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BIBOUMI 1 "2014-02-17"
======================
NAME
----
biboumi - XMPP gateway to IRC
SYNOPSIS
--------
`biboumi` [`config_filename`]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
Biboumi is an XMPP gateway that connects to IRC servers and translates
between the two protocols. It can be used to access IRC channels using any
XMPP client as if these channels were XMPP MUCs.
OPTIONS
-------
Available options:
`config_filename`
Specify the file to read for configuration. See *CONFIG* section for more
details on its content.
CONFIG
------
The configuration file uses a simple format of the form
`"option=value"`. Here is a description of each possible option:
`hostname` (mandatory)
The hostname served by the XMPP gateway. This domain must be configured in
the XMPP server as an external component. See the manual for your XMPP
server for more information.
`password` (mandatory)
The password used to authenticate the XMPP component to your XMPP server.
This password must be configured in the XMPP server, associated with the
external component on *hostname*.
`admin`
The bare JID of the gateway admin. This JID will have more privileges than
other standard users, for example some administration ad-hoc commands will
only be available to that JID.
`log_file`
A filename into which logs are written. If none is provided, the logs are
written on standard output
`log_level`
Indicate what type of log messages to write in the logs. Values can be
from 0 to 3. 0 is debug, 1 is info, 2 is warning, 3 is error. The
default is 0, but a more practical value for production use is 1.
The configuration can be re-read at runtime (you can for example change the
log level without having to restart biboumi) by sending SIGUSR1 or SIGUSR2
(see kill(1)) to the process.
USAGE
-----
When started, biboumi connects, without encryption (see *SECURITY*), to the
local XMPP server on the port `5347` and provides the configured password to
authenticate. Biboumi then serves the configured `hostname`, this means
that all XMPP stanza with a `to` JID on that domain will be sent to biboumi,
and biboumi will send only send messages coming from this hostname.
When an user joins an IRC channel on an IRC server (see *Join an IRC
channel*), biboumi connects to the remote IRC server, sets the user’s nick
as requested, and then tries to join the specified channel. If the same
user subsequently tries to connect to an other channel on the same server,
the same IRC connection is used. If, however, an other user wants to join
an IRC channel on that same IRC server, biboumi opens a new connection to
that server. Biboumi connects once to each IRC server, for each user on it.
To cleanly shutdown the component, send the SIGINT or SIGTERM signals to it.
It will send messages to all connected IRC and XMPP servers to indicate a
reason why the users are being disconnected. Biboumi exits when all
connections are closed because the remote acknowledged the end of
communication. If the remote server does not respond, biboumi does not
exit, unless SIGINT or SIGTERM is received again, in which case biboumi
closes the TCP connections and exits immediately.
### Addressing
IRC entities are represented by XMPP JIDs. The domain part of the JID is
the domain served by biboumi, and the local part depends on the concerned
entity.
IRC channels and IRC users JIDs have a localpart formed like this:
`name`, the `'%'` separator and the `irc_server`.
If the IRC channel you want to adress starts with the `'#'` character (or
less frequently, but still valid, one of `'&'`, `'+'` or `'!'`), then you
must include it in the JID. Some other gateway implementations, as well as
some IRC clients, do not require them to be started by one of these
characters, adding an implicit `'#'` in that case. Biboumi does not do that
because this gets confusing when trying to understand the difference between
the channels *foo*, *#foo*, and *##foo*.
If compiled with Libidn, an IRC user has a bare JID representing the
“hostname” provided by the IRC server.
### Join an IRC channel
To join an IRC channel `#foo` on the IRC server `irc.example.com`,
join the XMPP MUC `#foo%irc.example.com@hostname`.
### Connect to an IRC server
The connection to the IRC server is automatically made when the user tries
to join any channel on that IRC server. The connection is closed whenever
the last channel on that server is left by the user. To be able to stay
connected to an IRC server without having to be in a real IRC channel,
biboumi provides a virtual channel on the jid
`%irc_serve@biboumi.example.com`. For example if you want to join the
channel `#foo` on the server `irc.example.com`, but you need to authenticate
to a bot of the server before you can join it, you can first join the room
`%irc.example.com@biboumi.example.net` (this will effectively connect you to
the IRC server without joining any room), then send your authentication
message to the user `bot%irc.example.com@biboumi.example.net" and finally
join the room `#foo%irc.example.com@biboumi.example.net`.
### Channel messages
On XMPP, unlike on IRC, the displayed order of the messages is the same for
all participants of a MUC. Biboumi can not however provide this feature, as
it cannot know whether the IRC server has received and forwarded the
messages to other users. This means that the order of the messages
displayed in your XMPP may not be the same than the order on other IRC
users’.
### Nicknames
On IRC, nicknames are server-wide. This means that one user only has one
single nickname at one given time on all the channels of a server. This is
different from XMPP where an user can have a different nick on each MUC,
even if these MUCs are on the same server.
This means that the nick you choose when joining your first IRC channel on a
given IRC server will be your nickname in all other channels that you join
on that same IRC server.
If you explicitely change your nickname on one channel, your nickname will
be changed on all channels on the same server as well.
### Private messages
Private messages are handled differently on IRC and on XMPP. On IRC, you
talk directly to one server-user: toto on the channel #foo is the same user
as toto on the channel #bar (as long as these two channels are on the same
IRC server). Using biboumi, there is no way to receive a message from a
room participant (from a jid like #test%irc.example.com/nickname). Instead,
private messages are received from and sent to the user (using a jid like
nickname%irc.example.com). For conveniance and compatibility with XMPP
clients sending private messages to the MUC participants, a message sent to
#chan%irc.example.com@irc.example.net/Nickname will be redirected to
Nickname%irc.example.com@irc.example.net, although this is not the prefered
way to do it.
### Notices
Notices are received exactly like private messages. It is not possible to
send a notice.
### Kicks and bans
Kicks are transparently translated from one protocol to another. However
banning an XMPP participant has no effect. To ban an user you need to set a
mode +b on that user nick or host (see *MODES*) and then kick it.
### Encoding
On XMPP, the encoding is always `UTF-8`, whereas on IRC the encoding of
each message can be anything.
This means that biboumi has to convert everything coming from IRC into UTF-8
without knowing the encoding of the received messages. To do so, it checks
if each message is UTF-8 valid, if not it tries to convert from
`iso_8859-1` (because this appears to be the most common case, at least
on the channels I visit) to `UTF-8`. If that conversion fails at some
point, a placeholder character `'�'` is inserted to indicate this
decoding error.
Messages are always sent in UTF-8 over IRC, no conversion is done in that
direction.
### IRC modes
One feature that doesn’t exist on XMPP but does on IRC is the `modes`.
Although some of these modes have a correspondance in the XMPP world (for
example the `+o` mode on an user corresponds to the `moderator` role
in XMPP), it is impossible to map all these modes to an XMPP feature. To
circumvent this problem, biboumi provides a raw notification when modes are
changed, and lets the user change the modes directly.
To change modes, simply send a message starting with “`/mode`” followed by
the modes and the arguments you want to send to the IRC server. For example
“/mode +aho louiz”. Note that your XMPP client may interprete messages
begining with “/” like a command. To actually send a message starting with
a slash, you may need to start your message with “//mode” or “/say /mode”,
depending on your client.
When a mode is changed, the user is notified by a message coming from the
MUC bare JID, looking like “Mode #foo [+ov] [toto tutu]”. In addition, if
the mode change can be translated to an XMPP feature, the user will be
notified of this XMPP event as well. For example if a mode “+o toto” is
received, then toto’s role will be changed to moderator. The mapping
between IRC modes and XMPP features is as follow:
`+q`
Sets the participant’s role to `moderator` and its affiliation to `owner`.
`+a`
Sets the participant’s role to `moderator` and its affiliation to `owner`.
`+o`
Sets the participant’s role to `moderator` and its affiliation to `admin`.
`+h`
Sets the participant’s role to `moderator` and its affiliation to `member`.
`+v`
Sets the participant’s role to `participant` and its affiliation to `member`.
SECURITY
--------
Biboumi does not provide any encryption mechanism: connection to the XMPP
server MUST be made on localhost. The XMPP server is not supposed to accept
non-local connection from components, thus encryption is useless. IRC
SSL/TLS is also not yet implemented.
Biboumi also does not check if received JIDs are properly formatted using
nodeprep. This must be done by the XMPP server to which biboumi is directly
connected.
AUTHORS
-------
This software and man page are both written by Florent Le Coz.
LICENSE
-------
Biboumi is released under the zlib license.
|