NOTE: This might be heavily freenode-specific, but these things should work with other networks too, at least SASL and CertFP.

I will document the four different methods to identify to services which I use by myself. I use all of these at the same time.

SASL

There isn't much to say about SASL as it's easy to configure as long as your IRC client supports it. SASL identifies you before logging in, but it won't help you in case services are down. The easiest way to check does the network where you are support SASL is probably to whois or message or both to the SaslServ.

/whois SaslServ SaslServ
/msg SaslServ help

If the network does support SASL, you should see something like this which freenode gives:

XX:XX:XX -- [SaslServ] (SaslServ@services.): SASL Authentication Agent
XX:XX:XX -- [SaslServ] services. (Atheme IRC Services)
XX:XX:XX -- [SaslServ] is a Network Service
XX:XX:XX -- [saslserv] End of WHOIS
XX:XX:XX -- SaslServ: This service exists to identify connecting clients to the network. It has no public interface.

There are different mechanisms for use with SASL. I personally use them in this order with ZNC: PLAIN DH-AES DH-BLOWFISH and EXTERNAL.

This is what ZNC 1.5-git-3b01efc says about them:

XX:XX:XX < *sasl> +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+
XX:XX:XX < *sasl> | Mechanism   | Description                                        |
XX:XX:XX < *sasl> +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+
XX:XX:XX < *sasl> | EXTERNAL    | TLS certificate, for use with the *cert module     |
XX:XX:XX < *sasl> | DH-BLOWFISH | Secure negotiation using the DH-BLOWFISH mechanism |
XX:XX:XX < *sasl> | DH-AES      | More secure negotiation using the DH-AES mechanism |
XX:XX:XX < *sasl> | PLAIN       | Plain text negotiation                             |
XX:XX:XX < *sasl> +-------------+----------------------------------------------------+

Some notes:

CertFP

CertFP identifies you using SSL certificate which you must generate and add to your NickServ account.

You can use this command at IRC to check if the network supports certfp.

/msg NickServ help cert

I am not sure how this happens on Windows, so you might need to look for that information elsewhere unless someone decides to help me and tell how does it happen. I am going to tell about OpenSSL.

Generating the certificate

Open terminal and run this command and replae YOURNICKNAMEHERE.pem with your nickname or something else which makes you know what it is (DO NOT SET PASSWORD FOR IT OR YOUR CLIENT MIGHT NOT BE ABLE TO USE IT):

openssl req -nodes -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout YOURNICKNAMEHERE.pem -x509 -days 365 -out YOURNICKNAMEHERE.pem

This gives us file YOURNICKNAMEHERE.pem which you must give to your IRC client. I am sorry, but that depends on your IRC client too, so I cannot say anything about it.

Telling NickServ about your key

NickServ wants to know the fingerprint which you can get with the following command:

openssl x509 -sha1 -noout -fingerprint -in YOURNICKNAMEHERE.pem | sed -e 's/^.*=//;s/://g;y/ABCDEF/abcdef/'

which returns your fingerprint (WHICH YOU MUST NOT SHARE WITH ANYONE)

05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8

Now you can tell to NickServ about it.

/msg NickServ CERT ADD 05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8

(replace that with your own fingerprint!) And nickerv replies to you

14:13:39 -- NickServ: Added fingerprint 05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8 to your fingerprint list.

Testing

Now when you connect to freenode and have configured your IRC client to use your new certificate, you should get identified automatically and you should see your certificate by whoising yourself and running cert list with NickServ.

/WHOIS YOURNICK YOURNICK
/MSG NickServ CERT LIST

replies

<...>
XX:XX:XX -- [YOURNICK] has client certificate fingerprint 05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8
<...>
XX:XX:XX -- NickServ: Fingerprint list for YOURNICK:
XX:XX:XX -- NickServ: - 05dd01fedc1b821b796d0d785160f03e32f53fa8$$
XX:XX:XX -- NickServ: End of YOURNICK fingerprint list.

Notes

Server password

This might not work with some networks, but this works with freenode. All IRC clients should support settng password which to use while connecting to server. Set it as username:password for freenode and you are automatically identified when you connect.

Some notes:

Automatic command

This works with probably every client. They support setting commands that are automatically run as you connect and you can set the command

/msg NickServ identify username password

or whatever syntax the services on your network use.

Some notes:


For corrections above this line, please contact me at IRC or fix them by yourself here. What is below that line is embedded GitHub gist which reads where to contact with issues with it.