Comparison of Internet Relay Chat daemons
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The following tables compare general and technical data. This article does not have current or all the data available.
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Servers
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Obsolete Servers
The following servers are no longer maintained, but basic details are maintained for posterity. They will not be listed in feature comparison tables.
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Operating system support
The operating systems that the daemon is compatible with.
Technology
Various networking and IRC technology used to date.
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Features
IRC server features, mostly extensions to RFC 1459. Probably also implementations of RFC 2810, RFC 2811, RFC 2812, RFC 2813, and possibly IRCX.
- +channels (In early IRCds, these were simply named channels. At least one modern IRCd (IRCD) uses the + prefix for modeless channels, i.e. no chanops and channel mode forced to +nt. This is described in RFC 2811.)
- #channels ("+channels" were later replaced with "#channels" in version 2.7, numeric channels were removed entirely and channel bans (mode +b) were implemented.)
- &channels (irc2.8, those that exist only on the current server, rather than the entire network)
- !channels (irc2.10, those that are theoretically safe from suffering from the many ways that a user could exploit a channel by "riding a netsplit"; IRCds using timestamping provide (most of) this functionality on #channels)
- %#channels (#channels whose name are in UTF-8 for IRCX)
- %&channels (&channels whose name are in UTF-8 for IRCX)
- %!channels (!channels whose name are in UTF-8 for IRCX)
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Related pages
Notes
Other websites
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