![Oragono logo](docs/logo.png) Oragono is a modern, experimental IRC server written in Go. It's designed to be simple to setup and use, and it includes features such as UTF-8 nicks / channel names, client accounts with SASL, and other assorted IRCv3 support. Oragono is a fork of the [Ergonomadic](https://github.com/edmund-huber/ergonomadic) IRC daemon <3 --- [![Go Report Card](https://goreportcard.com/badge/github.com/oragono/oragono)](https://goreportcard.com/report/github.com/oragono/oragono) [![Download Latest Release](https://img.shields.io/badge/downloads-latest%20release-green.svg)](https://github.com/oragono/oragono/releases/latest) [![Freenode #oragono](https://img.shields.io/badge/Freenode-%23oragono-1e72ff.svg?style=flat)](https://www.irccloud.com/invite?channel=%23oragono&hostname=irc.freenode.net&port=6697&ssl=1) --- This project adheres to [Semantic Versioning](http://semver.org/). For the purposes of versioning, we consider the "public API" to refer to the configuration files, CLI interface and database format. # Oragono ## Features * UTF-8 nick and channel names with rfc7613 * [yaml](http://yaml.org/) configuration * native TLS/SSL support * server password (`PASS` command) * an extensible privilege system for IRC operators * ident lookups for usernames * automated client connection limits * on-the-fly updating server config and TLS certificates (rehashing) * client accounts and SASL * passwords stored with [bcrypt](https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/crypto) (client account passwords also salted) * banning ips/nets and masks with `KLINE` and `DLINE` * [IRCv3 support](http://ircv3.net/software/servers.html) * a heavy focus on developing with [specifications](http://oragono.io/specs.html) * integrated (alpha) REST API and web interface ## Installation Download the latest release from this page: https://github.com/oragono/oragono/releases/latest Extract it into a folder, then run the following commands: ```sh cp oragono.yaml ircd.yaml vim ircd.yaml # modify the config file to your liking oragono initdb oragono mkcerts ``` **Note:** This installation will give you unsigned certificates suitable for testing purposes. For real certs, look into [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/)! ### From Source You can also install this repo and use that instead! However, keep some things in mind if you go that way: `devel` branches are intentionally unstable, containing fixes that may not work, and they may be rebased or reworked extensively. The `master` branch _should_ usually be stable, but may contain database changes that either have not been finalised or not had database upgrade code written yet. Don't run `master` on a live production network. If you'd like to, run the latest tagged version in production instead. ## Configuration The default config file [`oragono.yaml`](oragono.yaml) helps walk you through what each option means and changes. The configuration's intended to be sparse, so if there are options missing it's either because that feature isn't written/configurable yet or because we don't think it should be configurable. ### Logs By default, logs are stored in the file `ircd.log`. The configuration format of logs is designed to be easily pluggable, and is inspired by the logging config provided by InspIRCd. ### Passwords Passwords (for both `PASS` and oper logins) are stored using bcrypt. To generate encrypted strings for use in the config, use the `genpasswd` subcommand as such: ```sh oragono genpasswd ``` With this, you receive a blob of text which you can plug into your configuration file. ## Running After this, running the server is easy! Simply run the below command and you should see the relevant startup information pop up. ```sh oragono run ``` ### How to register a channel 1. Register your account with `/quote ACC REGISTER * passphrase :` 2. Join the channel with `/join #channel` 3. Register the channel with `/privmsg ChanServ REGISTER #channel` After this, your channel will remember the fact that you're the owner, the topic, and any modes set on it! Make sure to setup [SASL](https://freenode.net/kb/answer/sasl) in your client to automatically login to your account when you next join the server. # Credits * Jeremy Latt, creator of Ergonomadic, * Edmund Huber, maintainer of Ergonomadic, * Niels Freier, added WebSocket support to Ergonomadic, * Daniel Oakley, maintainer of Oragono, * apologies to anyone I forgot.