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Bip » History » Revision 10

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Pierre-Louis Bonicoli, 2010-10-26 01:50
add "Getting the code" paragraph


About

Bip is an IRC proxy, which means it keeps connected to your preferred IRC servers, can store the logs for you, and even send them back to your IRC client(s) upon connection.

You may want to use bip to keep your logfiles (in a unique format and on a unique computer) whatever your client is, when you connect from multiple workstations, or when you simply want to have a playback of what was said while you were away.

News

There is a lot of news !
2010-10-26 New website: migrating from http://bip.t1r.net to http://https://projects.duckcorp.org/projects/bip
2010-10-25 New repository: migrating from http://bip.t1r.net/bip.git to
2010-09-12 bip 0.8.6 released

Features

There is a lot of features !

Basic usage

  • Copy sample bip.conf file found in tarball in ~/.bip/bip.conf
  • Edit according to your needs
  • Setup your favorite IRC client to connect to bip, and setup a IRC password according to the format “bip_username:bip_password:connection_id”

Use a single bip session for multiple irc connections. Each bip user can have multiple irc networks to connect to, the connection_id identifies a connection for a user. For example if a user connects on OFTC and efnet, he would configure his client to connect to two servers, all with the same host (the one on which bip is running), and he would set a different irc password for each of the networks. ie “user:pass:OFTC” and “user:pass:efnet”.

Documentation

Here is the bip documentation:

Getting the code

License

Bip is open source and released under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2 (source:COPYING).

Updated by Pierre-Louis Bonicoli about 14 years ago · 10 revisions