the rationale behind switching away from SGML/Docbook is the following:
* SGML is hard to edit for humans
* the output is not much prettier
* the toolchain is not well supported and missing from the build
* the build is not hooked into anywhere, no automation
the reason why RST was chosen:
* it allows for a strong structure like Docbook
* the theme from Read The Docs is pretty
* it also supports mobile devices
* sphinx can easily output to PDF and ePUB formats
* RST is plaintext that can be easily edited and diff'd
* RST can be automatically built by ReadTheDocs and the toolchain is
readily available
* the output is also parsed by Github so documentation can be read
straight from GH
the reason why Markdown was not chosen:
* the current strong structure would be hard to replicate
* markdown is not standardized and output varies according to the
implementation
the docs were converted with Pandoc, using the following commands:
mkdir oper-guide
for source in sgml/oper-guide/*.sgml; do
pandoc --toc -s -f docbook -t rst $source -o oper-guide/$(basename $source .sgml).rst
done
cd oper-guide
sphinx-quickstart
git add *.rst make.bat conf.py
git add -f Makefile
git rm -r ../sgml
This backports the code responsible for SPKI digests from release/4.
It also adjusts doc/reference.conf to note that SPKI digests are now
supported, and how to generate them. It does NOT backport the mkfingerprint
program -- the instructions in reference.conf are sufficient. I am ofcourse
open to anyone else backporting the program, but I don't see the need.
While functionally compatible with the implementation in ElementalIRCd, our approach is different,
specifically pre-calculating the bitmask at config load time. This is more efficient, and allows us
to report errors as part of the configuration phase.
This allows multiple improvements to m_sasl. With this change, the SASL
authentication gets aborted immediately when services are offline.
Additionally, we send the SASL ENCAP messages directly to the specified
SASL agent.
The code to send each channel mode only to servers supporting it was
broken a while ago and was not very useful anyway. Therefore, require
all connecting servers to support all standard channel modes.
There are IPv4 and IPv6 ranges reserved for documentation and example code;
use these to minimize the risk if someone accidentally uses an unmodified
example conf.
Add the flags (auth{} spoof, dynamic spoof) to struct Whowas and add a
show_ip_whowas().
Normal users now see IPs of unspoofed users, and remote opers can see IPs
behind dynamic spoofs. Also, general::hide_spoof_ips is now applied when
the IP is shown, not when the client exits.
This is to follow the precident set by Atheme's atheme.conf.example file. Since the ircd now fails to start on a non-existant configuration file, seeing that message would make one know where to look.