* To use them, uncomment the lines below.
*
* Channel mode +-A (admin only) -- chm_adminonly
+ * Channel mode +-T (blocks notices) -- chm_nonotice
* Channel mode +-O (oper only) -- chm_operonly
* Channel mode +-S (ssl only) -- chm_sslonly
* Emulates channel mode +-O (oper only) (+-iI $o) -- chm_operonly_compat
* Stop services kills -- no_kill_services
*/
#loadmodule "extensions/chm_adminonly";
+#loadmodule "extensions/chm_nonotice";
#loadmodule "extensions/chm_operonly";
#loadmodule "extensions/chm_sslonly";
#loadmodule "extensions/chm_operonly_compat";
/* vhost6: the IP to bind to when we connect outward to ipv6 servers.
* This should be an ipv6 IP only.
*/
- #vhost6 = "2001:db7:2::6";
+ #vhost6 = "2001:db8:2::6";
- /* ssl_private_key: our ssl private key */
- ssl_private_key = "etc/ssl.key";
-
- /* ssl_cert: certificate for our ssl server */
+ /* ssl_cert: certificate (and optionally key) for our ssl server */
ssl_cert = "etc/ssl.pem";
- /* ssl_dh_params: DH parameters, generate with openssl dhparam -out dh.pem 1024 */
+ /* ssl_private_key: our ssl private key (if not contained in ssl_cert file) */
+ #ssl_private_key = "etc/ssl.key";
+
+ /* ssl_dh_params: DH parameters, generate with openssl dhparam -out dh.pem 2048 */
+ /* If you do not provide parameters, some TLS backends will fail on DHE- ciphers,
+ and some will succeed but use weak, common DH groups! */
ssl_dh_params = "etc/dh.pem";
/* ssl_cipher_list: A list of ciphers, dependent on your TLS backend */
/* port: listen on all available IPs, ports 5000 and 6665 to 6669 */
port = 5000, 6665 .. 6669;
- /* sslport: listen for ssl connections on all available IPs, port 9999 */
- sslport = 9999;
+ /* sslport: listen for ssl connections on all available IPs, port 6697 */
+ sslport = 6697;
/* host: set a specific IP/host the ports after the line will listen
* on. This may be ipv4 or ipv6.
host = "2001:db8:2::6";
port = 7002;
sslport = 9002;
+
+ /* wsock: listeners defined with this option enabled will be websocket listeners,
+ * and will not accept normal clients.
+ */
+ wsock = yes;
+ sslport = 9999;
};
/* auth {}: allow users to connect to the ircd (OLD I:) */
* compressed - compress traffic via ziplinks
* topicburst - burst topics between servers
* ssl - ssl/tls encrypted server connections
+ * no-export - marks the link as a no-export link (not exported to other links)
*/
flags = compressed, topicburst;
};
connect "ipv6.lame.server" {
- /* Hosts that are IPv6 addresses must be in :: shortened form
- * if applicable. Addresses starting with a colon get an extra
- * zero prepended, for example: 0::1
- */
+ host = "192.0.2.1";
host = "2001:db8:3::8";
send_password = "password";
accept_password = "password";
port = 6666;
- /* aftype: controls whether the connection uses "ipv4" or "ipv6".
- * Default is ipv4.
+ /* aftype: controls whether the outgoing connection uses "ipv4" or "ipv6".
+ * Default is to try either at random.
*/
aftype = ipv6;
class = "server";
* WARNING:
* These settings are considered experimental. Only the most common proxy types
* are checked for (Charybdis is immune from POST and GET proxies). If you are
- * not comfortable with experimental code, remove or comment out the *entire*
- * block below to disable the proxy scanner.
+ * not comfortable with experimental code, do not use this feature.
*/
-opm {
+#opm {
/* IPv4 address to listen on. This must be a publicly facing IP address
* to be effective.
* If omitted, it defaults to serverinfo::vhost.
* to be effective.
* If omitted, it defaults to serverinfo::vhost6.
*/
- #listen_ipv6 = "0::1";
+ #listen_ipv6 = "::1";
/* IPv6 port to listen on.
* This should not be the same as any existing listeners.
/* You can also set the listen_port directive which will set both the
* IPv4 and IPv6 ports at once.
*/
- listen_port = 32000;
+ #listen_port = 32000;
/* This sets the timeout in seconds before ending open proxy scans.
* Values less than 1 or greater than 60 are ignored.
* It is advisable to keep it as short as feasible, so clients do not
* get held up by excessively long scan times.
*/
- timeout = 5;
+ #timeout = 5;
/* These are the ports to scan for SOCKS4 proxies on. They may overlap
* with other scan types. Sensible defaults are given below.
*/
- socks4_ports = 80, 443, 1080, 8000, 8080, 10800;
+ #socks4_ports = 80, 443, 1080, 8000, 8080, 10800;
/* These are the ports to scan for SOCKS5 proxies on. They may overlap
* with other scan types. Sensible defaults are given below.
*/
- socks5_ports = 80, 443, 1080, 8000, 8080, 10800;
+ #socks5_ports = 80, 443, 1080, 8000, 8080, 10800;
/* These are the ports to scan for HTTP CONNECT proxies on (plaintext).
* They may overlap with other scan types. Sensible defaults are given
* below.
*/
- httpconnect_ports = 80, 8080, 8000;
+ #httpconnect_ports = 80, 8080, 8000;
/* These are the ports to scan for HTTPS CONNECT proxies on (SSL).
* They may overlap with other scan types. Sensible defaults are given
* below.
*/
- httpsconnect_ports = 443, 4443;
-};
+ #httpsconnect_ports = 443, 4443;
+#};
/*
* Alias blocks allow you to define custom commands. (Old m_sshortcut.c)
away_interval = 30;
/* certfp_method: the method that should be used for computing certificate fingerprints.
- * Acceptable options are sha1, sha256 and sha512. Networks running versions of charybdis
- * prior to charybdis 3.5 MUST use sha1 for certfp_method.
+ * Acceptable options are sha1, sha256, spki_sha256, sha512 and spki_sha512. Networks
+ * running versions of charybdis prior to charybdis 3.5 MUST use sha1 for certfp_method.
+ *
+ * The spki_* variants operate on the SubjectPublicKeyInfo of the certificate, which does
+ * not change unless the private key is changed. This allows the fingerprint to stay
+ * constant even if the certificate is reissued. These fingerprints will be prefixed with
+ * "SPKI:SHA2-256:" or "SPKI:SHA2-512:" depending on the hash type. These fingerprints
+ * are not supported on servers running charybdis 3.5.3 or earlier.
+ *
+ * To generate a fingerprint from a certificate file, please use the mkfingerprint utility
+ * program located in the bin/ subdirectory of your IRCd installation. Running it with no
+ * arguments will give you a brief usage message; it takes method and filename arguments.
*/
- certfp_method = sha1;
+ certfp_method = spki_sha256;
/* hide_opers_in_whois: if set to YES, then oper status will be hidden in /WHOIS output. */
hide_opers_in_whois = no;