Author — qwerty 2006/09/16 14:45
mIRC has five types of lists that accept address-mask entries: one is the Users list, found in mIRC Editor's Users tab. The other four are those found in the Control section of mIRC's address book: Ignore, Op, Voice and Protect.
For each of these lists, there are one or more identifiers that allow you to compare a user's address against the list and determine if there's a match. However, these identifiers do not behave the same way. The purpose of this article to delineate those differences.
For the Users list, we have two identifiers, $level() and $ulist(). Let's start with $level; the help file says that $level() searches the Users list for the specified address and the example uses an address mask of type 2 (for more on masks see /help $mask). So if your Users list looks something like this:
10:qwerty!*@foo.com 15:*!test@*.com 42:*!*@blah.com
then typing
//echo -a $level(*!*@blah.com)
will give you 42; mIRC searched through the Users list for the exact entry *!*@blah.com and found it. However, $level() also accepts full addresses (of the form nick!address@host), which is what makes it really useful. When you specify a full address, mIRC goes through the list and compares each item against the specified full address; if the current item is a wildcard string that matches the full address, the associated level is returned. Think of it as an internal sort of
if (<list item> iswm <full address>)
So
//echo -a $level(somenick!someuser@blah.com)
gives 42.
The other identifier, $ulist() is more powerful though; not only does it accept either an exact mask or a full address, like $level(), but it also accepts wildcard address masks that are not in the Users list. Considering the above Users list, typing
//echo -a $ulist(bleh!*@something.com)
gives you *!test@*.com. Why? Because when mIRC goes through the list, it performs two checks for each item: it checks whether the current list entry is a wildcard string that matches the specified address (or address mask) but it also checks for the opposite, that is whether the specified address mask is a wildcard string that matches the list entry. A scripting equivalent of what's going on would be
if ((<current item> iswm <address>) || (<address> iswm <current item>))
Now about the other list types. For the Ignore list, we have the $ignore() identifier. This one works exactly like $level(): it either looks for an exact match in the ignore list or it checks whether each item in the list is a wildcard string that matches the specified full address. This means that if you add qwerty!*@foo.com in your ignore list, both
//echo -a $ignore(qwerty!user@foo.com)
and
//echo -a $ignore(qwerty!*@foo.com)
will give you back qwerty!*@foo.com, however
//echo -a $ignore(qwerty!*test*@foo.com)
will give you an insufficient parameters error (meaning $ignore() returned $null).
The Auto-Op and Auto-Voice list identifiers $aop() and $avoice() have identical behaviour, which matches $ulist()'s behaviour; they perform the same "2-way" comparison, thus they are more powerful than $ignore().
The Protect list identifier $protect(), however, seems to be broken in mIRC v6.2; it only accepts an exact mask, that is a mask that's represented literally in the Protect list. So if your Protect list contains *!*@blah.com, only $protect(*!*@blah.com) returns that entry; both $protect(foo!bar@blah.com) and $protect(*!bar@blah.com) return $null.
NOTE: the exact same rules that apply to address book identifiers also aply to their respective /if operators. That is, isignore, isaop, isavoice, isprotect exhibit identical behaviour to $ignore(), $aop(), $avoice(), $protect() respectively.
While performing some additional tests, I got the following results.. ('isban' included just because it also takes masks)
nick | full | narrow | exact | wide | all | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
$aop | x | x | x | |||
isaop | x | x | x | |||
$avoice | x | x | x | |||
isavoice | x | x | x | |||
$ignore | x | x | ||||
isignore | x | x | ||||
$protect | x | x | ||||
isprotect | x | x | ||||
$level | x | x | x | |||
$ulist | x | x | x | x | ||
isban | x | x |
The entry assumed present in all lists is *!*@host.domain. Legend:
entry | mask tested | description |
---|---|---|
nick | nick | nickname of matching person currently in IAL |
full | nick!user@host.domain | full address, no wildcards |
narrow | *!user@host.domain | narrower wildcard mask |
exact | *!*@host.domain | exact address as present in list |
wide | *!*@*.domain | wilder wildcard mask |
all | *!*@* | mask matching every possible mask |
Clearly $protect/isprotect are different from the rest, but the rest on itself is also far from consistent! Especially $ulist is worth a closer look though, as a few more tests of the "*!user@* vs *!*@*.domain" kind yielded all sorts of seemingly illogical results. With a large number of test cases, I've tried to procedurize how $ulist decides whether there is a match between the given input address and an entry in the userlist.
In comparison, for $level this process is rather straightforward. It can be assumed that $level iterates through the userlist, entry by entry, and tries to decide for each whether there is a match - that is, for each entry in the userlist, it checks this userlist <entry> against the <input> as given as first parameter and decides between match/no match. A very close approximation of this matching process can be described as follows:
This indeed fully explains the full/narrow/exact data points in the table above, as well as pretty much all other combinations I could come up with.1)
However, $ulist is much more complicated than that! Even if we ignore the L and N parameters and again fully concentrate on the most basic yes/no test whether <entry> in the userlist is a match for the given <input>, there are lots of strange things about $ulist. The simplest procedurization of $ulist's matching algorithm that I could come up with, is the following:
This indeed seems overly and unnecessarily complex, but I do not see a way to reduce the number of steps of this procedurization while yielding the same results - I've tested this procedurization as well and it seems to always yield the same results as $ulist itself.2) $ulist's input extension is as follows:
The two-way wildcard matching algorithm is a little too messy to describe here in full detail, but essentially it takes two wildcard strings as input, and decides whether there could potentially be a literal text string that is matched by both wildcard strings. For example, *a* and *b* match; a* and *b match; a* and b* don't. Wildcards '*' and '?' are both supported.
Again, I have no idea why $ulist is so incredibly complicated. Its behaviour doesn't strike me as particularly useful.. — Saturn 2006/09/25 20:54