X3 Installation Instructions Introduction: ---------- If you encounter any problems compiling/running X3, please make sure you have followed the directions in this file correctly and that all of the requirements listed below are met. If the problem persists, report it to one (or all) of the coders listed in the AUTHORS file. Please try to include ALL relevant information about the error/bug, including anything out of the ordinary reported from make and the appropriate entries from the log files. Requirements: ---------- This release of X3 (1.4) only supports the Undernet P10 protocol and is known to link to ircu/Undernet (u2.10.11, u2.10.12), Nefarious IRCu 0.4.0 and Nefarious IRCu 1.0. It does not support bahamut, hybrid, Unreal, or any other ircd not listed. Should you find other compatible ircds, please let us know. Most of the testing has been done on Nefarious IRCu 0.4.0/1.0 (Based on ircu2.10.11.x). X3 is known to compile on the following systems as long as you are using GNU make (make on Linux, gmake on many other systems): * Linux (libc5 or glibc2); glibc2.1 recommended+ (SPARC, ALPHA, x86, PPC) * FreeBSD 4.x; tested on 4.2-RELEASE and 4.2-STABLE (SPARC, x86) * FreeBSD 3.x; tested on 3.3-RELEASE and 3.4-STABLE (SPARC, x86) * FreeBSD 2.x; tested on 2.2.8-RELEASE (SPARC, x86) * NetBSD 1.6+; (ALPHA, MIPS, x86) * SunOS 5.x; tested on 5.8 (SPARC, x86) * OpenBSD 2.x; tested on 2.8 (x86) * BSDi 4.x; tested on 4.0.1 (x86) * CYGWIN 1.1.x and 1.3.x; tested on 1.1.8 (x86) For the Linux kernel, X3 has been tested on Debian 2.x - 3.x, and Redhat 5.x - 8.x. X3 should compile on other system types also. If you have success on other platforms/archs or problems on any platforms/archs, please contact the authors to let us know. gcc 2.96 tends to emit spurious warnings; before reporting any compiler warnings from it, make sure you are using the most recent version of it or try using an official release of gcc. You may also have trouble unless your compiler's C preprocessor supports ISO C99 varadic macros. gcc is the compiler we use for almost all our testing, and we recommend it for use with X3. Quick Install: ---------- $ ./configure NOTE: The protocol the resulting X3 binary will support is determined by the configure script. The P10 protocol is the default. $ make $ ${EDITOR} x3.conf NOTE: You may want to copy x3.conf.example to x3.conf and edit that. $ ./x3 Compiling: ---------- 1) Enter the root directory of the X3 tree. If installation is done from outside of it, it may cause problems during compile, or during runtime. 2) Run the configure script (sh configure), it will verify that your system will have the resources needed for X3 to compile. If you would like to change the path where X3 will be installed to, execute configure with the --prefix=/path option. The default path is ~/x3/, with the X's representing the version. 3) On some systems you may need to edit the Makefile in order for it to compile correctly. Includes, and other such things may reside in other directories. Most likely the Makefile won't require any modifications. 4) You may optionally edit config.h in case the configure script made a mistake. 5) Execute the "make" command to begin compiling. If you encounter any uncorrectable errors/warnings, please scroll up to the introduction section and follow the instructions. 6) You may now either type "make install" to install it to your installation path, or work from your build directory, either is fine. 7) Copy sockcheck.conf.example to sockcheck.conf (and edit to add new proxy types, if you wish). 8) Copy x3.conf.example to x3.conf and edit to suit your needs. Errors in the configuration file will be logged to main.log (and if X3 is running in the foreground, printed to stdout) when you start the daemon. 9) You can now begin using your service bots. You can debug by running it with '-fd', it will not background itself, and it will be fairly verbose if you gave the configure script the --enable-debug flag. If you would like to run in the foreground with no verbosity, use the '-f' flag. If you just want to run it, execute X3 without any flags. 10) Once you have X3 started, you'll need to register a AuthServ account: /msg AuthServ@services.irc.com register Make sure that you register the first account -- it is automatically granted certain privileges and gives you root-level access to O3 once you are opered up. 11) New operators can be given access to O3 through AuthServ's (or whatever you've named the nick/authentication service) oset command: /msg AuthServ oset |* level Levels are generally beween 0 and 1000 by convention; higher numbers correspond to more access. You can also add helpers (users with extra privileges such as security override in traditional configurations) through AuthServ: /msg AuthServ oset |* flags +H End of file, INSTALL. -Jedi (jedi@turboflux.net)