K-line Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
K-line or Kill Line is an IRC term. It stands for a line in the configuration file of the IRC server (ircd.conf), that prevents a client with a specific hostmask from connecting. Such a user is then called 'k-lined'.Reasons for a client being k-lined may include:
- Geography: If a IRC network has servers in different countries and continents, it will try to reduce the distance between server and client. Thus, servers on one continent may k-line all clients from the others and vice versa.
- Infected client: A client infected by a virus, worm or trojan that spreads via IRC may be k-lined, so it doesn't reduce the efficiency of the server and to decrease the rate at which the malicious program is spreading.
- Misbehaviour: If a user repeatedly disobeys the rules of the IRC network, and doesn't change his behaviour through kicks and bans, then he/she might get k-lined to protect the other users of the server.
The following terms are also related to k-lines:
- A g-line is a network-wide k-line ("global k-line").
- An i-line (EFNet) limits the use of a server to certain domain names. If a server limits access like that, it is called "closed I:", otherwise "open I:"
- A q-line is a ban on a nickname on a server
- An x-line bans a user from a server based on the real-name field.
- A z-line is a blocking of an IP address range on a network (instead of a hostmask)
- A d-line is what a z-line is called in the hybrid- and comstud-IRC-daemons (used by EFNet and DALnet)
- An akill or "Autokill" is a network-wide k-line that is done through OperServ
External links
- Undernet K-Line and G-Line FAQ with reasons for them, amongst other things
- EFnet FAQ with several -line terms explained
This is an Article on K-line. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About K-line
