| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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This doesn't yet, but it will break the "robustness principle" according
to which a server "SHOULD NOT" assume that a client capable of parsing
one tag is capable of parsing all tags. In future, TagCaps will have all
other caps that use tags ORed into it, and only if the client supports
none of them will tags be filtered out.
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I still think this limit is unreasonably large in comparison to 512 for
the actual message.
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This commit introduces a '-S' command line option and a "bind" configuration
file option for selecting the source address when making outbound TCP
connections (similar to the corresponding option in catgirl(1)).
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This is a little bit messy. Allows setting either -A or -W or both.
Implements SASL EXTERNAL for clients that expect that when connecting
with a client certificate.
Need to test that reloading still works inside capsicum, since I suspect
that rewind call may be blocked.
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This way things like litterbox can do it automatically without having to
be configured with a hyphen-prefixed username, which is usually invalid
anywhere else.
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Oops, thought I did this already.
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This still allows using openssl(1) from PATH, but defaults to using
${LIBRESSL_PREFIX}/bin/openssl.
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Otherwise, each source file that includes the header gets its own
definition, and according to the C standard (C99 6.9p5):
> If an identifier declared with external linkage is used in an
> expression (other than as part of the operand of a sizeof operator
> whose result is an integer constant), somewhere in the entire
> program there shall be exactly one external definition for the
> identifier
Most compilers use the .bss section for zero data, but if it uses
.data instead, or if -Wl,--warn-common is used, this will cause a
linking error.
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This inverts the meaning of -N!
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I really want to be writing tests for these functions...
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The remaining caps only generate new commands which can easily be
filtered out when sending to clients so will be in the first pass of
support.
extended-join is probably safe to pass through unaltered, just causing
extraneous parameters on JOIN commands, but maybe not.
invite-notify reuses the INVITE command where the invited user is not
self.
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The list that I've defined are the ones that I expect to be able to
enable probably without any clients breaking... And of course
server-time which pounce implements itself.
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Turns out I did eventually fix this, because I may want to implement
"passive clients" for logging or notification stuff, which wouldn't
affect AWAY status either.
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GCC hates declaring static consts in headers and not using them, for
some stupid reason.
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> Notwithstanding any other provision of this License, if you modify the
> Program, your modified version must prominently offer all users
> interacting with it remotely through a computer network (if your version
> supports such interaction) an opportunity to receive the Corresponding
> Source of your version by providing access to the Corresponding Source
> from a network server at no charge, through some standard or customary
> means of facilitating copying of software.
This potentially means that every freenode user, for example, is
interacting with this software, and offering the corresponding source to
each of them is an unreasonable burden.
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GNU doesn't implement memset_s, but both FreeBSD and GNU implement
explicit_bzero. Darwin doesn't, so #define it in terms of memset_s.
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OwO
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To disambiguate clientRecv and clientRead, say clientConsume.
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It's still messy but it works!!
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