WHO documentation, updated on 02 Jan 1999. Since ircu2.10.02 the WHO command had been changed from what described in RFC1459, while still keeping backward compatibility, actually it has been changed again in u2.10.05 so that since this release the format of the who query is now: [:source] WHO [ []] is optional, if mask2 is present it's used for matching and mask1 is ignored, otherwise mask1 is used for matching, since mask2 is the last parameter it *can* contain a space and this can help when trying to match a "realname". When matching IP numbers the can be in 3 forms: - The old and well known IRC masks using * and ? as wanted - The IPmask form a.b.c.d/e.f.g.h as used in most firewalls and system configurations, where what is before the / are the bits we expect in the IP number and what is after the / is the "filter mask" telling wich bits whould be considered and wich should be ignored. - The IPmask form a.b.c.d/bitcount where bitcount is an integer between 0 and 31 (inclusive), the matching will be for the IPs whose first "bitcount" bits are equal to those in a.b.c.d Note that: . The bitcount must be between 0 and 31, 32 is NOT good (and makes no sense to use it... just match against the static IP a.b.c.d) . The missing pieces of both the bitmask and the ipnumber in the forms ipnumber/bitmask and ipnumber/bitcount default to zero from right to left, this is NOT what inet_aton and most tools do but makes more sense here IMO, in example /who 194.243/16 is taken as /who 194.243.0.0/255.255.0.0 (inet_aton whould take 194.243 as 194.0.0.243). . For the above reason and specified validity limits 1.2.3.4/31 becomes 1.2.3.4/255.255.255.254 while 1.2.3.4/32 becomes 1.2.3.4/32.0.0.0 :) For all the other fields th match happens as has always been, i.e. it's only considered the IRC mask with * and ? (that is: don't expect to catch an user with "realname" = "1.2.3.4" when doing "/who 1.2/16 h" :) For both the masks and the options (and thus for all flags) case is NOT significative (so "/who o" is exactly the same as "/who O". The "options" part can be as follows: [][%[[,]]] in which: : can be a sequence of field matching flags, use mode matching flags and special purpose flags Field matching flags, when one of these is specified the field in question is matched against the mask, otherwise it's not matched. n Nick (in nick!user@host) u Username (in nick!user@host) h Hostname (in nick!user@host) i Numeric IP (the unresolved host) s Servername (the canonic name of the server the guy is on) r Info text (formerly "Realname") a Account name If no field-matching flags are specified they default to what old servers used to do: nuhsr (= everything except the numeric IP) User mode matching flags (specifying one of these means that only clients with that umode are considered, what is not specified is always matched): d Join-delayed channel members o Irc operator [In the future more flags will be supported, basically all usermodes plus the +/- specificators to revert the filtering] Special purpose flags: x If this is specified the extended visibility of information for opers is applied, what this means depends on the fact that you are local or global operator and on how the admin configured the server (global and eventually local irc opers might be allowed with this flag to see +i local users, to see all +i users, to see users into +p and/or +s channels, and so on). Using the 'x' flag while not being an irc operator is meaningless (it will be ignored), using it while oper'd means that the query is almost certainly logged and the admin might (rightfully) ask you an explanation on why you did. The rest, what follows the %, that is [%[fields[,]]], is as it has always been since the first who.patch, the part specifies wich fields to include in the output as: c : Include (first) channel name d : Include "distance" in hops (hopcount) f : Include flags (all of them) h : Include hostname i : Include IP l : Include idle time (0 for remote users) [2.10.11+] n : Include nick r : Include real name s : Include server name t : Include the querytype in the reply u : Include userID with eventual ~ a : Include account name o : Include oplevel (shows 999 to users without ops in the channel) And the , final option can be used to specify what you want the server to say in the querytype field of the output, useful to filter the output in scripts that do a kind of "on 354 ..." If no %fields are specified the reply is _exactly_ the same as has always been, numeric 352, same fields, same order. If one or more %fields are specified the reply uses a new numeric, since an out-of-standard 352 crashes EPIC and confuses several other clients. I used 354. :"source" 354 "target" ["querytype"] ["channel"] ["user"] ["IP"] ["host"] ["server"] ["nick"] ["flags"] ["hops"] ["idle"] ["account"] [:"realname"] Where only the fields specified in the %fields options are present. "querytype" is the same value passed in the /who command, it is provided to simplify scripting, in example one could pass a certain value in the query and have that value "signal" back what is to be done with those replies. The number of lines in the reply is still limited to avoid self-flooding and sooner or later another limitation will be added: you will be forced to do no more than one /who query every 'n' seconds where 'n' depends on the number of fields you actually match (the field-match flags specified before % in the option, defaulting to 6 if you don't specify an option at all), infact matching against many fields as the default query does severely affects the CPU usage of the server and is *much* better to specify with the field-matching flags what you are looking for, in example when you are looking for all french users a "/who *.fr h" is A LOT better than just "/who *.fr" (and actually you want users that have the _hostname_ matching *.fr, you wouldn't want to match a japanese user that has the realname "ku fung-kay aj.fr" in example...) Note that: - An user doing a "/who whatever" or a "/who whatever o" will not see any change (except for the anti-flood limit and sooner or later the CPU usage limit) - An user doing a "/who #wasteland %n" will get just a list of nicks (lame, very lame way of doing it :-) - An user doing a "/who 0 o%nuhs" will get a list of the opers with Nick, userID, server and hostname like: :Amst* 354 Nemesi #wasteland nbakker pc73.a.sn.no Oslo*.org Niels - An user doing a "/who 0 o%tnuhs,166" will get a list of the opers with Nick, userID, server and hostname like the above but with a request type field of 166 like: :Amst* 354 Nemesi 166 #wasteland nbakker pc73.a.sn.no Oslo-R.NO.EU.Undernet.org Niels So that he can have in example a script that does on ^354 "% 166" display "There is an oper ..." - The client will have to sort/format the fields by itself, the _order_ in which flags are passed is not significant, the fields in the reply will always have the same order. - The maximum number of _lines_ reported as reply for a query is 2048/(n+4) where 'n' is the number of flags "enabled" that is the number of fields included in each reply. Actually: 1 field returned = maximum 409 replies 2 fields returned = maximum 341 replies 3 fields returned = maximum 292 replies 4 fields returned = maximum 256 replies 5 fields returned = maximum 227 replies 6 fields returned = maximum 204 replies 7 fields returned = maximum 186 replies (default query) 8 fields returned = maximum 170 replies 9 fields returned = maximum 157 replies 10 fields returned = maximum 146 replies If the limit is reached before completing the query the reply is truncated and a new numeric error is issued after the "End of WHO", anyway the "end of" numeric is _always_ sent (otherwise some scripts and clients go crazy). The actual "mask" to match can have one of the two following forms: - A comma-separated list of elements: in this case each element is treated as a flat channel or nick name and is not matched to the other elements. Nicks do count in the limit of output lines (they should not be that many anyway), channels count if who asks the query is not on the channel. (That is: a /who #channel gives unlimited output if you are in there). - A _single_ mask: in this case (no commas, only one element) the mask is first checked to be a full channel or nickname, then it is matched against all relevant fiels as already known. These happens in different steps with replicates-removal so that if one has (?) something like "#wasteland" as "real name" or is on a channel named "#***MyChan***" it all works nicely. Miscellaneous bug fixes / "undocumented feature" changes: - /who NickName did not show the user with nick = NickName when it was invisible, even if the nick was given completely (without wildchars) now it does, since one could always see him as /whois NickName. It does not report him twice if he also has in example the userID == NickName and is -i. - ":source WHO :The Black Hacker" did not report an user having "The Black Hacker" as real name, now it does. Since this can only be done without the flags/format specificator because that would become the "last parameter" an escape has been provided: if you pass to m_who _3_ parameters the first one will be ignored and the last one used for matching, like in example ":source WHO foo %nuh :*Black Hacker*" where "foo" will not be used and the match will happen on "*Black Hacker*". (It was passed through clean_channelname() that prevented the mask from containing spaces and such...) - When one user was umode -i he was shown or not depending on the fact he was on a +p or +s channel... since we are doing a lookup on the _user_ this makes no sense to me, example: Neme1 : umode -i, on no channels, was SEEN with a /who 0 Neme2 : umode -i, on channel #p with chmode +p, was NOT SEEN by /who 0 Neme3 : umode -i, on channel #s with chmode +s, was NOT SEEN by /who 0 Now all users "-i" are matched with a "/who mask", the +i users instead must be on a _common_ channel to be seen. Basically being on "one" +s|p channel "forced" a +i status while one might want to be on #secret (mode +s) and have nobody know that he is in there but on the other side stay -i so others can find him. Of course a +s|p channel is never shown in the reply unless who asks the query is in there, if no "visible" channels are available for a -i user he is shown on "channel *". - When one user is +i is shown _only_ if there is a common channel, the first common channel found is shown in the reply. - As requested by many persons an escape has been provided for opers, when #defined SHOW_ALL_CHANNELS opers can /who #channel from outside and see users in there even if the channel is +s|+p Each admin decides locally if this feature is enabled to his opers. - As requested by many admins an escape from the query-size limit has been provided for opers, by #defining UNLIMIT_OPER_QUERY opers can do unlimited sized /who-s (until they get disconnected by max SendQ exceeded ;) Again admins will decide if enable or not this feature. - A /who a,c,b,d,e,f used to return as many ** END OF WHO as there were elements in the list, since now the command is supposed to be _efficient_ for /who nick1,nick2,nick3 .. I return a _single_ end of query message. - /who did not work for a channel named in example #**StarWars** now it does handle it properly (the mask was passed through collapse() and then.. did not find that channel, fixed). - "/who #John" did not report an user having '#John' as "Real name", now it does (and does NOT report him twice if he is ALSO on a channel named #John, strange but true: this can happen). - "/who a,b,c,d" where a b c and d are channelnames/nicks now uses an hash lookup and therefore is extremely efficient, if _only_ one field is specified it is looked in all the fields; who really wants _only_ users on a specific channel or a single nick (without looking for a match in the other fields) can force the server to consider the parameter as a list adding a comma somewhere, like: "/who #Italia," or "/who ,Nemesi" Or even better to avoid misbehaviour with other servers: "/who #Italia %... #Italia," or "/who Nemesi %... Nemesi," This will make old servers act properly and new ones and should be the recomended way for GUI based clients to get a channel's userlist and all the infos they want about users on the channel. - If you use the new numeric, flags will contain all the information about a user on a channel. @ for op'd, + for voiced, and ! for zombie. eg: Isomer #coder-com H@+, where the old behavor of just displaying one of them has been preserved for the old numeric. [2.10.11+] Regards, Andrea aka Nemesi