-
Posts
5998 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
17
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Downloads
Gallery
Events
Articles
Everything posted by chain
-
Some cool stuff went down in the world of Internet Relay Chat during the past six months and we should take a look at it. Irssi is back! In the last news article, I mentioned that the development of the Irssi terminal client had slowed down and that there was an active fork. Since then, the changes from Nei’s fork were integrated upstream. The increased coordination lead to the release of Irssi version 1.4.1 in June. Many new IRCv3 features became available. IRC Driven, a service that provides indexing for IRC networks is now out of beta. A recent feature is displaying channel logs on the website in real time. Read More Here
-
The XeroMem IRC Network Routing Team has performed major software updates on the network. Here’s a quick update: UnrealIRCd v5.0.9 upgraded to UnrealIRCd v6.0.4 Anope v2.0.9 upgraded to Anope v2.0.11 UnrealIRCd 6 The UnrealIRCd Team announced and made UnrealIRCd 5 an old-stable release, In doing so, they also announced the upcoming End of Life for UnrealIRCd 5 as July 2023. In an effort to stay current, we’ve updated to the more-recently released UnrealIRCd 6. Changes included a complete overhaul of the logging and snomask features, improved support for IRCv3, GeoIP database management, improved cloaking modules, updated configuration file design, and improved overall stability. For more information about UnrealIRCd, visit the UnrealIRCd Development Site. Anope 2.0.11 To support the latest version of UnrealIRCd, we had to upgrade our Services Package from Anope 2.0.9 to Anope 2.0.11. For more information on Anope Services, visit the Anope Development Site. http://Read more here
-
FemvsFem is a fun place for like-minded people to discuss a common interest - Female Combat! Whether it be wrestling, boxing, martial arts, or good old catfighting, #femvsfem is the place to talk about it! Website
-
The Open and Free Technology Community aims to provide stable and effective collaboration services to members of the community in any part of the world, while closely listening to their needs and desires. OFTC was founded at the end of 2001 by a group of experienced members of the Open Source and Free Software communities aiming to provide these communities with better communication, development, and support infrastructure. OFTC is a member project of Software in the Public Interest, a non-profit organization which was founded to help organizations develop and distribute open hardware and software. You can reach the OFTC IRC network by using a traditional IRC Client of choice, or by the WebChat that we provide. The webchat enables you to connect to the network and chat directly from within your browser. Connection Details: ircs://irc.oftc.net:6697 for SSL (alternative port: 9999), IPv4 and IPv6. irc://irc.oftc.net:6667 for non-SSL (alternative ports: 6668-6670, 7000), IPv4 and IPv6. SSL is supported on all of our servers. The server certificates are signed by the Let’s Encrypt certification authority. We also publish DNSSEC-signed TLSA records for irc.oftc.net:6697/tcp (see dig _6697._tcp.irc.oftc.net tlsa). See CertFP for how to configure client certificate-based NickServ identification. If you need to force IPv4, connect to ircs://irc4.oftc.net:6697. We offer a WebChat service (also via the boxes at the top of this page). Use of Tor is permitted to irc.oftc.net or our onion service on ircs://oftcnet6xg6roj6d7id4y4cu6dchysacqj2ldgea73qzdagufflqxrid.onion. We offer IRC services (NickServ, ChanServ) for nick and channel registration. If you have support requests regarding the operation of the network please stop by #oftc or email support@oftc.net. We welcome issues and pull requests on our GitHub projects, especially on the issue tracking repository. We now offer a Tor hidden service: ircs://oftcnet6xg6roj6d7id4y4cu6dchysacqj2ldgea73qzdagufflqxrid.onion.
-
Version 1.0.0
0 downloads
Psotnic is an IRCnet bot written in C++. The main goal of the project was to create a fast, stable and easy to use bot. Here is a list of features: antiidle 7 ctcp emulation types kick4 and kick6 ipv6 support clone check: host, ident, /24 ipv4 class, /64 ipv6 prefix, proxies (!~@*.isp.com) socks5 support vanilla BNC support shitlist (shits are enforced upon addition) alternative slave support module loading (each one is protected with md5 sum) 3 types of owners (permanent (+x), super owner (+s), owner (+n)) channel modes protection (only +n can change channel modes) master can only op one person per mode encrypted links between bots (blowfish) encrypted config file and userlist (blowfish) autolimit limit override protection (mass invite protection) ban and limit enforcing user level based protection (user gets kicked if he harms user with higher level) mass, remote and slave joins channel flags support dynamic invites, bans and exempts was op test keepnick no trust between bots very fast oping (does not use botnet for oping) algorythm getop (nearly not used for oping), getkey, getinvite, unban all features can be controlled via .set and .chset command channel locking (+i) when number of bots on channel reaches below critical level CIDR ban support bots can be updated via partyline 15 chars long nicknames support reop (+R) mode support on join host resolver (linux only, since 0.2.3) config can be edited via partyline (since 0.2.3) omnipresent hashtables make bot less cpu consuming (since 0.2.3) new random number generator makes (xor shift) decision algorithm less cpu consuming (since 0.2.3) source code (since 0.2.6) ident spoofing for oidentd (since 0.2.8) SSL support for irc and partyline connections (since 0.2.9) partyline management of invite, exempt and reop modes. (since 0.2.12) There are a lot of more features. Please read the documentation and the changelog. -
Despite modern alternatives like Slack, the ancient IRC is still hugely popular as an online interactive chat platform. This may be because there are IRC clients for almost every operating system and device, from the Commodore Amiga to your smartphone, and the technology behind IRC is reassuringly simplistic - it really is just raw text and a few control characters being bumped around the network. Online servers, such as those offered by Libera Chat, are wonderful for both public and private channels. But it’s equally easy to run your own private IRC server, giving you complete control over your data, logs and configuration settings whilst avoiding all the risks and frustrations of dealing with IRC spammers and bots. In this tutorial, we’ll cover installing the InspIRCd IRC server on Ubuntu, from installing its dependencies and building the latest version from GitHub, to configuration and execution. Read More
-
A never-before-seen Linux malware has been dubbed a "Swiss Army Knife" for its modular architecture and its capability to install rootkits. This previously undetected Linux threat, called Lightning Framework by Intezer, is equipped with a plethora of features, making it one of the most intricate frameworks developed for targeting Linux systems. "The framework has both passive and active capabilities for communication with the threat actor, including opening up SSH on an infected machine, and a polymorphic malleable command and control configuration," Intezer researcher Ryan Robinson said in a new report published today. Read More Here
-
We are envisioning an "admin panel" where IRCOps would be able to do a number of server tasks, starting with: Status overview / dashboard Spamfilter and *LINE management: that would be a lot easier via the web than on IRC These two things would already be a great start. Naturally more can be added, i'm sure there are lots of ideas. The admin panel would be installed on a (web)server and would connect to UnrealIRCd using the new JSON-RPC API that is currently being developed. It does not have to run on the same machine as UnrealIRCd. We are looking for webdevs who would like to help out on the HTML/CSS and the coding-side. Do you have experience with web development and do you have time this summer to work on this? If you do, what would you prefer/suggest? UPDATE: We have found someone now, see the other posts below. You can still join in to help, of course. In July 2022 the groundwork will be done along with the first few items of the admin panel, but later on more help may be needed to expand things. Original questions: Which language/environment to use? PHP? NodeJS? Python? Which coding framework should be used? Eg in case of PHP: Laravel, Symfony, ..? In case of JS/python... what? Which CSS/front end framework to use? Eg Bootstrap? Most of the UnrealIRCd devs are backend coders with less experience on webdev/frontend. For us it would be relatively easy to make a quick-and-dirty PHP-without-famework non-AJAX "proof of concept" that is ugly and hard to extend. That is not what we are after. The idea is to have clean code that stays maintainable on the long run. We would like to hear who would like to work on this and what choices should be made. On our side we can help with getting people together, hosting it as an official (sub)project and exchanging ideas. On the technical side we can provide the right API calls and options in UnrealIRCd. We have created a new channel #unreal-webpanel on irc.unrealircd.org (IRC TLS on port 6697) that we can use for the discussion. Or you can reply here on the forums. Read more here
-
-
due to properbly recently found the link
-
-
Version 1.0.0
0 downloads
Botnet Tools by TG ## This little tcl is handy for making your botnet do fun things. ## ## COMMANDS: .netjump <server> .netjoin <#channel> .netpart <#channel> ## .nethash .greet .netset <#channel> <+/- setting> ## .announce .netmode <#channel> <mode> .netsave ## .passcheck .changepass <password> .netinfo ## .servstat .removeuser ## ## Questions or comments email jsimm@satexas.com ## ## Version 3.4 ## ## gaiden (EFNet) gordo@transwarp.net ## ## Version 3.4.1 ## - fixed problem with the .netset command. it was trying to pass ## one argument to the channel set command. when setting ## flood modes it needs to pass two. ## - beefed up the netjoin/netpart commands by passing ## the name of the user issuing the command to the botnet. ## added code so it'll half work with earlier versions. ## (could do the same for the other commands but should use ## the new version throughout the botnet anyway) ## - made the join channel settings a variable so they're up top. ## changed defaults to +revenge and -dynamicbans on join. ## - commented out ident_att redirect by default ## - changed the flood level defaults ## - lowered the bind flags required for some functions to make ## use of +t and +m flags ## ## EverRaver (EFNet) everraver@home.com ## -
-
-
-
-
This is an exhaustive list of all the Tcl commands added to Eggdrop 😀 Eggdrop Tcl Commands — Eggdrop 1.9.2 documentation (eggheads.org)
-
Learning basic Unix commands is essential if your using a shell hosting company for your Eggdrop 😀 SpiKe's TCL Scripts | Unix Shell Commands For Eggdrop (mytclscripts.com)
-
This page will help you config your eggdrop 😀 SpiKe's TCL Scripts | Eggdrop Example Configuration (mytclscripts.com)
-
This page will give you a lot of info regarding Eggdrop 😜 https://docs.eggheads.org/index.html