選択できるのは25トピックまでです。 トピックは、先頭が英数字で、英数字とダッシュ('-')を使用した35文字以内のものにしてください。
Daniel Oaks 5dcf18c702 New translations irc.lang.json (English, Australia) 3年前
distrib add commented-out PrivateNetwork to unit file 3年前
docs fix #1442 3年前
irc Merge pull request #1496 from slingamn/jointime.1 3年前
irctest @ b58fe44b5b bump irctest 3年前
languages New translations irc.lang.json (English, Australia) 3年前
vendor bump ircfmt to fix snomask bug 3年前
.check-gofmt.sh add `make gofmt` 3年前
.gitattributes add .gitattributes 4年前
.gitignore add pemfiles to gitignore 4年前
.gitmodules run irctest in travis 3年前
.goreleaser.yml update references to conventional.yaml 3年前
.travis.yml explicitly whitelist branches for building 3年前
CHANGELOG.md bump changelog for v2.4.0 3年前
DEVELOPING.md update release runbook 3年前
Dockerfile attempt to fix #1282 3年前
LICENSE update copyright notice 4年前
Makefile introduce "flat ip" representations 3年前
README tweak some manual language 3年前
README.md stopgap documentation update for SASL 3年前
crowdin.yml Force CrowdIn to put files in the right place 5年前
default.yaml reduce recommended bcrypt cost to the lowest allowed value 3年前
gencapdefs.py fix #1075 3年前
go.mod bump ircfmt to fix snomask bug 3年前
go.sum bump ircfmt to fix snomask bug 3年前
oragono.go first draft of atheme migration code 3年前
oragono.motd Add colour charts to the default MOTD, including 16-98 extended colours 6年前
traditional.yaml reduce recommended bcrypt cost to the lowest allowed value 3年前
updatetranslations.py Ignore some dodgy TL strings, fix another dodgy string 3年前

README.md

Oragono logo

Oragono is a modern IRC server written in Go. Its core design principles 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
  • Highly customizable via a rehashable (i.e., reloadable at runtime) YAML config

Oragono is a fork of the Ergonomadic IRC daemon <3


Go Report Card Build Status Download Latest Release Crowdin

If you want to take a look at a running Oragono instance or test some client code, feel free to play with testnet.oragono.io (TLS on port 6697 or plaintext on port 6667).


Features

  • integrated services: NickServ for user accounts, ChanServ for channel registration, and HostServ for vanity hosts
  • bouncer-like features: storing and replaying history, allowing multiple clients to use the same nickname
  • UTF-8 nick and channel names with rfc7613 (PRECIS)
  • native TLS/SSL support, including support for client certificates
  • yaml configuration
  • updating server config and TLS certificates on-the-fly (rehashing)
  • SASL authentication
  • LDAP support
  • supports multiple languages (you can also set a default language for your network)
  • advanced security and privacy features (support for requiring SASL for all logins, cloaking IPs, and running as a Tor hidden service)
  • an extensible privilege system for IRC operators
  • ident lookups for usernames
  • automated client connection limits
  • passwords stored with bcrypt
  • banning ips/nets and masks with KLINE and DLINE
  • IRCv3 support
  • a focus on developing with specifications

Quick start guide

Download the latest release from this page: https://github.com/oragono/oragono/releases/latest

Extract it into a folder, then run the following commands:

cp default.yaml ircd.yaml
vim ircd.yaml   # modify the config file to your liking
oragono mkcerts
oragono run     # server should be ready to go!

Note: See the productionizing guide in our manual for recommendations on how to run a production network, including obtaining valid TLS certificates.

Platform Packages

Some platforms/distros also have Oragono packages maintained for them:

Using Docker

A Dockerfile and example docker-compose recipe are available in the distrib/docker directory. Oragono is automatically published to Docker Hub at oragono/oragono. For more information, see the distrib/docker README file.

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.

The stable branch contains the latest release. You can run this for a production version without any trouble.

Building

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 oragono in the base directory of the project.

Configuration

The default config file default.yaml helps walk you through what each option means and changes.

You can use the --conf parameter when launching Oragono to control where it looks for the config file. For instance: oragono run --conf /path/to/ircd.yaml. The configuration file also stores where the log, database, certificate, and other files are opened. Normally, all these files use relative paths, but you can change them to be absolute (such as /var/log/ircd.log) when running Oragono as a service.

Logs

By default, logs go to stderr only. They can be configured to go to a file, or you can use systemd to direct the stderr to the system journal (see the manual for details). 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:

oragono genpasswd

With this, you receive a blob of text which you can plug into your configuration file.

Nickname and channel registration

Oragono relies heavily on user accounts to enable its distinctive features (such as allowing multiple clients per nickname). As a user, you can register your current nickname as an account using /msg NickServ register <password>. Once you have done so, you should enable SASL in your clients, ensuring that you will be automatically logged into your account on each connection. This will prevent problems claiming your registered nickname.

Once you have registered your nickname, you can use it to register channels:

  1. Join the channel with /join #channel
  2. Register the channel with /CS REGISTER #channel

After this, your channel will remember the fact that you’re the owner, the topic, and any modes set on it!

Credits