ngIRCd - Next Generation IRC Server http://ngircd.barton.de/ (c)2001-2013 Alexander Barton and Contributors. ngIRCd is free software and published under the terms of the GNU General Public License. -- Commands.txt -- This file lists all commands available on ngIRCd. It is written in a format that is human readable as well as machine parseable and therefore can be used as "help text file" of the daemon. In short, the daemon reads this file on startup and parses it as following when an user issues a "HELP " command: 1. Search the file for a line "- ", 2. Output all subsequent lines that start with a TAB (ASCII 9) character to the client using NOTICE commands, treat lines containing a single "." after the TAB as empty lines. 3. Break at the first line not starting with a TAB character. This format allows to have information to each command stored in this file which will not be sent to an IRC user requesting help which enables us to have additional annotations stored here which further describe the origin, implementation details, or limits of the specific command which are not relevant to an end-user but administrators and developers. A special "Intro" block is returned to the user when the HELP command is used without a command name: - Intro This is ngIRCd, a server software for Internet Relay Chat (IRC) networks. You can find more information about ngIRCd on its homepage: . Use "HELP COMMANDS" to get a list of all available commands and "HELP " to get help for a specific IRC command, for example "HELP quit" or "HELP privmsg". Connection Handling Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - CAP CAP LS CAP LIST CAP REQ CAP ACK CAP NAK CAP CLEAR CAP END . List, request, and clear "IRC Capabilities". . Using this command, an IRC client can request additional "IRC capabilities" during login or later on, which influences the communication between server and client. Normally, these commands aren't directly used by humans, but automatically by their client software. And please note that issuing such commands manually can irritate the client software used, because of the "non-standard" behavior of the server! . - CAP LS: list all available capabilities. - CAP LIST: list active capabilities of this connection. - CAP REQ: Request particular capabilities. - CAP ACK: Acknowledge a set of capabilities to be enabled/disabled. - CAP NAK: Reject a set of capabilities. - CAP CLEAR: Clear all set capabilities. - CAP END: Indicate end of capability negotiation during login, ignored in an fully registered session. Please note that the must be given in a single parameter but whitespace separated, therefore a command could look like this: "CAP REQ :capability1 capability2 capability3" for example. References: - - - doc/Capabilities.txt - CHARCONV CHARCONV . Set client character set encoding to . . After receiving such a command, the server translates all message data received from the client using the set to the server encoding (UTF-8), and all message data which is to be sent to the client from the server encoding (UTF-8) to . . This enables older clients and clients using "strange" character sets to transparently participate in channels and direct messages to clients using UTF-8, which should be the default today. References: - - doc/Protocol.txt - NICK NICK . Change your nickname to . - PASS PASS [] . Set a connection . This command must be sent before the NICK/USER registration combination. . See doc/Protocol.txt for more info. - PING PING [] . Tests the presence of a connection. A PING message results in a PONG reply. If is specified, the message gets passed on to it. - PONG PONG [] . This command is a reply to the PING command and works in much the same way. - QUIT QUIT [] . End IRC session and disconnect from the server. . If a has been given, it is displayed to all the channels that you are a member of when leaving. - USER USER . This command is used at the beginning of a connection to specify the name, hostname, and initial user of the connecting client. . may contain spaces, and thus must be prefixed with a colon. - WEBIRC See doc/Protocol.txt General Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - AWAY AWAY [] . Provides the server with a message to automatically send in reply to a PRIVMSG directed at the user, but not to a channel they are on. . If is omitted, the away status is removed. - HELP HELP [] . Show help information for a specific IRC . The name is case-insensitive. . Use the command "HELP Commands" to get a list of all available commands. The HELP command isn't specified by any RFC but implemented by most daemons. If no help text could be read in, ngIRCd outputs a list of all implemented commands when receiving a plain "HELP" command as well as on "HELP Commands". ngIRCd replies using "NOTICE" commands like ircd 2.10/2.11; other implementations are using numerics 704, 705, and 706. - MODE MODE (user) MODE [] . The MODE command is dual-purpose. It can be used to set both (user) and modes. . See doc/Modes.txt for more information. - NOTICE NOTICE . Send to (nick or channel). . This command works similarly to PRIVMSG, except automatic replies must never be sent in reply to NOTICE messages. - PRIVMSG PRIVMSG . Send to (nick or channel). . Common IRC clients use MSG as PRIVMSG alias. (Some clients use "QUERY []" to open a private chat.) Status and Informational Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - ADMIN ADMIN [] . Show administrative information about an IRC server in the network. . can be a server name, the nickname of a client connected to a specific server, or a mask matching a server name in the network. The server of the current connecion is used when is omitted. References: - RFC 2812, 3.4.9 "Admin command" - INFO INFO [] . Show the version, birth & online time of an IRC server in the network. . can be a server name, the nickname of a client connected to a specific server, or a mask matching a server name in the network. The server of the current connecion is used when is omitted. References: - RFC 2812, 3.4.10 "Info command" - ISON ISON [ [...]] . Query online status of a list of nicknames. The server replies with a list only containing nicknes actually connected to a server in the network. If no nicknames of the given list are online, an empty list is returned to the client requesting the information. Please note that "all" IRC daemons even parse separate nicknames in a single parameter (like ":nick1 nick2"), and therefore ngIRCd implements this behaviour, too. References: - RFC 2812, 4.9 "Ison message" - LINKS LINKS [[] [] . List all servers currently registered in the network matching , or all servers if has been omitted, as seen by the server specified by or the local server when is omitted. . can be a server name, the nickname of a client connected to a specific server, or a mask matching a server name in the network. References: - RFC 2812, 3.4.5 "Links message" - LUSERS LUSERS [ []] . Return statistics about the number of clients (users, servers, services, ...) in the network as seen by the server . . can be a server name, the nickname of a client connected to a specific server, or a mask matching a server name in the network. The server of the current connecion is used when is omitted. Please note that ngIRCd ignores the parameter entirely: it is not possible to get information for a part of the network only. References: - RFC 2812, 3.4.2 "Lusers message" - MOTD MOTD [] . Show "Message Of The Day" of the current server or specified . - NAMES NAMES [ []] . Returns a list of who is on the comma-separated list of , by channel name. . If is omitted, all users are shown, grouped by channel name with all users who are not on a channel being shown as part of channel "*". If is specified, the command is sent to for evaluation. - STATS STATS [] . Returns statistics about the current server, or of a specified . . STATS flags: . g = G-Lines (Network-wide bans) k = K-Lines (Server-local bans) l = Link status (Parent server and own link) m = IRC command status (usage count) u = Server uptime - TIME TIME [] . Show the local time of the current server, or of a specified . - TRACE TRACE [] . Trace a path across the IRC network of the current server, or if given of a specific , in a similar method to traceroute. - USERHOST USERHOST . Show the user-host of (seperated by space). "-" means is away, "+" means is available, "*" indicates your connection. - VERSION VERSION [] . Show the ngIRCd version of the current server, or specified . - WHO WHO [ ["o"]] . Returns a list of users who match (nick, hostmask or channel). . If the flag "o" is given, the server will only return information about IRC Operators. - WHOIS WHOIS [] . Returns information about the comma-separated list of . . If is given, the command is forwarded to it for processing. - WHOWAS WHOWAS [ []] . Used to return information about that are no longer in use (due to client disconnection, or nickname changes). . If given, the server will return information from the last times the nickname has been used. If is given, the command is forwarded to it for processing. Channel Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - INVITE INVITE . Invites to . does not have to exist, but if it does, only members of the channel are allowed to invite other clients. . If the mode "+i" is set, only operators may invite other clients. - JOIN JOIN [] . Makes the client join the (comma-separated list), specifying the passwords, if needed, in the comma-separated list. A is only needed, if the mode "+k" is set. . If the channel(s) do not exist, then they will be created. - KICK KICK [] . Remove from , optional with a . . Only operators are able to KICK. - LIST LIST [ []] . List all visible (comma-seperated list) on the current server. If is given, the command will be forwarded to for evaluation. - PART PART [] . Leave (comma-separated list), optional with a . - TOPIC TOPIC . Set a for . . Only operators are able to set a . Administrative Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - CONNECT CONNECT [ [ [ ]]] . Instructs the current server, or if specified, to connect to . . To connect you need to have remote oper status. If is omitted, it uses the server port of the configuration. If and is given, it uses those passwords instead of the ones in the configuration. - DIE DIE . Instructs the server to shut down. - DISCONNECT DISCONNECT [] . Disconnects the current server, or if specified. To disconnect a you need to have remote oper status. - GLINE GLINE : . This command provides timed G-Lines (Network-wide bans). If a client matches a G-Line, it cannot connect to any server on the IRC network. If you put 0 as , it makes the G-Line permanent. . To remove a G-Line, type "GLINE ". To list the G-Lines, type "STATS g". - KILL KILL . Forcibly removes from the IRC network with a . - KLINE KLINE : . This command provides timed K-Lines (Server-local bans). If a client matches a K-Line, it cannot connect to the issued server. If you put 0 as , it makes the K-Line permanent. . To remove a K-Line, type "KLINE ". To list the K-Lines, type "STATS k". - OPER OPER . Authenticates as an IRC operator on the current server/network. - REHASH REHASH . Causes the server to re-read and re-process its configuration file(s). - RESTART RESTART . Restart the server. - WALLOPS WALLOPS . Sends to all users with user mode "+w". IRC Service Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - SERVICE - SERVLIST - SQUERY - SVSNICK Server Protocol Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - CHANINFO CHANINFO + [[ ] ] . CHANINFO is used by servers to inform each other about a channel: its modes, channel key, user limits and its topic. . See doc/Protocol.txt for more information. - ERROR ERROR [ [<> [...]]] . Return an error message to the server. The first parameter, if given, will be logged by the server, all further parameters are silently ignored. . This command is silently ignored on non-server and non-service links. - METADATA METADATA . The METADATA command is used on server-links to update "metadata" information of clients, like the hostname, the info text ("real name"), or the user name. . See doc/Protocol.txt for more information. - NJOIN - SERVER - SQUIT SQUIT . Disconnects an IRC Server from the network. Dummy Commands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - SUMMON - USERS - GET - POST