Annotation of ircnowd/man/ngircd.conf.5.tmpl, Revision 1.1
1.1 ! tomglok 1: .\"
! 2: .\" ngircd.conf(5) manual page template
! 3: .\"
! 4: .TH ngircd.conf 5 "Jan 2021" ngIRCd "ngIRCd Manual"
! 5: .SH NAME
! 6: ngircd.conf \- configuration file of ngIRCd
! 7: .SH SYNOPSIS
! 8: .B :ETCDIR:/ngircd.conf
! 9: .SH DESCRIPTION
! 10: .BR ngircd.conf
! 11: is the configuration file of the
! 12: .BR ngircd (8)
! 13: Internet Relay Chat (IRC) daemon, which must be customized to the local
! 14: preferences and needs.
! 15: .PP
! 16: Most variables can be modified while the ngIRCd daemon is already running:
! 17: It will reload its configuration file when a HUP signal or REHASH command
! 18: is received.
! 19: .SH "FILE FORMAT"
! 20: The file consists of sections and parameters. A section begins with the name
! 21: of the section in square brackets and continues until the next section
! 22: begins.
! 23: .PP
! 24: Sections contain parameters of the form
! 25: .PP
! 26: .RS
! 27: .I name
! 28: =
! 29: .I value
! 30: .RE
! 31: .PP
! 32: Empty lines and any line beginning with a semicolon (';') or a hash ('#')
! 33: character are treated as a comment and will be ignored. Leading and trailing
! 34: whitespaces are trimmed before any processing takes place.
! 35: .PP
! 36: The file format is line-based - that means, each non-empty newline-terminated
! 37: line represents either a comment, a section name, or a parameter.
! 38: .PP
! 39: Section and parameter names are not case sensitive.
! 40: .PP
! 41: There are three types of variables:
! 42: .I booleans,
! 43: .I text strings,
! 44: and
! 45: .I numbers.
! 46: Boolean values are
! 47: .I true
! 48: if they are "yes", "true", or any non-null integer. Text strings are used 1:1
! 49: without leading and following spaces; there is no way to quote strings. And
! 50: for numbers all decimal integer values are valid.
! 51: .PP
! 52: In addition, some string or numerical variables accept lists of values,
! 53: separated by commas (",").
! 54: .SH "SECTION OVERVIEW"
! 55: The file can contain blocks of seven types: [Global], [Limits], [Options],
! 56: [SSL], [Operator], [Server], and [Channel].
! 57: .PP
! 58: The main configuration of the server is stored in the
! 59: .I [Global]
! 60: section, like the server name, administrative information and the ports on
! 61: which the server should be listening. The variables in this section have to be
! 62: adjusted to the local requirements most of the time, whereas all the variables
! 63: in the other sections can be left on their defaults very often.
! 64: .PP
! 65: Options in the
! 66: .I [Limits]
! 67: block are used to tweak different limits and timeouts of the daemon, like the
! 68: maximum number of clients allowed to connect to this server. Variables in the
! 69: .I [Options]
! 70: section can be used to enable or disable specific features of ngIRCd, like
! 71: support for IDENT, PAM, IPv6, and protocol and cloaking features. The
! 72: .I [SSL]
! 73: block contains all SSL-related configuration variables. These three sections
! 74: are all optional.
! 75: .PP
! 76: IRC operators of this server are defined in
! 77: .I [Operator]
! 78: blocks. Links to remote servers are configured in
! 79: .I [Server]
! 80: sections. And
! 81: .I [Channel]
! 82: blocks are used to configure pre-defined ("persistent") IRC channels.
! 83: .PP
! 84: There can be more than one [Operator], [Server] and [Channel] section per
! 85: configuration file, one for each operator, server, and channel. [Global],
! 86: [Limits], [Options], and [SSL] sections can occur multiple times, too, but
! 87: each variable overwrites itself, only the last assignment is relevant.
! 88: .SH [GLOBAL]
! 89: The
! 90: .I [Global]
! 91: section is used to define the main configuration of the server,
! 92: like the server name and the ports on which the server should be listening.
! 93: These settings depend on your personal preferences, so you should make sure
! 94: that they correspond to your installation and setup!
! 95: .TP
! 96: \fBName\fR (string; required)
! 97: Server name in the IRC network. This is an individual name of the IRC
! 98: server, it is not related to the DNS host name. It must be unique in the
! 99: IRC network and must contain at least one dot (".") character.
! 100: .TP
! 101: \fBAdminInfo1\fR, \fBAdminInfo2\fR, \fBAdminEMail\fR (string)
! 102: Information about the server and the administrator, used by the ADMIN
! 103: command. This information is not required by the server but by RFC!
! 104: .TP
! 105: \fBHelpFile\fR (string)
! 106: Text file which contains the ngIRCd help text. This file is required
! 107: to display help texts when using the "HELP <cmd>" command.
! 108: Please note: Changes made to this file take effect when ngircd starts up
! 109: or is instructed to re-read its configuration file.
! 110: .TP
! 111: \fBInfo\fR (string)
! 112: Info text of the server. This will be shown by WHOIS and LINKS requests for
! 113: example.
! 114: .TP
! 115: \fBListen\fR (list of strings)
! 116: A comma separated list of IP address on which the server should listen.
! 117: If unset, the defaults value is "0.0.0.0" or, if ngIRCd was compiled
! 118: with IPv6 support, "::,0.0.0.0". So the server listens on all configured
! 119: IP addresses and interfaces by default.
! 120: .TP
! 121: \fBMotdFile\fR (string)
! 122: Text file with the "message of the day" (MOTD). This message will be shown to
! 123: all users connecting to the server. Please note: Changes made to this file
! 124: take effect when ngircd starts up or is instructed to re-read its
! 125: configuration file.
! 126: .TP
! 127: \fBMotdPhrase\fR (string)
! 128: A simple Phrase (<127 chars) if you don't want to use a MOTD file.
! 129: .TP
! 130: \fBNetwork\fR (string)
! 131: The name of the IRC network to which this server belongs. This name is
! 132: optional, should only contain ASCII characters, and can't contain spaces.
! 133: It is only used to inform clients. The default is empty, so no network
! 134: name is announced to clients.
! 135: .TP
! 136: \fBPassword\fR (string)
! 137: Global password for all users needed to connect to the server. The default is
! 138: empty, so no password is required. Please note: This feature is not available
! 139: if ngIRCd is using PAM!
! 140: .TP
! 141: \fBPidFile\fR (string)
! 142: This tells ngIRCd to write its current process ID to a file. Note that the
! 143: "PID file" is written AFTER chroot and switching the user ID, therefore the
! 144: directory the file resides in must be writable by the ngIRCd user and exist
! 145: in the chroot directory (if configured, see above).
! 146: .TP
! 147: \fBPorts\fR (list of numbers)
! 148: Port number(s) on which the server should listen for unencrypted connections.
! 149: There may be more than one port, separated with commas (","). Default: 6667.
! 150: .TP
! 151: \fBServerGID\fR (string or number)
! 152: Group ID under which the ngIRCd daemon should run; you can use the name of the
! 153: group or the numerical ID.
! 154: .PP
! 155: .RS
! 156: .B Attention:
! 157: .br
! 158: For this to work the server must have been started with root privileges!
! 159: .RE
! 160: .TP
! 161: \fBServerUID\fR (string or number)
! 162: User ID under which the ngIRCd daemon should run; you can use the name of the
! 163: user or the numerical ID.
! 164: .PP
! 165: .RS
! 166: .B Attention:
! 167: .br
! 168: For this to work the server must have been started with root privileges! In
! 169: addition, the configuration and MOTD files must be readable by this user,
! 170: otherwise RESTART and REHASH won't work!
! 171: .RE
! 172: .SH [LIMITS]
! 173: This section is used to define some limits and timeouts for this ngIRCd
! 174: instance. Default values should be safe, but it is wise to double-check :-)
! 175: .TP
! 176: \fBConnectRetry\fR (number)
! 177: The server tries every <ConnectRetry> seconds to establish a link to not yet
! 178: (or no longer) connected servers. Default: 60.
! 179: .TP
! 180: \fBIdleTimeout\fR (number)
! 181: Number of seconds after which the whole daemon should shutdown when no
! 182: connections are left active after handling at least one client (0: never). This
! 183: can be useful for testing or when ngIRCd is started using "socket activation"
! 184: with systemd(8), for example. Default: 0.
! 185: .TP
! 186: \fBMaxConnections\fR (number)
! 187: Maximum number of simultaneous in- and outbound connections the server is
! 188: allowed to accept (0: unlimited). Default: 0.
! 189: .TP
! 190: \fBMaxConnectionsIP\fR (number)
! 191: Maximum number of simultaneous connections from a single IP address that
! 192: the server will accept (0: unlimited). This configuration options lowers
! 193: the risk of denial of service attacks (DoS). Default: 5.
! 194: .TP
! 195: \fBMaxJoins\fR (number)
! 196: Maximum number of channels a user can be member of (0: no limit).
! 197: Default: 10.
! 198: .TP
! 199: \fBMaxNickLength\fR (number)
! 200: Maximum length of an user nickname (Default: 9, as in RFC 2812). Please
! 201: note that all servers in an IRC network MUST use the same maximum nickname
! 202: length!
! 203: .TP
! 204: \fBMaxPenaltyTime\fR (number)
! 205: Maximum penalty time increase in seconds, per penalty event. Set to -1 for no
! 206: limit (the default), 0 to disable penalties altogether. ngIRCd doesn't use
! 207: penalty increases higher than 2 seconds during normal operation, so values
! 208: greater than 1 rarely make sense.
! 209: .TP
! 210: \fBMaxListSize\fR (number)
! 211: Maximum number of channels returned in response to a LIST command. Default: 100.
! 212: .TP
! 213: \fBPingTimeout\fR (number)
! 214: After <PingTimeout> seconds of inactivity the server will send a PING to
! 215: the peer to test whether it is alive or not. Default: 120.
! 216: .TP
! 217: \fBPongTimeout\fR (number)
! 218: If a client fails to answer a PING with a PONG within <PongTimeout>
! 219: seconds, it will be disconnected by the server. Default: 20.
! 220: .SH [OPTIONS]
! 221: Optional features and configuration options to further tweak the behavior of
! 222: ngIRCd are configured in this section. If you want to get started quickly, you
! 223: most probably don't have to make changes here -- they are all optional.
! 224: .TP
! 225: \fBAllowedChannelTypes\fR (string)
! 226: List of allowed channel types (channel prefixes) for newly created channels
! 227: on the local server. By default, all supported channel types are allowed.
! 228: Set this variable to the empty string to disallow creation of new channels
! 229: by local clients at all. Default: #&+
! 230: .TP
! 231: \fBAllowRemoteOper\fR (boolean)
! 232: If this option is active, IRC operators connected to remote servers are allowed
! 233: to control this local server using administrative commands, for example like
! 234: CONNECT, DIE, SQUIT etc. Default: no.
! 235: .TP
! 236: \fBChrootDir\fR (string)
! 237: A directory to chroot in when everything is initialized. It doesn't need
! 238: to be populated if ngIRCd is compiled as a static binary. By default ngIRCd
! 239: won't use the chroot() feature.
! 240: .PP
! 241: .RS
! 242: .B Attention:
! 243: .br
! 244: For this to work the server must have been started with root privileges!
! 245: .RE
! 246: .TP
! 247: \fBCloakHost\fR (string)
! 248: Set this hostname for every client instead of the real one. Default: empty,
! 249: don't change. Use %x to add the hashed value of the original hostname.
! 250: .TP
! 251: \fBCloakHostModeX\fR (string)
! 252: Use this hostname for hostname cloaking on clients that have the user mode
! 253: "+x" set, instead of the name of the server. Default: empty, use the name
! 254: of the server. Use %x to add the hashed value of the original hostname
! 255: .TP
! 256: \fBCloakHostSalt\fR (string)
! 257: The Salt for cloaked hostname hashing. When undefined a random hash is
! 258: generated after each server start.
! 259: .TP
! 260: \fBCloakUserToNick\fR (boolean)
! 261: Set every clients' user name and real name to their nickname and hide the one
! 262: supplied by the IRC client. Default: no.
! 263: .TP
! 264: \fBConnectIPv4\fR (boolean)
! 265: Set this to no if you do not want ngIRCd to connect to other IRC servers using
! 266: the IPv4 protocol. This allows the usage of ngIRCd in IPv6-only setups.
! 267: Default: yes.
! 268: .TP
! 269: \fBConnectIPv6\fR (boolean)
! 270: Set this to no if you do not want ngIRCd to connect to other IRC servers using
! 271: the IPv6 protocol.
! 272: Default: yes.
! 273: .TP
! 274: \fBDefaultUserModes\fR (string)
! 275: Default user mode(s) to set on new local clients. Please note that only modes
! 276: can be set that the client could set using regular MODE commands, you can't
! 277: set "a" (away) for example!
! 278: Default: none.
! 279: .TP
! 280: \fBDNS\fR (boolean)
! 281: If set to false, ngIRCd will not make any DNS lookups when clients connect.
! 282: If you configure the daemon to connect to other servers, ngIRCd may still
! 283: perform a DNS lookup if required.
! 284: Default: yes.
! 285: .TP
! 286: \fBIdent\fR (boolean)
! 287: If ngIRCd is compiled with IDENT support this can be used to disable IDENT
! 288: lookups at run time.
! 289: Users identified using IDENT are registered without the "~" character
! 290: prepended to their user name.
! 291: Default: yes.
! 292: .TP
! 293: \fBIncludeDir\fR (string)
! 294: Directory containing configuration snippets (*.conf), that should be read in
! 295: after parsing the current configuration file.
! 296: Default: none.
! 297: .TP
! 298: \fBMorePrivacy\fR (boolean)
! 299: This will cause ngIRCd to censor user idle time, logon time as well as the
! 300: PART/QUIT messages (that are sometimes used to inform everyone about which
! 301: client software is being used). WHOWAS requests are also silently ignored,
! 302: and NAMES output doesn't list any clients for non-members.
! 303: This option is most useful when ngIRCd is being used together with
! 304: anonymizing software such as TOR or I2P and one does not wish to make it
! 305: too easy to collect statistics on the users.
! 306: Default: no.
! 307: .TP
! 308: \fBNoticeBeforeRegistration\fR (boolean)
! 309: Normally ngIRCd doesn't send any messages to a client until it is registered.
! 310: Enable this option to let the daemon send "NOTICE *" messages to clients
! 311: while connecting. Default: no.
! 312: .TP
! 313: \fBOperCanUseMode\fR (boolean)
! 314: Should IRC Operators be allowed to use the MODE command even if they are
! 315: not(!) channel-operators? Default: no.
! 316: .TP
! 317: \fBOperChanPAutoOp\fR (boolean)
! 318: Should IRC Operators get AutoOp (+o) in persistent (+P) channels?
! 319: Default: yes.
! 320: .TP
! 321: \fBOperServerMode\fR (boolean)
! 322: If \fBOperCanUseMode\fR is enabled, this may lead the compatibility problems
! 323: with Servers that run the ircd-irc2 Software. This Option "masks" mode
! 324: requests by non-chanops as if they were coming from the server. Default: no;
! 325: only enable it if you have ircd-irc2 servers in your IRC network.
! 326: .TP
! 327: \fBPAM\fR (boolean)
! 328: If ngIRCd is compiled with PAM support this can be used to disable all calls
! 329: to the PAM library at runtime; all users connecting without password are
! 330: allowed to connect, all passwords given will fail.
! 331: Users identified using PAM are registered without the "~" character
! 332: prepended to their user name.
! 333: Default: yes.
! 334: .TP
! 335: \fBPAMIsOptional\fR (boolean)
! 336: When PAM is enabled, all clients are required to be authenticated using PAM;
! 337: connecting to the server without successful PAM authentication isn't possible.
! 338: If this option is set, clients not sending a password are still allowed to
! 339: connect: they won't become "identified" and keep the "~" character prepended
! 340: to their supplied user name.
! 341: Please note:
! 342: To make some use of this behavior, it most probably isn't useful to enable
! 343: "Ident", "PAM" and "PAMIsOptional" at the same time, because you wouldn't be
! 344: able to distinguish between Ident'ified and PAM-authenticated users: both
! 345: don't have a "~" character prepended to their respective user names!
! 346: Default: no.
! 347: .TP
! 348: \fBPAMServiceName\fR (string)
! 349: When PAM is enabled, this value determines the used PAM configuration.
! 350: This setting allows running multiple ngIRCd instances with different
! 351: PAM configurations on each instance. If you set it to "ngircd-foo",
! 352: PAM will use /etc/pam.d/ngircd-foo instead of the default
! 353: /etc/pam.d/ngircd.
! 354: Default: ngircd.
! 355: .TP
! 356: \fBRequireAuthPing\fR (boolean)
! 357: Let ngIRCd send an "authentication PING" when a new client connects, and
! 358: register this client only after receiving the corresponding "PONG" reply.
! 359: Default: no.
! 360: .TP
! 361: \fBScrubCTCP\fR (boolean)
! 362: If set to true, ngIRCd will silently drop all CTCP requests sent to it from
! 363: both clients and servers. It will also not forward CTCP requests to any
! 364: other servers. CTCP requests can be used to query user clients about which
! 365: software they are using and which versions said software is. CTCP can also be
! 366: used to reveal clients IP numbers. ACTION CTCP requests are not blocked,
! 367: this means that /me commands will not be dropped, but please note that
! 368: blocking CTCP will disable file sharing between users!
! 369: Default: no.
! 370: .TP
! 371: \fBSyslogFacility\fR (string)
! 372: Syslog "facility" to which ngIRCd should send log messages. Possible
! 373: values are system dependent, but most probably "auth", "daemon", "user"
! 374: and "local1" through "local7" are possible values; see syslog(3).
! 375: Default is "local5" for historical reasons, you probably want to
! 376: change this to "daemon", for example.
! 377: .TP
! 378: \fBWebircPassword\fR (string)
! 379: Password required for using the WEBIRC command used by some Web-to-IRC
! 380: gateways. If not set or empty, the WEBIRC command can't be used.
! 381: Default: not set.
! 382: .SH [SSL]
! 383: All SSL-related configuration variables are located in the
! 384: .I [SSL]
! 385: section. Please note that this whole section is only recognized by ngIRCd
! 386: when it is compiled with support for SSL using OpenSSL or GnuTLS!
! 387: .TP
! 388: \fBCertFile\fR (string)
! 389: SSL Certificate file of the private server key.
! 390: .TP
! 391: \fBCipherList\fR (string)
! 392: Select cipher suites allowed for SSL/TLS connections. This defaults to
! 393: "HIGH:!aNULL:@STRENGTH:!SSLv3" (OpenSSL) or "SECURE128:-VERS-SSL3.0" (GnuTLS).
! 394: Please see 'man 1ssl ciphers' (OpenSSL) and 'man 3 gnutls_priority_init'
! 395: (GnuTLS) for details.
! 396: .TP
! 397: \fBDHFile\fR (string)
! 398: Name of the Diffie-Hellman Parameter file. Can be created with GnuTLS
! 399: "certtool \-\-generate-dh-params" or "openssl dhparam". If this file is not
! 400: present, it will be generated on startup when ngIRCd was compiled with GnuTLS
! 401: support (this may take some time). If ngIRCd was compiled with OpenSSL, then
! 402: (Ephemeral)-Diffie-Hellman Key Exchanges and several Cipher Suites will not be
! 403: available.
! 404: .TP
! 405: \fBKeyFile\fR (string)
! 406: Filename of SSL Server Key to be used for SSL connections. This is required
! 407: for SSL/TLS support.
! 408: .TP
! 409: \fBKeyFilePassword\fR (string)
! 410: OpenSSL only: Password to decrypt the private key file.
! 411: .TP
! 412: \fBPorts\fR (list of numbers)
! 413: Same as \fBPorts\fR , except that ngIRCd will expect incoming connections
! 414: to be SSL/TLS encrypted. Common port numbers for SSL-encrypted IRC are 6669
! 415: and 6697. Default: none.
! 416: .SH [OPERATOR]
! 417: .I [Operator]
! 418: sections are used to define IRC Operators. There may be more than one
! 419: .I [Operator]
! 420: block, one for each local operator.
! 421: .TP
! 422: \fBName\fR (string)
! 423: ID of the operator (may be different of the nickname).
! 424: .TP
! 425: \fBPassword\fR (string)
! 426: Password of the IRC operator.
! 427: .TP
! 428: \fBMask\fR (string)
! 429: Mask that is to be checked before an /OPER for this account is accepted.
! 430: Example: nick!ident@*.example.com
! 431: .SH [SERVER]
! 432: Other servers are configured in
! 433: .I [Server]
! 434: sections. If you configure a port for the connection, then this ngIRCd
! 435: tries to connect to the other server on the given port (active);
! 436: if not, it waits for the other server to connect (passive).
! 437: .PP
! 438: ngIRCd supports "server groups": You can assign an "ID" to every server
! 439: with which you want this ngIRCd to link, and the daemon ensures that at
! 440: any given time only one direct link exists to servers with the same ID.
! 441: So if a server of a group won't answer, ngIRCd tries to connect to the next
! 442: server in the given group (="with the same ID"), but never tries to connect
! 443: to more than one server of this group simultaneously.
! 444: .PP
! 445: There may be more than one
! 446: .I [Server]
! 447: block.
! 448: .TP
! 449: \fBName\fR (string)
! 450: IRC name of the remote server.
! 451: .TP
! 452: \fBHost\fR (string)
! 453: Internet host name (or IP address) of the peer.
! 454: .TP
! 455: \fBBind\fR (string)
! 456: IP address to use as source IP for the outgoing connection. Default is
! 457: to let the operating system decide.
! 458: .TP
! 459: \fBPort\fR (number)
! 460: Port of the remote server to which ngIRCd should connect (active).
! 461: If no port is assigned to a configured server, the daemon only waits for
! 462: incoming connections (passive, default).
! 463: .TP
! 464: \fBMyPassword\fR (string)
! 465: Own password for this connection. This password has to be configured as
! 466: \fBPeerPassword\fR on the other server. Must not have ':' as first character.
! 467: .TP
! 468: \fBPeerPassword\fR (string)
! 469: Foreign password for this connection. This password has to be configured as
! 470: \fBMyPassword\fR on the other server.
! 471: .TP
! 472: \fBGroup\fR (number)
! 473: Group of this server (optional).
! 474: .TP
! 475: \fBPassive\fR (boolean)
! 476: Disable automatic connection even if port value is specified. Default: false.
! 477: You can use the IRC Operator command CONNECT later on to create the link.
! 478: .TP
! 479: \fBSSLConnect\fR (boolean)
! 480: Connect to the remote server using TLS/SSL. Default: false.
! 481: .TP
! 482: \fBServiceMask\fR (string)
! 483: Define a (case insensitive) list of masks matching nicknames that should be
! 484: treated as IRC services when introduced via this remote server, separated
! 485: by commas (","). REGULAR SERVERS DON'T NEED this parameter, so leave it empty
! 486: (which is the default).
! 487: .PP
! 488: .RS
! 489: When you are connecting IRC services which mask as a IRC server and which use
! 490: "virtual users" to communicate with, for example "NickServ" and "ChanServ",
! 491: you should set this parameter to something like "*Serv", "*Serv,OtherNick",
! 492: or "NickServ,ChanServ,XyzServ".
! 493: .SH [CHANNEL]
! 494: Pre-defined channels can be configured in
! 495: .I [Channel]
! 496: sections. Such channels are created by the server when starting up and even
! 497: persist when there are no more members left.
! 498: .PP
! 499: Persistent channels are marked with the mode 'P', which can be set and unset
! 500: by IRC operators like other modes on the fly.
! 501: .PP
! 502: There may be more than one
! 503: .I [Channel]
! 504: block.
! 505: .TP
! 506: \fBName\fR (string)
! 507: Name of the channel, including channel prefix ("#" or "&").
! 508: .TP
! 509: \fBTopic\fR (string)
! 510: Topic for this channel.
! 511: .TP
! 512: \fBModes\fR (string)
! 513: Initial channel modes, as used in "MODE" commands. Modifying lists (ban list,
! 514: invite list, exception list) is supported.
! 515: .PP
! 516: .RS
! 517: This option can be specified multiple times, evaluated top to bottom.
! 518: .RE
! 519: .TP
! 520: \fBKeyFile\fR (string)
! 521: Path and file name of a "key file" containing individual channel keys for
! 522: different users. The file consists of plain text lines with the following
! 523: syntax (without spaces!):
! 524: .PP
! 525: .RS
! 526: .RS
! 527: .I user
! 528: :
! 529: .I nick
! 530: :
! 531: .I key
! 532: .RE
! 533: .PP
! 534: .I user
! 535: and
! 536: .I nick
! 537: can contain the wildcard character "*".
! 538: .br
! 539: .I key
! 540: is an arbitrary password.
! 541: .PP
! 542: Valid examples are:
! 543: .PP
! 544: .RS
! 545: *:*:KeY
! 546: .br
! 547: *:nick:123
! 548: .br
! 549: ~user:*:xyz
! 550: .RE
! 551: .PP
! 552: The key file is read on each JOIN command when this channel has a key
! 553: (channel mode +k). Access is granted, if a) the channel key set using the
! 554: MODE +k command or b) one of the lines in the key file match.
! 555: .PP
! 556: .B Please note:
! 557: .br
! 558: The file is not reopened on each access, so you can modify and overwrite it
! 559: without problems, but moving or deleting the file will have not effect until
! 560: the daemon re-reads its configuration!
! 561: .RE
! 562: .SH HINTS
! 563: It's wise to use "ngircd \-\-configtest" to validate the configuration file
! 564: after changing it. See
! 565: .BR ngircd (8)
! 566: for details.
! 567: .SH AUTHOR
! 568: Alexander Barton, <alex@barton.de>
! 569: .br
! 570: Florian Westphal, <fw@strlen.de>
! 571: .PP
! 572: Homepage: http://ngircd.barton.de/
! 573: .SH "SEE ALSO"
! 574: .BR ngircd (8)
! 575: .\"
! 576: .\" -eof-
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