These days salted SHA-256 is considered quite weak for passwords.
Transparently upgrade existing hashes upon login.
Bump cmake requirement to able to use IMPORTED_TARGET, this will allow
further cleanup in next commits.
Some clients will reuse query windows as the client thinks its just a
nick change if you have a existing query window with a module and a different one messages you.
Fix that by using the modules name as the ident.
Update tests to match new modules ident.
Used for "server-dependent" caps which already rely on sending NEW and
DEL to client. This functionality is not yet available for caps added by
modules.
Currently, there is no usable wrapper for CModCommand for use within
bindings, so this commit adds a proxy class that adds itself as a
callback and allows implementing Python classes to implement commands
via __call__().
A completely synthetic example:
import znc
class foo(znc.Module):
module_types = [znc.CModInfo.UserModule]
def OnLoad(self, args, message):
self.AddHelpCommand()
self.AddCommand(FooCmd)
return True
class FooCmd(znc.Command):
cmd = 'foo'
args = foo.t_d('bar')
desc = foo.t_d('baz')
def __call__(self, line):
self.GetModule().PutModule('I have been foo’d!')
Fixes https://github.com/znc/znc/issues/198
The bug was introduced while fixing #1705. If a client did not enable
echo-message, and doesn't have a network, it crashes.
Thanks to LunarBNC for reporting this
'imp' was deprecated since python 3.3.
This removes the undocumented feature of loading python C extension as
ZNC module, but adds a test that python package can be loaded.
Bump python requirements to 3.4