any connections on its public interfaces. You
should remove any listener that starts with the address of a public
interface, or with
:
, which means “listen on all available interfaces”. You should listen only on127.0.0.1:6667
and a Unix domain socket such as/hidden_service_sockets/ergo_tor_sock
. - In this mode, it is especially important that all operator passwords are strong and all operators are trusted (operators have a larger attack surface to deanonymize the server).
- Onion services are at risk of being deanonymized if a client can
trick the server into performing a non-Tor network request. Ergo should
not perform any such requests (such as hostname resolution or ident
lookups) in response to input received over a correctly configured Tor
listener. However, Ergo has not been thoroughly audited against such
deanonymization attacks — therefore, Ergo should be deployed with
additional sandboxing to protect against this:
- Ergo should run with no direct network connectivity, e.g., by
running in its own Linux network namespace. systemd implements this with
the PrivateNetwork
configuration option: add
PrivateNetwork=true
to Ergo’s systemd unit file. - Since the loopback adapters are local to a specific network namespace, and the Tor daemon will run in the root namespace, Tor will be unable to connect to Ergo over loopback TCP. Instead, Ergo must listen on a named Unix domain socket that the Tor daemon can connect to. However, distributions typically package Tor with its own hardening profiles, which restrict which sockets it can access. Below is a recipe for configuring this with the official Tor packages for Debian:
- Ergo should run with no direct network connectivity, e.g., by
running in its own Linux network namespace. systemd implements this with
the PrivateNetwork
configuration option: add
- Create a directory with
0777
permissions such as/hidden_service_sockets
. - Configure Ergo to listen on
/hidden_service_sockets/ergo_tor_sock
, withtor: true
. - Ensure that Ergo has no direct network access as described above,
e.g., with
PrivateNetwork=true
. - Next, modify Tor’s apparmor profile so that it can connect to this
socket, by adding the line
/hidden_service_sockets/** rw,
to/etc/apparmor.d/local/system_tor
. - Finally, configure Tor with:
HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/ergo_hidden_service
HiddenServicePort 6667 unix:/hidden_service_sockets/ergo_tor_sock
# DO NOT enable HiddenServiceNonAnonymousMode
Instructions on how client software should connect to an .onion address are outside the scope of this manual. However:
- Hexchat is known to support .onion addresses, once it has been configured to use a local Tor daemon as a SOCKS proxy (Settings -> Preferences -> Network Setup -> Proxy Server).
- Pidgin should work with torsocks.
ZNC
ZNC 1.6.x (still pretty common in distros that package old versions
of IRC software) has a bug where it fails to
recognize certain SASL messages. Ergo supports a compatibility mode that
works around this to let ZNC complete the SASL handshake: this can be
enabled with server.compatibility.send-unprefixed-sasl
.
Ergo can emulate certain capabilities of the ZNC bouncer for the benefit of clients, in particular the third-party playback module. This enables clients with specific support for ZNC to receive selective history playback automatically. To configure this in Textual, go to “Server properties”, select “Vendor specific”, uncheck “Do not automatically join channels on connect”, and check “Only play back messages you missed”. Other clients with support are listed on ZNC’s wiki page.
External authentication systems
Ergo can be configured to call arbitrary scripts to authenticate
users; see the auth-script
section of the config. The API
for these scripts is as follows: Ergo will invoke the script with a
configurable set of arguments, then send it the authentication data as
JSON on the first line (\n
-terminated) of stdin. The input
is a JSON dictionary with the following keys:
accountName
: during passphrase-based authentication, this is a string, otherwise omittedpassphrase
: during passphrase-based authentication, this is a string, otherwise omittedcertfp
: during certfp-based authentication, this is a string, otherwise omittedpeerCerts
: during certfp-based authentication, this is a list of the PEM-encoded peer certificates (starting from the leaf), otherwise omittedip
: a string representation of the client’s IP address
The script must print a single line (\n
-terminated) to
its output and exit. This line must be a JSON dictionary with the
following keys:
success
, a boolean indicating whether the authentication was successfulaccountName
, a string containing the normalized account name (in the case of passphrase-based authentication, it is permissible to return the empty string or omit the value)error
, containing a human-readable description of the authentication error to be logged if applicable
Here is a toy example of an authentication script in Python that checks that the account name and the password are equal (and rejects any attempts to authenticate via certfp):
#!/usr/bin/python3
import sys, json
raw_input = sys.stdin.readline()
input = json.loads(raw_input)
account_name = input.get("accountName")
passphrase = input.get("passphrase")
success = bool(account_name) and bool(passphrase) and account_name == passphrase
print(json.dumps({"success": success}))
Note that after a failed script invocation, Ergo will proceed to check the credentials against its local database.
DNSBLs and other IP checking systems
Similarly, Ergo can be configured to call arbitrary scripts to validate user IPs. These scripts can either reject the connection, or require that the user log in with SASL. In particular, we provide an ergo-dnsbl plugin for querying DNSBLs.
The API is similar to the auth-script API described above (one line of JSON in, one line of JSON out). The input is a JSON dictionary with the following keys:
ip
: the IP in a standard human-readable notation, e.g.,1.1.1.1
or2001::0db8
The output is a JSON dictionary with the following keys:
result
: an integer indicating the result of the check (1 for “accepted”, 2 for “banned”, 3 for “SASL required”)banMessage
: a message to send to the user indicating why they are bannederror
, containing a human-readable description of the authentication error to be logged if applicable
Acknowledgements
Ergo’s past and present maintainers and core contributors are:
- Jeremy Latt (2012-2014)
- Edmund Huber (2014-2015)
- Daniel Oaks (2016-present)
- Shivaram Lingamneni (2017-present)
In addition, Ergo has benefited tremendously from its community of contributors, users, and translators, not to mention collaborations with the wider IRCv3 community. There are too many people to name here — but we try to credit people for individual contributions in the changelog, please reach out to us if we forgot you :-)