QuasselWiki » History » Version 13
Version 12 (sph, 01/17/2009 02:51 AM) → Version 13/217 (sph, 01/17/2009 03:02 AM)
h1. Quassel
{{toc}}
h2. Introduction
Quassel is a program to connect to an IRC network. It has the unique ability to split the graphical component (quasselclient) from the core which handles the IRC connection (quasselcore). This means that you can have a core permanently connected to one or more IRC networks and attach a client from wherever you are without moving around any information or settings. However, Quassel can easily behave like any other client, which is referred to as "Quassel Mono".
Quassel's distributed approach:
!http://lithitux.org/~sphilips/quassel/wiki/distributed.png!
h2. Getting started
Setting up Quassel is fairly easy and straightforward. Since we have a separated core and client, we will configure them in two steps. If you are using the Quassel Mono version, then you can skip the core part as this is done internally.
h3. Installation
The best and most reliable way is to simply install the packages provided by your distribution. However, we do offer some static binaries at http://quassel-irc.org/downloads along with Git instructions for those who prefer to compile Quassel themselves.
h3. Connecting to the core
If This assumes you wish to setup the core with SSL support, you must have Qt SSL support and a core compiled with the "-DWITH_OPENSSL=ON" cmake option. Generate a key with the following command on the server are running the core:
<pre>"openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:1024 -keyout ~/.quassel/quasselCert.pem -out ~/.quassel/quasselCert.pem"</pre>
Now start the core and open quasselclient quasselcore somewhere, either locally or on your local a remote machine.
h3. Configuration
h2. Howto's
* [[Manage core users]]
* [[Add SSL to the core]]
{{toc}}
h2. Introduction
Quassel is a program to connect to an IRC network. It has the unique ability to split the graphical component (quasselclient) from the core which handles the IRC connection (quasselcore). This means that you can have a core permanently connected to one or more IRC networks and attach a client from wherever you are without moving around any information or settings. However, Quassel can easily behave like any other client, which is referred to as "Quassel Mono".
Quassel's distributed approach:
!http://lithitux.org/~sphilips/quassel/wiki/distributed.png!
h2. Getting started
Setting up Quassel is fairly easy and straightforward. Since we have a separated core and client, we will configure them in two steps. If you are using the Quassel Mono version, then you can skip the core part as this is done internally.
h3. Installation
The best and most reliable way is to simply install the packages provided by your distribution. However, we do offer some static binaries at http://quassel-irc.org/downloads along with Git instructions for those who prefer to compile Quassel themselves.
h3. Connecting to the core
If This assumes you wish to setup the core with SSL support, you must have Qt SSL support and a core compiled with the "-DWITH_OPENSSL=ON" cmake option. Generate a key with the following command on the server are running the core:
<pre>"openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:1024 -keyout ~/.quassel/quasselCert.pem -out ~/.quassel/quasselCert.pem"</pre>
Now start the core and open quasselclient quasselcore somewhere, either locally or on your local a remote machine.
h3. Configuration
h2. Howto's
* [[Manage core users]]
* [[Add SSL to the core]]