Channel Registration
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. If your nickname is not registered, see Register your 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 #services
for assistance; however, this is only in the case where none of the idlers have operator status.
- The channel may not be registered already. To check if the channel is registered or not:
/msg ChanServ INFO #channel
- You may also be able to tell if the channel has the letter "z" in its modes on entry. This is usually a surefire way to check whether a channel is registered without ChanServ interaction as long as your client allows you to see them.
If these conditions are met, you will be able to register your channel using:
/msg ChanServ REGISTER #channel password description
Where you replace the following:
#channel
|
The name of your channel. |
password
|
A channel password. Used to identify you as the channel's owner. (It is not a channel key.) When you identify to NickServ you will automatically be identified to ChanServ for all channels you have registered. If you would like to share the founder level control of the channel with a friend, and make sure you're absolutely sure about doing so, you may give them the channel password as well. |
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
or look at the Botserv list page 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 Modes, Channel Management 101, and/or Channel Management 102 as they hold most answers to your questions.