ChanServ:Register
In order to use the advanced features of ChanServ, HostServ or MemoServ, you MUST have identified to a nick you have registered.
Registering your channel
Required conditions:
- You must have a registered nickname.
- You must have operator status or above (
@
,&
,~
) on the channel.- Note: You will receive operator status automatically when you join an empty, unregistered channel.
- Note: If there are idlers in the channel, and the channel is not registered, you may
/join #help
for assistance; however, this is only in the case where none of the idlers have operator status.
- The channel must be unregistered. To check if the channel is registered or not:
/msg ChanServ INFO #channel
If these conditions are met, you can register your channel using
/msg ChanServ REGISTER #channel password description
#channel
|
The name of your channel. |
password
|
A channel password. Used to identify a user as the channel's founder. This password can be shared to provide "almost" founder-level control of the channel with someone else. |
description
|
This is a description of your channels purpose, it is not the same as a channel topic. This will be seen when someone uses the INFO command for your channel (as shown above) and can be changed at any later date.
|
What's next?
So, you followed the commands above and successfully registered your channel, but what's next?
BotServ
You can request a BotServ bot. First use the command /msg BotServ BOTLIST
to see the bot nicks and choose one that you like.
Then, to assign a BotServ bot, use /msg BotServ ASSIGN #channel bot
where #channel
is the name of the channel you are assigning it to and bot
is the bot you are assigning.
Now that you have a bot assigned, visit BotServ commands for more information.
Learning more
Don't forget to browse Channel Management, as it holds most answers to your questions.