mirror of
https://github.com/matrix-construct/construct
synced 2024-11-27 01:02:46 +01:00
369 lines
16 KiB
Text
369 lines
16 KiB
Text
|
|
||
|
EFnet Oper Guide
|
||
|
Last update: 02-21-2002
|
||
|
Written and maintained by Riedel
|
||
|
E-Mail: dennisv@vuurwerk.nl
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. Commands you should know about
|
||
|
2. The client of your choice
|
||
|
3. Your primary responsibilities
|
||
|
4. Re-routing
|
||
|
4.1 Re-routing other servers and remote connects
|
||
|
5. Kills and klines
|
||
|
6. Kill and K-Line requests
|
||
|
7. Happy birthday!
|
||
|
8. Security
|
||
|
9. Know who your friends are
|
||
|
10. The TCM bot
|
||
|
11. Services
|
||
|
12. G-Lines
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. Commands you should know about
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is no longer covered here. IRCD-hybrid is changing too rapidly, so
|
||
|
this section would be outdated in no time ;) For an up-to-date version,
|
||
|
please download the latest hybrid at www.ircd-hybrid.org.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
2. The client of your choice
|
||
|
|
||
|
There are many IRC clients around for a wide variety of operating systems.
|
||
|
Being an IRC Operator doesn't *require* you to use a UNIX client, however
|
||
|
I personally prefer UNIX-based clients. If you're familiar with UNIX and
|
||
|
use UNIX for opering, I suggest ircII / epic. There are a lot of scripts
|
||
|
available for those two clients, and it's not that hard to write scripts
|
||
|
yourself to suite your needs. It is important that you know how to operate
|
||
|
your client, and familiarize yourself with the options and features. For
|
||
|
whatever client you chose this goes for any of them: You should be in
|
||
|
control of your client, instead of the client being in control of you.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Resources :
|
||
|
|
||
|
www.mirc.co.uk - mIRC (MS-Windows)
|
||
|
www.irchelp.org - a variety of clients and scripts
|
||
|
ftp.blackened.com - several UNIX based clients available
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
3. Your primary responsibilities
|
||
|
|
||
|
As an IRC Operator, you're responsible for maintaining the server on a
|
||
|
real-time basis. You represent your server, and you represent the network.
|
||
|
Irresponsible / rude / offensive / stupid behavior may discredit your server
|
||
|
and the network. You should focus on the task you were chosen for...
|
||
|
maintainance. Sounds simple, no? It means getting rid of users that abuse
|
||
|
the service, enforcing the server's policy and keeping the server linked.
|
||
|
Users will ask you questions, and expect you to know all the answers.. after
|
||
|
all, you're the oper!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Be prepared for users trying to fool you, sweet talk you into things you
|
||
|
don't want, lie and deceive. Most users are handling in good faith...
|
||
|
however, the abusers have learned how to manipulate opers. They have studied
|
||
|
the alien creature 'oper' for ages like biologists study animals. Be
|
||
|
paranoid, be curious and be suspicious. I can't stress the importancy of that
|
||
|
often enough.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Second priority has the network. You were not chosen to maintain the network
|
||
|
but you were chosen to maintain the server. However, you may want to be able
|
||
|
to reroute servers. If you see something broken, don't be afraid to fix it.
|
||
|
If you do, be sure you fix things and don't make it worse. Before you
|
||
|
step into routing, be sure you've familiarized yourself with the network's
|
||
|
topology, and be confident enough to perform such actions. (re)routing is
|
||
|
covered in the next chapter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Opers on the network depend on a trusting relationship. You can usually take
|
||
|
the word from an oper. Other opers are considered -trusted-, however, there
|
||
|
are exceptions. Sometimes even opers lie to opers to get things done. Don't
|
||
|
be afraid to ask for proof of a certain statement, such as logs.
|
||
|
This doesn't mean you distrust the oper in question, but -you- and you alone
|
||
|
are responsible for your actions. You call the shots on your server, unless
|
||
|
your admin says otherwise.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
4. Re-routing
|
||
|
|
||
|
Re-routing is not hard, and it's not scary but it is important that you do it
|
||
|
right. The commands you'll use are SQUIT and CONNECT. First, a very simple
|
||
|
example. Let's say your server, irc.yourserver.com is lagged to it's uplink,
|
||
|
irc.uplink.com and you want to reroute your server. You have to think about
|
||
|
where you want your server to be linked, and you have to time your reroute.
|
||
|
An example topology :
|
||
|
|
||
|
irc.yourserver.com ---- irc.uplink.com
|
||
|
| | \
|
||
|
B C D
|
||
|
/ \
|
||
|
E F
|
||
|
/ \
|
||
|
G H --- O
|
||
|
/ | \ | \
|
||
|
I J K L M
|
||
|
\
|
||
|
N
|
||
|
|
||
|
In this case, you're uplinked by irc.uplink.com
|
||
|
irc.uplink.com also hubs B, C and D. Server B functions as hub for E and F;
|
||
|
F hubs G and H; H hubs L, M and O. G hubs I, J and K. M hubs N.
|
||
|
Your server is allowed to connect to server B, F and G. So you consider the
|
||
|
servers you're able to connect to. Is the lag caused by a server that uplinks
|
||
|
irc.uplink.com ? Use /stats ? irc.uplink.com to determine lag to the other
|
||
|
servers. If irc.uplink.com does not respond, the lag is to your uplink. If
|
||
|
so, you cannot be sure about the state of the other uplinks, so you'd have to
|
||
|
get on a remote server and determine lag by using /stats ? and /trace. For
|
||
|
example, you could connect to server N, and /trace yournick. Yournick, being
|
||
|
the nick on your server. You'll see which route it takes, and what the
|
||
|
problem server is. Example /trace output :
|
||
|
|
||
|
S:[SERVER-N ] V:[2.8/hybrid] U:[SERVER-M ]
|
||
|
S:[SERVER-M ] V:[2.8/hybrid] U:[SERVER-H ]
|
||
|
S:[SERVER-H ] V:[2.8/hybrid] U:[SERVER-F ]
|
||
|
S:[SERVER-F ] V:[2.8/hybrid] U:[SERVER-B ]
|
||
|
S:[SERVER-B ] V:[2.8/hybrid] U:[irc.uplink.com ]
|
||
|
S:[irc.uplink.com ] V:[2.8/hybrid] U:[irc.yourserver.com ]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The trace doesn't complete... server-b announces irc.uplink.com, and
|
||
|
irc.uplink.com announces your server. Your server should return something
|
||
|
like :
|
||
|
|
||
|
S:[irc.yourserver.] OPER [yournick!user@yourhost]
|
||
|
|
||
|
If it doesn't, we know the lag is only between yourserver and uplink.
|
||
|
Usually if there is lag between your server and your uplink, the send-queue
|
||
|
rises. This is not always the case. Sometimes your server can write perfectly
|
||
|
to your uplink, but not reverse. That is called one sided lag.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We pick server B to link to. It means we have to SQUIT and CONNECT.
|
||
|
To unlink from irc.uplink.com and connect to SERVER_B we'd type:
|
||
|
/quote SQUIT irc.uplink.com :reroute
|
||
|
/connect SERVER_B
|
||
|
|
||
|
we *DON'T* SQUIT irc.yourserver.com... and I'll try to explain why:
|
||
|
If we wanted to remove hub M from the network, and with it N, we'd issue
|
||
|
a SQUIT M. An SQUIT follows a path, relays the SQUIT request to each server
|
||
|
in that path. Finally it reaches server H, which is the hub for M. Server H
|
||
|
sees the SQUIT and drops the link to M.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now a different situation, we want to separate yourserver, uplink, C and D
|
||
|
from the rest of the network, in order to reroute. We'd have to SQUIT server
|
||
|
B, since we want the -uplink- of server B (being irc.uplink.com) to drop the
|
||
|
link to server B.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If you'd SQUIT irc.yourserver.com, you ask yourserver.com to drop the link to
|
||
|
itself, which is impossible. If you SQUIT irc.uplink.com, you ask yourserver
|
||
|
to drop the link to uplink, which is what we want to do.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the SQUIT and CONNECT, the new situation looks like this :
|
||
|
|
||
|
irc.uplink.com
|
||
|
| | \
|
||
|
irc.yourserver.com -- B C D
|
||
|
/ \
|
||
|
E F
|
||
|
/ \
|
||
|
G H --- O
|
||
|
/ | \ | \
|
||
|
I J K L M
|
||
|
\
|
||
|
N
|
||
|
|
||
|
If yourserver is a Hub, it makes the situation more complex, since your
|
||
|
actions have more impact.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
4.1 - Re-routing other servers and remote connects
|
||
|
|
||
|
Example topology :
|
||
|
|
||
|
irc.uplink.com
|
||
|
| | \
|
||
|
irc.yourserver.com -- B C D
|
||
|
/ \
|
||
|
E F
|
||
|
/ \
|
||
|
G H --- O
|
||
|
/ | \ | \
|
||
|
I J K L M
|
||
|
\
|
||
|
N
|
||
|
|
||
|
Let's say, hub H is way lagged to F, but G to F is fine... we want to reroute
|
||
|
H, and stick H to G.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We'd do :
|
||
|
|
||
|
/quote SQUIT serverh :re-routing you babe
|
||
|
/connect serverh 6667 serverg
|
||
|
|
||
|
A global wallops will be sent :
|
||
|
!serverg! Remote CONNECT serverh 6667 from ItsMe
|
||
|
|
||
|
When re-routing, always give the server some time to prevent nick collides.
|
||
|
When there is lag, people will connect to another server. When you SQUIT and
|
||
|
CONNECT to fast, a lot of those clients will be collided. Also, stick to your
|
||
|
territory. How enthusiastic you may be, you cannot route the world. If you're
|
||
|
an oper on the US side, stick to the US side when re-routing. Needless to
|
||
|
say, if you're EU, keep it to EU ;)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
5. Kills and klines
|
||
|
|
||
|
As an oper, you're given the incredible power *cough* of KILL and KLINE.
|
||
|
/kill nick reason disconnects a client from IRC with the specified reason.
|
||
|
A /quote kline *evil@*.dude.org :reason here bans the user from your server.
|
||
|
Abusive kills and klines may draw attacks to your server, so always consider
|
||
|
if a kline or kill is deserved. If the server gets attacked after a valid
|
||
|
kill or kline, well.. tough luck. You should never be 'afraid' to kline
|
||
|
anyone on your server. If it's a good reason, make it so. Even if you know
|
||
|
it may cause the server to be attacked. Maybe good to think about is this:
|
||
|
- if /ignore solves the problem rather than a kick, /ignore
|
||
|
- kick if a ban is unneeded
|
||
|
- ban if a /kill is unwarranted for
|
||
|
- kill rather than kline if that solves the problem
|
||
|
- kline when a server ban is really needed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You kline a user when you absolutely don't want this user to use the service
|
||
|
your server is providing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Crosskills (killing users on another server) are another issue. Some admins
|
||
|
don't care if users get /kill'ed off their server, for any reason or no
|
||
|
reason at all... and other admins are very anal about it. A good way to go
|
||
|
(IMO) is to issue a KILL if there is an absolute need for the target user to
|
||
|
be disconnected. If there are active opers on that server, let them handle
|
||
|
it. They'll be upset if you /kill a user off their server, without
|
||
|
contacting them. /stats p irc.server.here shows the active opers on a
|
||
|
particular server. Some opers have multiple o-lines and are not watching all
|
||
|
sessions. If you can't find an active oper on a server, you can
|
||
|
/quote operwall a request for opers from that server.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ghost KILLs are another story, an often misunderstood one.
|
||
|
When you see a /KILL from an oper with the reason 'ghosted' they usually
|
||
|
KILL a client that's about to ping timeout. That is not what a ghost is!
|
||
|
To quote Dianora: "a ghost happens because a client misses being killed when
|
||
|
it should be. Its a race condition due to nick chasing". In other words,
|
||
|
Server X thinks client A has been KILLed, while server Y missed the KILL
|
||
|
for that client.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
6. Kill and K-Line requests
|
||
|
|
||
|
As previously mentioned, if an oper from another server contacts you and
|
||
|
requests a kill or a kline for a local client with a good reason, you can
|
||
|
usually trust this request. Opers depend on a trusting relationship. However,
|
||
|
since you're responsible for the kill or kline, it is not rude to ask for
|
||
|
proof. It depends on the oper making the request how thats interpreted, but
|
||
|
the way they respond to asking for proof tells more about them than about
|
||
|
you.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The more and longer you oper, how better you get to know the other opers.
|
||
|
You know who is honest, you'll know who are lying and deceiving. Before
|
||
|
you acquire this knowledge, you can merely rely on common sense and
|
||
|
instincts. You'll probably make mistakes occasionally, and thats nothing to
|
||
|
be ashamed of. Opers are - despite contrary believes - human.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Users occasionally will ask you to kill or kline a user/bot too. Some
|
||
|
requests are straight-forward and clear, others require you to be cautious. I
|
||
|
recommend to always investigate such requests, and when you're confident the
|
||
|
request is valid, issue the kill or kline.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
7. Happy birthday!
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is a custom on EFnet to birthday /kill opers of whom it is his/her
|
||
|
birthday. Not all opers like this, but typically those opers don't let
|
||
|
others know about their birthday. You'll notice that the KILLS say a lot
|
||
|
about who likes who and who is friends with who. Whether you want to
|
||
|
participate, is entirely up to you.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
8. Security
|
||
|
|
||
|
As with any privilege, you have to handle it cautiously and responsibly.
|
||
|
Be sure that your o/O line doesn't get compromised! Oper only from secure
|
||
|
hosts. You and only you should know your password. Don't share your oper
|
||
|
account, and make your oper password a UNIQUE one. If your o/O line gets
|
||
|
compromised, nasty things may/will happen. Imagine an oper with crosskill
|
||
|
capabilities who's operline gets 'hacked'... the results are often
|
||
|
disastrous and you will lose respect and trust from others. It can cause
|
||
|
your oper privileges to be revoked, or even the server to be (temporarily)
|
||
|
delinked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
9. Know who your friends are
|
||
|
|
||
|
As an oper you will get a lot of users that want to be 'friends' with you.
|
||
|
Users offer you free* access to their *nix servers, ops in channels,
|
||
|
unlimited leech access to the biggest and fastest warez sites *gasp* and
|
||
|
more. They want favors in return. They say they don't but they truly want
|
||
|
something in return. They -expect- something in return. You could either
|
||
|
don't respond to such offers, or use them. The last option creates an even
|
||
|
more distorted image of opers and doesn't do any good for the user <-> oper
|
||
|
relationship. Your *real* friends are usually the persons who were your
|
||
|
friends _before_ you acquired the extra privileges.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
10. The TCM Bot
|
||
|
|
||
|
A TCM bot can be a valuable tool for opers. It keeps record of all connected
|
||
|
clients, flags clients with multiple connections and has all sorts of other
|
||
|
useful commands. There are three different kind of TCM's in use on EFnet,
|
||
|
being OOMon, TCM-Dianora and TCM-Hybrid. Every one of them requires you to
|
||
|
log in to be able to access the privileged commands. On OOMon you DCC chat
|
||
|
the TCM bot and do '.auth yournick yourpass' where yournick is your oper
|
||
|
name in your o/O line. In TCM-Dianora and TCM-Hybrid you register with:
|
||
|
'.register yourpass', where yourpass is your password ;)
|
||
|
All TCM commands start with a period. If you forget the period, the text goes
|
||
|
into the 'partyline', where it is echoed to all connected opers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Resources : http://toast.blackened.com/oomon/help
|
||
|
http://www.db.net/~db/tcm.html
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
11. Services
|
||
|
|
||
|
A recent addition to EFNet is Channel Fixer, aka ChanFix. This is an
|
||
|
automated service that re-ops clients on opless channels. There are a few
|
||
|
restrictions. First, the channel has to be of significant size for ChanFix
|
||
|
to store it in its database. Second, it only logs static addresses.
|
||
|
|
||
|
How does it work? Periodically it stores information about the channel state
|
||
|
in its database, for every channel in there. On every 'run', a channel
|
||
|
operator gets one point. These scores make a top-5 of 'most frequent opped
|
||
|
clients'. When a channel becomes opless, ChanFix will join and op the top-5
|
||
|
opped clients CURRENTLY IN THE CHANNEL.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Chanfix can be invoked manually by server administrators. /msg ChanFix
|
||
|
chanfix #channel is the command to do it. ChanFix will join, and treat the
|
||
|
channel as if it were opless. It lowers TS by one (resulting in a deop of
|
||
|
the entire channel) and re-ops the top-5 clients currently in the channel.
|
||
|
The Channel Fixer won't log or actively fix channels when there's a split of
|
||
|
significant size. Needless to say, the chanfix command must be used with
|
||
|
caution.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
12. G-Lines
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oh yes! A G-Line section. Currently, a part of EFNet (EU-EFnet) has G-Lines
|
||
|
enabled. This was decided by the EU admin community and is now mandatory
|
||
|
within EU-EFnet. In order for a G-Line to be activated, three opers from
|
||
|
three different servers need to issue the _exact_ same G-Line. The reason
|
||
|
is not counted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
G-Lines work best when the EU side of EFNet is not fragmented. G-Lines
|
||
|
will, however, propogate through a Hybrid 6 hub (but not a CSr hub) even
|
||
|
if the hub server has G-Lines disabled. This propogation allows two halves
|
||
|
of EU-EFnet to have concurrent G-Lines set even when split by US hub servers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Questions / Comments / Suggestions are welcome.
|
||
|
You can e-mail me: dennisv@vuurwerk.nl
|
||
|
|
||
|
Best regards,
|
||
|
--
|
||
|
Dennis "Riedel" Vink ___~___ Email - dennisv@vuurwerk.nl
|
||
|
Unix System Administrator \ | / Phone - +31 23 5111111
|
||
|
Vuurwerk Internet '|.|' PGP - 0xD68A7AAB
|
||
|
|
||
|
And on the seventh day, He exited from append mode.
|
||
|
|
||
|
# $Id: operguide.txt 6 2005-09-10 01:02:21Z nenolod $
|