...around BOT in the line which gets fingerprint id to tell to services for certfp.
4.9 KiB
Identifying the bot to services
The different methods are listed in order which I (Mikaela) recommend. You can use all of these methods or only some of them. I (Mikaela) personally use SASL, CertFP and Server password.
Please also note that SASL and CertFP are only supported on Limnoria.
SASL
Note that SASL isn't supported on all networks. You can easily test
if it's supported with /msg SaslServ help
and if you get
response, SASL is probably supported, if you don't get reply or get
error about no such nick, SASL isn't supported.
SASL is widely agreed as the best method to identify to services as it identifies you before anyone (other than IRC operators) can see that you are connected. To enable SASL, simply:
config networks.<network>.sasl.username AccountName
config networks.<network>.sasl.password P455w0rd
where you of course replace AccountName and P455w0rd with your actual
NickServ account name and password. Remember to replace
<network>
with the real network name like
freenode
.
CertFP
You can test if CertFP is supported by services simply by doing
/msg NickServ cert
. If you get an error about "Insufficient
parameters for CERT", CertFP is supported, and if you get an error about
unknown command, it's not supported.
CertFP identifies you to services using a client (SSL) certificate and naturally requires an SSL connection. It doesn't identify you as soon as SASL, but unlike SASL, it identifies you even when services return from a netsplit, unlike any other mechanism.
First you must generate a certificate, and the easiest method is probably using OpenSSL which you should have even on Windows if you installed with pip:
openssl req -nodes -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout <BOT>.pem -x509 -days 3650 -out <BOT>.pem -subj "/CN=<BOT>"
Now you should have a <BOT>.pem
file in the
directory where you ran the command, presumably your home directory and
you only tell your bot where to find it and tell NickServ that it
belongs to you. Note that you should replace <BOT>
with the account name of your bot.
You have two choices, using the same certificate on all networks:
config protocols.irc.certfile /home/<username>/<BOT>.pem
or only on one or more network where it's manually configured:
config networks.<network>.certfile /home/<username>/<BOT>.pem
And lastly, you must tell the services what is your certificate fingerprint, which you can find out with:
openssl x509 -sha1 -noout -fingerprint -in <BOT>.pem | tr -d ':' | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z'
This results in something like
05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8
which you tell
your bot to tell services:
owner ircquote PRIVMSG NickServ :cert add 05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8
Or if your bot identifies as you, you can do that by yourself with:
/msg NickServ cert add 05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8
Remember to replace
05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8
with your own
fingerprint! Next time your bot connects, it should get identified
automatically.
Server password
Many networks support identifying using
username:password
as server password. If this is the case
with your network (anything that uses a charybdis-like IRCd), this
should work for you. Note that this identifies you after SASL so, your
real host might be seen. To do this, simply:
config networks.<network>.password username:password
Replace <network>
with the name of network, for
example freenode
and username:password with your real
username and password.
ZNC users: since ZNC 1.0, ZNC's identification format has been
username/network:password
.
Services plugin
The Services plugin comes with Supybot and should be an easy way to
identify your bot, but SASL and username:password
as server
password are recommended over it. Start by loading Services with:
load Services
and then tell it what NickServ and ChanServ are called:
config plugins.services.nickserv NickServ
config plugins.services.chanserv ChanServ
Remember to replace NickServ/ChanServ with their real names if they have a different name on any network. Note that they must have the same name on all networks, and you must have the same password on all networks.
Now you can set your password:
services password Bot P455w0rd
makes the bot attempt identifying as Bot using password P455w0rd.
Replace them with your real nickname and password. Note that if you have
multiple nicknames, you must run services password
for them
all.
If your bot happens to get a nickname that isn't configured, it won't
know how to identify. You might be able to avoid this issue by loading
NickCapture, (load NickCapture
) which attempts to regain
the primary nick, when it's possible, and when it regains the primary
nick, the identification should work.