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Topic: XChat


In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
  XChat for Windows
You may use XChat for Windows for free for 30 days.
Building XChat for Windows is a difficult process, it requires quite some skill and expertise to accomplish.
There's also the main FAQ for information on using xchat's features.
www.xchat.org /windows   (320 words)

  
  xchat
Xchat is a general-purpose dialing and login program designed for use with Taylor UUCP as a ``chat-program'', taking the place (or augmenting) the built-in chat scripting facility.
Because xchat assumes that it is connected to the terminal device via stdin/stdout, you can easily debug scripts by invoking it from the shell and responding to the script from the keyboard.
For all statements that accept two arguments, the first is the name of a new state, and the second specifies a condition or reason for changing to the new state.
www.delorie.com /gnu/docs/uucp/xchat.man.html   (2441 words)

  
 Gentoo Linux Documentation -- XChat 2.0.x SOCKS5 Vulnerability
XChat is vulnerable to a stack overflow that may allow a remote attacker to run arbitrary code.
The SOCKS 5 proxy code in XChat is vulnerable to a remote exploit.
Users would have to be using XChat through a SOCKS 5 server, enable SOCKS 5 traversal which is disabled by default and also connect to an attacker's custom proxy server.
www.gentoo.org /security/en/glsa/glsa-200404-15.xml   (164 words)

  
 XChat 2.6.8 Review - XChat 2.6.8 Download
XChat is one of those clients, developed mainly for Unix-like systems but versions for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X have also been made available.
XChat is available both as a command line and as a graphical program, although the graphical version far overtakes the command line version in many areas.
For advanced users, XChat offers the Plugin function which supports scripting in a number of programming languages: Perl, Python, Tcl and Ruby, which are available as external plugins and contain a binary module interface, usually for the C programming language.
www.softpedia.com /reviews/linux/XChat-Review-39320.shtml   (1126 words)

  
 XChat - LQWiki
Type '/join #xchat' to join the XChat channel, or try the name of whatever project you are interested in.
XChat supports a number of character sets and encodings, and although the default, UTF-8, is a very good encoding for multilingual text.
But not all IRC clients support it and for the characters that are send to appear correctly on the other people's IRC clients, they have to set the exact same encoding in their client.
wiki.linuxquestions.org /wiki/XChat   (830 words)

  
 Gentoo Linux Documentation -- XChat 2.0.x SOCKS5 Vulnerability
XChat is vulnerable to a stack overflow that may allow a remote attacker to run arbitrary code.
The SOCKS 5 proxy code in XChat is vulnerable to a remote exploit.
Users would have to be using XChat through a SOCKS 5 server, enable SOCKS 5 traversal which is disabled by default and also connect to an attacker's custom proxy server.
security.gentoo.org /glsa/glsa-200404-15.xml   (164 words)

  
 Compiling xchat... - MacNN Forums
When the author of xchats codes in support for XFree86 4.1, this should be solved.
Yes, with "--disable-perl" it compiles fine, but IRC without scripting is only half the fun unfortunately, and fiddling with "+M" would be a trial-and-error for hours with only a vague hope on success (at least for me).
On the xchat site they provide a 1.6.4 binary with and a 1.8.0 without perl...
forums.macnn.com /54/unix/18162/compiling-xchat   (261 words)

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