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136 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
136 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
Anope Installation Instructions
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-------------------------------
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1) Installing Anope
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2) Upgrading Anope
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3) Setting up the IRCd
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4) Starting Anope
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5) Setting up a crontab
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Note: You should also read the README and FAQ files!
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1) Installing Anope
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IMPORTANT NOTE: it is not recommended to use (and therefore install)
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Anope as root. Use an unprivileged user instead -- the
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one you're using for the ircd or a dedicated one will
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be good enough.
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The very first thing you need to do is to get the Anope package (if not
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already done). You can find it at:
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https://www.anope.org/
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Anope requires cmake to build. You can check if CMake is already
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installed on your system using the command:
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cmake --version
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If it's installed, you will get a line that says something similar to
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"cmake version 2.8.12.2". If the version is less than 2.4 or you get
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an error saying the command was not found, you will not be able to use
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CMake unless you install it yourself into your home directory. CMake
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can be downloaded from:
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https://cmake.org/download/
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Next, unpack the package in your home directory, and go into the created
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directory.
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If there are any extra modules you want to enable, such as m_mysql, run
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the 'extras' script to enable them. If you do not know you can come back
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later and enable them.
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Now type ./Config to start the configuration script. It will ask you a
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few questions, and figure out how to compile Anope on your system. If
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you are unsure about the answer to a question, use the default value.
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Now cd build and type make and make install. This will install
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all the needed files in the paths you specified with the configure
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script, and setup file permissions. You should ensure that the data
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directory is not accessible by other users, as malicious users may
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cause trouble on your network if passwords are not encrypted, or read
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the memos of any user.
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Now go into the conf directory (by default, ~/services/conf). Copy the example
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configuration file (example.conf) to services.conf, and open the latter
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with your favorite text editor. It contains all the configuration
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directives Anope will use at startup. Read the instructions contained in
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the file carefully. Using the default values is NOT a good idea, and will
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most likely not work!
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If you need help, you should visit https://forum.anope.org/ or #anope on
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irc.anope.org. Provide *complete* error output, along with other relevant
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information eg. OS, compiler and C++ library versions.
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See the README file for more information.
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2) Upgrading Anope
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To upgrade Anope, just follow the installation instructions described in
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section 1. There are however a few specific guidelines:
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* IMPORTANT: Back up your old databases!
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* If you are upgrading to a new major release, ALWAYS restart a
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fresh configuration file from example.conf.
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3) Setting up the IRCd
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Services acts as an IRC server with pseudo-clients on it. To link them to
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your network, you'll need to configure your IRCd to allow services to link.
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The configuration varies depending on the IRCd, but you will probably need
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a link block (also called connect block, or C line), a U line (also called
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a shared block), and be sure that the IRCd is listening on the given port
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in the link block.
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Example link configurations can be found in example.conf for some of the
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popular IRCds.
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Don't forget to /rehash your IRCd to apply changes.
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You may also try our interactive link maker, which is located at:
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https://www.anope.org/ilm.php
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4) Starting Anope
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Go into the directory where binaries were installed (by default, this is
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~/services/bin). Type ./services to launch Anope.
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If there are syntax errors in the configuration file they will be
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displayed on the screen. Correct them until there are no errors anymore.
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A successful startup won't generate any message.
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Give Services at least one minute to link to your network, as certain
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IRCds on some OSes may be really slow for the link process. If nothing
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happens after about a minute, it is probably a configuration problem. Try
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to launch Anope with ./services -debug -nofork to see any errors that it
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encounters, and try to correct them.
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If you need help to solve errors, feel free to subscribe to the Anope
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mailing list and ask there. See the README file for details.
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5) Setting up a crontab
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A crontab entry will allow you to check periodically whether Anope is
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still running, and restart it if not.
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First rename the example.chk script that is in Anope path (by default,
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this is ~/services/conf) to services.chk and edit it. You'll need to
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modify the CONFIGURATION part of the file. Then ensure that the file is
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marked as executable by typing chmod +x services.chk, and try to launch the
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script to see if it works (Anope must not be running when you do this ;))
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When this is done, you'll have to add the crontab entry. Type crontab -e.
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This will open the default text editor with the crontab file. Enter the
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following (with correct path):
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*/5 * * * * /home/ircd/services/conf/services.chk >/dev/null 2>&1
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The */5 at the beginning means "check every 5 minutes". You may replace
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the 5 with other another number if you want (but less than 60). Consult
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your system's manual pages for more details on the syntax of the crontab
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file. Interesting manpages are crontab(5), crontab(1) and cron(8).
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Save and exit, and it's installed.
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