Awesome
Circe, a Client for IRC in Emacs
Overview
Circe is a Client for IRC in Emacs. It tries to have sane defaults, and integrates well with the rest of the editor, using standard Emacs key bindings and indicating activity in channels in the status bar so it stays out of your way unless you want to use it.
Complexity-wise, it is somewhere between rcirc (very minimal) and ERC (very complex).
Screenshot
Installation
Dependencies
In order to securely connect to an IRC server using TLS, Circe requires an Emacs linked against the GnuTLS library.
For displaying images, Circe requires ImageMagick.
package.el
Make sure you have MELPA Stable added to your package sources. To your .emacs, add this:
(require 'package)
(add-to-list 'package-archives
'("melpa-stable" . "http://stable.melpa.org/packages/") t)
(package-initialize)
Then, use package-install
to install Circe:
M-x package-install RET circe RET
After this, M-x circe
should work.
Development Version
In a shell:
mkdir -d ~/.emacs.d/lisp/
cd ~/.emacs.d/lisp
git clone git://github.com/emacs-circe/circe.git
Then add the following to your .emacs
file:
(add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/lisp/circe")
(require 'circe)
The next time you start your Emacs, you should be able to use
M-x circe
to connect to IRC.
Connecting to IRC
To connect to IRC, simply use M-x circe RET Libera Chat RET RET
.
This will connect you to Libera. You can join us on #emacs-circe
by
using /join #emacs-circe
in the server buffer.
A more elaborate setup would require you to edit your init file and add something like the following:
(setq circe-network-options
'(("Libera Chat"
:tls t
:nick "my-nick"
:sasl-username "my-nick"
:sasl-password "my-password"
:channels ("#emacs-circe")
)))
With this in your configuration, you can use M-x circe RET Libera Chat RET
to connect to Libera using these settings.
If the network you are connecting to supports client certificate authentication and you have setup your certificate, you can tell circe to use it when login to the network. You can enable SASL external authentication also if the network supports it. An example to connect into Libera using a client certificate could be:
(setq circe-network-options
'(("Libera Chat"
:tls t
:tls-keylist (("/full/path/key.pem"
"/full/path/cert.pem"))
:sasl-external t
:nick "my-nick"
:channels ("#emacs-circe")
)))
If the client certificate consists of just one combined file, it needs to be specified twice:
(setq circe-network-options
'(("Libera Chat"
:tls t
:tls-keylist (("/full/path/combined.pem"
"/full/path/combined.pem"))
:sasl-external t
:nick "my-nick"
:channels ("#emacs-circe")
)))
Note that sasl-external
is not required in order to be able to authenticate
using client certificates and not all the networks support it.
Features
- Sensible defaults
- Tab completion
- Nick highlighting
- Automatically displaying images in channel
- Logging
- Spell checker
- Ignore feature that also hides users who talk to users on your ignore list
- Ignored messages can be toggled so they show up and then hidden again
- TLS/SSL support
- SASL authentication support (PLAIN and EXTERNAL methods)
- Client certificate authentication
- Nickserv authentication, automatic ghosting, and nick re-gain
- Auto-join
- Ability to reduce join/part/quit spam from lurkers
- Automatic splitting of long lines at word boundaries
- Netsplit handling
- Activity tracking in the mode line
- Fully customizeable message display
- Topic changes can be shown as a diff
- Automatic linking of Emacs Lisp symbols, RFCs, PEPs, SRFIs, Github issues, etc.
- Automatic splitting of outgoing messages at word boundaries to adhere to IRC protocol limitations
- Flood protection
- Nickname coloring (via the
circe-color-nicks
module) - Lag monitoring (via the
circe-lagmon
module) - Automatic pasting to a paste site for long messages (via the
lui-autopaste
module) - Bar marking the last read position (via the
lui-track-bar
module)
Documentation
Please see the Wiki for further information: