This means the calling code in commands.c no longer needs to take a copy before calling the function.
Also remove code testing result of of ctcp_quote_it() and ctcp_unquote_it() - these functions never fail.
These functions are really specific to parsing and creating CTCP SED messages, which means they belong
in ctcp.c with the other CTCP code.
Also remove unnecessary inclusions of encrypt.h and ctcp.h.
Use size_t for passing buffer lengths, and const char * for encryption keys and other non-modified buffer
arguments.
Remove pointless helper function do_crypt().
Encrypted messages to a channel need to use their own format. This also fixes the use of ENCRYPTED_PRIVMSG
and ENCRYPTED_NOTICE - they were being called with too many arguments so the destination nick was being prepended
to the message text.
Actual encryped messages and notices are now printed directly from do_sed() / do_reply_sed().
Inline CTCP replacement is only done if the message cannot be decrypted (for the [ENCRYPTED MESSAGE]
placeholder).
This removes the need for the global flag 'sed' to alter the NOTICE and PRIVMSG handling.
A side-effect of this is that SED PRIVMSGs now do not go through the usual PRIVMSG ignore
and flood handling. This is acceptable because messages can only go through this path if
the sender has actually been added as a SED peer with /ENCRYPT, and it still goes through
the CTCP ignore and flood handling.
When a SED-encrypted NOTICE is scanned for CTCPs within the decrypted portion, they should be
handled with do_notice_ctcp() so they are treated as CTCP replies.
Checking before truncation means you can sneak a privileged port past the check.
This change also collects the various broken-out parts of a CTCP DCC offer into a struct so that
it's easier to pass them all around together.
There's several different types of DCC offers, all of which need slightly
different handling. Previously they were all handled by the monster function
register_dcc_type() - this breaks them out into seperate functions for handling
SEND, RESEND, CHAT and BOT offers, moves common code into static helper
functions and renames the entry point from ctcp.c to handle_dcc_offer().
This will allow adding a way for modules to register DCC offer types that
they're interested in.
This also moves rename_file() from misc.c into dcc.c, where its only user is.
stripansi() actually just munged control-characters, so it just turned ANSI
codes into visible junk.
stripansicodes() instead leaves control characters alone but removes complete
ANSI sequences from the string. I'm not sure if even that is necessary,
really - after all, we always allowed ^B, ^C etc style formatting in CTCP
replies.
recieved; last_ctcp_reply is the last reply recieved (used by /RELCR etc.)
All of the /WI* commands now do a /WII style full whois request.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/bitchx/code/trunk@88 13b04d17-f746-0410-82c6-800466cd88b0
like x86-64, where sizeof(int) != sizeof (void *). This involves correctly
casting every function pointer from the global table to the correct
function type, which has the added benefit of allowing type-checking of
function arguments and return values.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/bitchx/code/trunk@26 13b04d17-f746-0410-82c6-800466cd88b0