From 043f2c9063ca55a7c69297f14fd0038cd325caaa Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ariadne Conill Date: Sun, 5 Jul 2020 21:09:48 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] example config: dnsbl{} block change, update explanation comment a bit --- doc/ircd.conf.example | 16 ++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/ircd.conf.example b/doc/ircd.conf.example index dbe97c2b..07e91adf 100644 --- a/doc/ircd.conf.example +++ b/doc/ircd.conf.example @@ -383,14 +383,14 @@ serverhide { disable_hidden = no; }; -/* These are the blacklist settings. +/* These are the DNSBL settings. * You can have multiple combinations of host and rejection reasons. * They are used in pairs of one host/rejection reason. * - * These settings should be adequate for most networks. + * The default settings should be adequate for most networks. * - * Word to the wise: Do not use blacklists like SPEWS for blocking IRC - * connections. + * It is not recommended to use DNSBL services designed for e-mail spam + * prevention, such as SPEWS for blocking IRC connections. * * As of charybdis 2.2, you can do some keyword substitution on the rejection * reason. The available keyword substitutions are: @@ -410,13 +410,13 @@ serverhide { * is considered a match. If included, a comma-separated list of *quoted* * strings is allowed to match queries. They may be of the format "0" to "255" * to match the final octet (e.g. 127.0.0.1) or "127.x.y.z" to explicitly match - * an A record. The blacklist is only applied if it matches anything in the + * an A record. The DNSBL match is only applied if it matches anything in the * list. You may freely mix full IP's and final octets. * - * Consult your blacklist provider for the meaning of these parameters; they - * are usually used to denote different ban types. + * Consult your DNSBL provider for the meaning of these parameters; they + * are usually used to denote different block reasons. */ -blacklist { +dnsbl { host = "rbl.efnetrbl.org"; type = ipv4; reject_reason = "${nick}, your IP (${ip}) is listed in EFnet's RBL. For assistance, see http://efnetrbl.org/?i=${ip}";