1 | Frequently Asked Questions about BitlBee |
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2 | ======================================== |
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3 | |
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4 | Well, maybe not exactly "Frequently", but definitely "Asked" ... mostly by |
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5 | the developers :-) |
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6 | |
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7 | Q: WTH were you guys on when you thought of that _weird_ name? |
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8 | A: Though we live in The Netherlands and one of us even lives in Amsterdam, |
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9 | we're not on drugs ... most of the time. |
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10 | |
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11 | Q: Okay, so the cops are so evil there, you can't even admit the truth, but |
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12 | WTH does BitlBee mean then? |
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13 | A: There are a few explanations. But the most symbolical goes like: the two |
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14 | colors of the bee symbolize the two worlds betwee which the Bee flies. On |
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15 | the one hand there's the IM-networks, on the other is IRC. |
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16 | |
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17 | Truth be told, it's absolute nonsense. The biggest nutcase in the |
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18 | development team just played around with words for half an hour or so. |
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19 | BitlBee was the result. We liked it, we kept it. We lovingly shorten it |
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20 | to "the Bee" or even "het Bijtje" (Dutch for "the little Bee") sometimes. |
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21 | |
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22 | Q: What is 'root' doing in my control channel? I didn't start the Bee as |
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23 | root. |
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24 | A: 'root' is just the name for the most powerful user in BitlBee. Just like |
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25 | in the system, it is root who is the ... eh ... root of the |
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26 | functionality. Luckily, in BitlBee, root follows your orders (mostly), so |
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27 | no BOFHs there. |
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28 | |
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29 | We get some complaints from time to time that 'root' is a confusing name. |
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30 | Because of that name, some package maintainers have renamed root to, for |
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31 | example, BitlBee. We recognize that some people see that need. If the |
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32 | package maintainer hasn't renamed root, you can do this yourself with the |
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33 | 'rename' command. |
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34 | |
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35 | The name root is not likely to change in the 'official' releases, though. |
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36 | We find the metaphor of root correct and feel that there is no important |
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37 | (security threatening) reason to change this non-creative piece of |
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38 | artistic creativity. |
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39 | |
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40 | Q: Why is there no mailing list/CVS/<insert your favourite development tool |
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41 | here>? |
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42 | A: Short answer: we don't need it. |
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43 | |
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44 | Longer answer: and we're not completely convinced of their merits. |
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45 | |
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46 | Long answer: we currently use some shell scripts which make sure all |
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47 | developers' copies are in sync with Wilmer's master copy. These shell |
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48 | scripts also produce development "releases" and packages, as well as |
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49 | stick them on a http-server. Patches are sent to Wilmer who decides |
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50 | whether or not a patch should be applied and if it may need some |
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51 | additional changes. This has the consistency advantage of a one-person |
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52 | project while having the capacity of more people available. The system |
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53 | works and we are kind of attached to it. |
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54 | |
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55 | Q: When is $random_feature going to be implemented? |
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56 | A: Please do consult doc/TODO (preferably in a development snapshot, which |
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57 | is more up-to-date than a TODO in a release version) before asking. |
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58 | Please also check the documentation. You'd not be the first one to request |
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59 | a feature which already exists! |
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60 | |
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61 | If your fabulous feature seems not to be requested before, just join |
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62 | #bitlbee on irc.oftc.net and tell us the news. |
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63 | |
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64 | If your feature request is already in the TODO list, of course you can |
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65 | still request it again/make us know that you'd like to see the feature as |
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66 | well. But when the feature is in the "post-1.0" list, it's probably not |
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67 | going to help. Most of the features in this list are low-priority because |
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68 | we (the developers) don't need (or even want) them. (File transfers are a |
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69 | good example here.) |
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70 | Hence, they'll only be implemented when we really got too much spare |
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71 | time. Obviously, if you're willing to help (i.e. submit a patch), you're |
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72 | always welcome. |
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73 | |
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74 | Q: The messages I send and/or receive look weird. I see weird characters and |
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75 | annoying HTML codes. Or, BitlBee does evil things when I send messages with |
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76 | non-ASCII characters! |
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77 | A: You probably have to change some settings. To get rid of HTML in messages, |
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78 | see "help set html". If you seem to have problems with your charset, see |
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79 | "help set charset". |
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80 | |
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81 | Q: Is BitlBee forked from Gaim? |
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82 | A: BitlBee 0.7 was, sort-of. It contained a lot of code from Gaim 0.58 |
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83 | (mainly the IM-code), although heavily modified, to make it work better |
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84 | with BitlBee. We were planning to keep BitlBee up-to-date with later Gaim |
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85 | versions, but this turned out to be very time-consuming because the API |
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86 | changed a lot, and we don't have the time to keep up with those changes |
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87 | all the time. |
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88 | |
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89 | These days, we replaced the Yahoo! code with libyahoo2 (which is a |
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90 | separate Yahoo! module. It's derived from Gaim, but separately |
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91 | maintained) and wrote our own MSN module. More modules are probably going |
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92 | to be changed, so in the near future, the API might be the only thing |
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93 | left from Gaim. |
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94 | |
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95 | Q: What's that Gaim doing in BitlBee error messages and my Jabber resource? |
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96 | A: Ah, well, as you probably know we use some of Gaim's IM-modules, and we |
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97 | don't think it's worth our time to do a search-and-replace over the whole |
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98 | source to get rid of every reference to Gaim. In fact, we don't want to, |
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99 | since we don't want to pretend we wrote all that code. |
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100 | |
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101 | About Jabber: If you want a different resource string, you can set it |
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102 | when logging in by appending it to your Jabber ID, like: |
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103 | lintux@jabber.com/BitlBee |
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