Misc Stuff
Smileys
All MSN smileys (except one) are case insensitive and work without the nose too.
(Y)Thumbs up
(N)Thumbs down
(B)Beer mug
(D)Martini glass
(X)Girl
(Z)Boy
(6)Devil smiley
:-[Vampire bat
(})Right hug
({)Left hug
(M)MSN Messenger or Windows Messenger icon (think a BitlBee logo here ;)
:-SCrooked smiley (Confused smiley)
:-$Embarrassed smiley
(H)Smiley with sunglasses
:-@Angry smiley
(A)Angel smiley
(L)Red heart (Love)
(U)Broken heart
(K)Red lips (Kiss)
(G)Gift with bow
(F)Red rose
(W)Wilted rose
(P)Camera
(~)Film strip
(T)Telephone receiver
(@)Cat face
(&)Dog's head
(C)Coffee cup
(I)Light bulb
(S)Half-moon (Case sensitive!)
(*)Star
(8)Musical eighth note
(E)Envelope
(^)Birthday cake
(O)Clock
Groupchats
BitlBee now supports groupchats on all IM networks. This text will try to explain you how they work.
As soon as someone invites you into a groupchat, you will be force-joined or invited (depending on the protocol) into a new virtual channel with all the people in there. You can leave the channel at any time, just like you would close the window in regular IM clients. Please note that root-commands don't work in groupchat channels, they only work in control channels (or to root directly).
Of course you can also create your own groupchats. Type help groupchats2 to see how.
Creating groupchats
To open a groupchat, use the chat with command. For example, to start a groupchat with the person lisa_msn in it, just type chat with lisa_msn. BitlBee will create a new virtual channel with root, you and lisa_msn in it.
Then, just use the ordinary IRC /invite command to invite more people. Please do keep in mind that all the people have to be on the same network and contact list! You can't invite Yahoo! buddies into an MSN groupchat.
Some protocols (like Jabber) also support named groupchats. BitlBee now supports these too. You can use the chat add command to join them. See help chat add for more information.
Away states
To mark yourself as away, you can just use the /away command in your IRC client. BitlBee supports most away-states supported by the protocols.
Away states have different names accross different protocols. BitlBee will try to pick the best available option for every connection:
Away
NA
Busy, DND
BRB
Phone
Lunch, Food
Invisible, Hidden
So /away Food will set your state to "Out to lunch" on your MSN connection, and for most other connections the default, "Away" will be chosen.
You can also add more information to your away message. Setting it to "Busy - Fixing BitlBee bugs" will set your IM-away-states to Busy, but your away message will be more descriptive for people on IRC. Most IM-protocols can also show this additional information to your buddies.
If you want to set an away state for only one of your connections, you can use the per-account away setting. See help set away.
Changing your nickname
BitlBee now allows you to change your nickname. So far this was not possible because it made managing saved accounts more complicated.
The restriction no longer exists now though. When you change your nick (just using the /nick command), your logged-in status will be reset, which means any changes made to your settings/accounts will not be saved.
To restore your logged-in status, you need to either use the register command to create an account under the new nickname, or use identify -noload to re-identify yourself under the new nickname. The -noload flag tells the command to verify your password and log you in, but not load any new settings. See help identify for more information.
Dealing with channels
You can have as many channels in BitlBee as you want. You maintain your channel list using the channel command. You can create new channels by just joining them, like on regular IRC networks.
You can create two kinds of channels. Control channels, and groupchat channels. By default, BitlBee will set up new channels as control channels if their name starts with an &, and as chat channels if it starts with a #.
Control channels are where you see your contacts. By default, you will have one control channel called &bitlbee, containing all your contacts. But you can create more, if you want, and divide your contact list accross several channels.
For example, you can have one channel with all contacts from your MSN Messenger account in it. Or all contacts from the group called "Work".
Type help channels2 to read more.
Creating a channel
When you create a new channel, BitlBee will try to guess from its name which contacts to fill it with. For example, if the channel name (excluding the &) matches the name of a group in which you have one or more contacts, the channel will contain all those contacts.
Any valid account ID (so a number, protocol name or part of screenname, as long as it's unique) can also be used as a channel name. So if you just join &msn, it will contain all your MSN contacts. And if you have a Facebook account set up, you can see its contacts by just joining &facebook.
To start a simple group chat, you simply join a channel which a name starting with #, and invite people into it. All people you invite have to be on the same IM network and contact list.
If you want to configure your own channels, you can use the channel set command. See help channels3 for more information.
Configuring a control channel
The most important setting for a control channel is fill_by. It
tells BitlBee what information should be used to decide if someone should be shown
in the channel or not. After setting this setting to, for example, account, you
also have to set the account setting. Example:
chan &wlm set fill_by account
fill_by = `account'
chan &wlm set account msn
account = `msn'
Also, each channel has a show_users setting which lets you
choose, for example, if you want to see only online contacts in a channel, or
also/just offline contacts. Example:
chan &offline set show_users offline
show_users = `offline'
See the help information for all these settings for more information.
Nickname formatting
The nick_format setting can be set globally using
the set command, or per account using account
set (so that you can set a per-account suffix/prefix or have
nicknames generated from full names for certain accounts).
The setting is basically some kind of format string. It can contain normal
text that will be copied to the nick, combined with several variables:
%nickNickname suggested for this contact by the IM protocol, or just the handle if no nickname was suggested.
%handleThe handle/screenname of the contact.
%full_nameThe full name of the contact.
%first_nameThe first name of the contact (the full name up to the first space).
%groupThe name of the group this contact is a member of
%accountAccount tag of the contact
Invalid characters (like spaces) will always be stripped. Depending on your
locale settings, characters with accents will be converted to ASCII.
See help nick_format2 for some more information.
Nickname formatting - modifiers
Two modifiers are currently available: You can include only the first few
characters of a variable by putting a number right after the %. For
example, [%3group]%-@nick will include only the first
three characters of the group name in the nick.
Also, you can truncate variables from a certain character using
the - modifier. For example, you may want to leave out
everything after the @. %-@handle will expand to
everything in the handle up to the first @.
New stuff in BitlBee 1.2.6
Twitter support. See help account add twitter.
New stuff in BitlBee 1.3dev
Support for multiple configurable control channels, each with a subset of
your contact list. See help channels for more
information.
File transfer support for some protocols (more if you use libpurple). Just
/DCC SEND stuff. Incoming files also become DCC transfers.
Only if you run your own BitlBee instance: You can build a BitlBee that uses
libpurple for connecting to IM networks instead of its own code, adding
support for some of the more obscure IM protocols and features.
Many more things, briefly described in help news1.3.
New stuff in BitlBee 3.0
BitlBee can be compiled with support for OTR message encryption (not available
on public servers since encryption should be end-to-end).
The MSN module was heavily updated to support features added to MSN Messenger
over the recent years. You can now see/set status messages, send offline
messages, and many strange issues caused by Microsoft breaking old-protocol
compatibility should now be resolved.
Twitter extended: IRC-style replies ("BitlBee:") now get converted to proper
Twitter replies ("@BitlBee") and get a reference to the original message
(see help set auto_reply_timeout). Retweets and some
other stuff is also supported now (see help set commands).
New stuff in BitlBee 1.3dev (details)
Most of the core of BitlBee was rewritten since the last release. This entry
should sum up the majority of the changes.
First of all, you can now have as many control channels as you want. Or you
can have none, it's finally possible to leave &bitlbee and still talk to
all your contacts. Or you can have a &work with all your work-related
contacts, or a &msn with all your MSN Messenger contacts. See help
channels for more information about this.
Also, you can change how nicknames are generated for your contacts. Like
automatically adding a [fb] tag to the nicks of all your Facebook contacts.
See help nick_format.
When you're already connected to a BitlBee server and you connect from
elsewhere, you can take over the old session.
Instead of account numbers, accounts now also get tags. These are
automatically generated but can be changed (help set
tag). You can now use them instead of accounts numbers.
(Example: acc gtalk on)
Last of all: You can finally change your nickname and
shorten root commands (try acc li instead
of account list).
New stuff in BitlBee 3.0.5
OAuth2 support in Jabber module (see help set oauth).
For better password security when using Google Talk, Facebook XMPP, or for
using MSN Messenger via XMPP. Especially recommended on public servers.
Starting quick groupchats on Jabber is easier now (using the chat
with command, or /join + /invite).
SSL certificate verification. Works only with GnuTLS, and needs to be enabled
by updating your bitlbee.conf.
New stuff in BitlBee 3.2
Upgradeed to Twitter API version 1.1. This is necessary because previous
versions will stop working from March 2013. At the same time, BitlBee now
supports the streaming API and incoming direct messages.
New stuff in BitlBee 3.2.2
The OTR plugin now uses libotr 4.0 (AKA libotr5 in debian based distros)
A few minor fixes/additions, like being able to use /oper to change
passwords with account tag set -del password
New stuff in BitlBee 3.4
Lots of bugfixes! Important: Recompiling third party plugins such as bitlbee-steam or bitlbee-facebook is required!
twitter: Filter channels - Search by keyword/hashtag or a list of users. See the HowtoTwitter wiki page for more details!
twitter: Add "rawreply" command, like reply but bitlbee won't add @mention. Also add "favorite" / "fav" command aliases.
twitter: Start stream from last tweet on connect/reconnect to avoid showing duplicate tweets
jabber: Fixed crashes with file transfers (they still fail at bypassing NATs, but at least they fail without crashing)
purple: Improved support for gadugadu, whatsapp and telegram.
msn: disabled in this release since the protocol we used (MSNP18) stopped working.
Add a 'pattern' parameter to the blist command, to filter it.
The utf8_nicks setting should be more reliable now.
See the full changelog for details!
New stuff in BitlBee 3.4.1
msn: Upgraded protocol version to MSNP21, works again
jabber: Add "hipchat" protocol, for smoother login. Takes the same username as the official client. Note that unlike the 'hip-cat' branch, this doesn't preload channels. See the HowtoHipchat wiki page for details
jabber: Gmail notifications support
twitter: Show quoted tweets inline. Added "url" command, can be used to quote tweets.