X-Git-Url: https://arthur.barton.de/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=ngircd-alex.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=INSTALL;h=601ec2d4382ebcb7dd667ee9ed402a321a878e38;hp=f4a6ae4d74e66bd7435342c1b8c65a849c3763be;hb=62f705f97e580fe61520793b3387081915f240ba;hpb=c888c81adf0964e12ae2961550836a52da7c3678 diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL index f4a6ae4d..601ec2d4 100644 --- a/INSTALL +++ b/INSTALL @@ -1,19 +1,27 @@ ngIRCd - Next Generation IRC Server + http://ngircd.barton.de/ - (c)2001-2006 by Alexander Barton, - alex@barton.de, http://www.barton.de/ - + (c)2001-2011 Alexander Barton and Contributors. ngIRCd is free software and published under the terms of the GNU General Public License. -- INSTALL -- - I. Upgrade Information ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +Differences to version 17 + +- Support for ZeroConf/Bonjour/Rendezvous service registration has been + removed. The configuration option "NoZeroconf" is no longer available. + +Differences to version 16 + +- Changes to the "MotdFile" specified in ngircd.conf now require a ngircd + configuration reload to take effect (HUP signal, REHASH command). + Differences to version 0.9.x - The option of the configure script to enable support for Zeroconf/Bonjour/ @@ -51,9 +59,9 @@ on modern UNIX-like systems that are supported by GNU autoconf and GNU automake ("configure") should be no problem. The normal installation procedure after getting (and expanding) the source -files (using a distribution archive or CVS) is as following: +files (using a distribution archive or GIT) is as following: - 1) ./autogen.sh [only necessary when using CVS] + 1) ./autogen.sh [only necessary when using GIT] 2) ./configure 3) make 4) make install @@ -77,7 +85,7 @@ doc/ directory: sample-ngircd.conf. The first step, autogen.sh, is only necessary if the configure-script isn't already generated. This never happens in official ("stable") releases in -tar.gz-archives, but when using CVS. +tar.gz-archives, but when using GIT. This step is therefore only interesting for developers. @@ -149,14 +157,20 @@ standard locations. The Z compression library ("libz") is required for this option. * IO Backend (autodetected by default): + --with-select[=] / --without-select + --with-poll[=] / --without-poll + --with-devpoll[=] / --without-devpoll --with-epoll[=] / --without-epoll --with-kqueue[=] / --without-kqueue - ngIRCd can use three different IO "backends": the "old school" select() + ngIRCd can use different IO "backends": the "old school" select() and poll() API which should be supported by most UNIX-like operating systems, or the - more efficient and flexible epoll() (Linux 2.6) or kqueue() (BSD) APIs. + more efficient and flexible epoll() (Linux >=2.6), kqueue() (BSD) and + /dev/poll APIs. By default the IO backend is autodetected, but you can use "--without-xxx" - to disable a more enhanced API and force the daemon to use select(). + to disable a more enhanced API. + When using the epoll() API, support for select() is compiled in as well by + default to enable the binary to run on older Linux kernels (<2.6), too. * IDENT-Support: --with-ident[=] @@ -164,13 +178,6 @@ standard locations. Include support for IDENT ("AUTH") lookups. The "ident" library is required for this option. -* ZeroConf Support: - --with-zeroconf[=] - - Compile ngIRCd with support for ZeroConf multicast DNS service registration. - Either the Apple ZeroConf implementation (e. g. Mac OS X) or the Howl - library is required. Which one is available is autodetected. - * TCP-Wrappers: --with-tcp-wrappers[=] @@ -178,6 +185,24 @@ standard locations. to the daemon, for example by using "/etc/hosts.{allow|deny}". The "libwrap" is required for this option. +* PAM: + --with-pam[=] + + Enable support for PAM, the Pluggable Authentication Modules library. + See doc/PAM.txt for details. + +* SSL: + --with-openssl[=] + --with-gnutls[=] + + Enable support for SSL/TLS using OpenSSL or gnutls libraries. + See doc/SSL.txt for details. + +* IPv6: + --enable-ipv6 + + Adds support for version 6 of the Internet Protocol. + IV. Useful make-targets ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ @@ -238,7 +263,3 @@ These parameters could be passed to the ngIRCd: Use "--help" to see a short help text describing all available parameters the server understands, with "--version" the ngIRCd shows its version number. In both cases the server exits after the output. - - --- -$Id: INSTALL,v 1.24 2006/08/03 14:37:29 alex Exp $