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Native Linux IRC client built in Vala and Gtk for elementary OS

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avojak/iridium

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Iridium

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The friendly IRC client

Iridium is a native Linux IRC client built in Vala and Gtk for elementary OS.

Install from Source

You can install Iridium by compiling from source. Here's the list of dependencies required:

  • granite (>= 0.6.0)
  • debhelper (>= 10.5.1)
  • gettext
  • libgtk-3-dev (>= 3.10)
  • libgee-0.8-dev
  • libsecret-1-dev
  • libsqlite3-dev
  • meson
  • valac (>= 0.28.0)
  • libsqlite3-dev
  • libgtksourceview-4-dev
  • libhandy-1-dev (>=1.0.0)

An install-dev-dependencies.sh script is available to help developers get up and running.

Building and Running

$ meson build --prefix=/usr
$ sudo ninja -C build install
$ com.github.avojak.iridium

Flatpak

To test the Flatpak build with Flatpak Builder:

$ flatpak-builder build  com.github.avojak.iridium.yml --user --install --force-clean
$ flatpak run com.github.avojak.iridium

Development Build

You can also install a development build alongside a stable version by specifying the dev profile:

$ meson build --prefix=/usr -Dprofile=dev
$ sudo ninja -C build install
$ com.github.avojak.iridium-dev

Updating Translations

When new translatable strings are added, ensure that po/POTFILES contains a reference to the file with the translatable string.

Update the .pot file which contains the translatable strings:

$ ninja -C build com.github.avojak.iridium-pot

Generate translations for the languages listed in the po/LINGUAS files:

$ ninja -C build com.github.avojak.iridium-update-po

Testing

To facilitate testing, a test-server.py script is available which starts a local IRC server using Docker.

$ ./test-server.py [-h] {create|start|watch|stop|reset}

To create a new test server:

$ ./test-server.py create

You should now be able to connect to the server from Iridium using the Server localhost, and all other settings as default. (Note: If you have configured the settings to reject unacceptable SSL/TLS certificates, you may not be able to connect because the Docker IRC server uses self-signed certificates)

Troubleshooting and Debugging

Log messages can be found using the journalctl command. For example, the following will show journal messages for the current boot of the OS:

$ journalctl -b

When the application starts, it logs a series of messages with basic information:

Jan 01 11:13:24 avojak-eOS plank.desktop[1992]: [INFO 11:13:24.802632] Application.vala:48: com.github.avojak.iridium-dev version: 1.0.0
Jan 01 11:13:24 avojak-eOS plank.desktop[1992]: [INFO 11:13:24.802666] Application.vala:49: Kernel version: 5.4.0-58-generic
Jan 01 11:13:24 avojak-eOS plank.desktop[1992]: [INFO 11:13:24.815561] SecretManager.vala:46: Secret schema version: 1
Jan 01 11:13:24 avojak-eOS plank.desktop[1992]: [INFO 11:13:24.850977] SQLClient.vala:39: Database file: iridium01.db

This can also be useful to locate where the application started amidst all of the journal entries.

Project Status

This project is very much in-progress and has a lot of remaining work. Check out the Projects page to track progress towards the next milestone.

Please keep in mind that at this time I am developing Iridium as a personal project in my limited free time to learn Vala and contribute back to the elementary OS community, so do not be offended if I reject a pull request or other contribution.

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