Target Change for Messages Lee H --------------------------- Reworked by Jilles Tjoelker, February 2010. Channel target change added by Jilles Tjoelker, August 2010. If the server you are using uses the target change mechanism, then restrictions are placed on how many different users and/or channels you can message in a set timeframe. This also applies to invites (for the target user) and topic changes. Target change does not apply to ctcp replies, messages to yourself, messages to services and joins. You will have a set number of 'slots', each different target you message will take up one slot. A client doing a nick change will not use a new slot, however a client disconnecting from the server it is on and reconnecting will. You will receive 1 new slot roughly every minute. Additionally, clients that message or invite you are placed in one of a small number of special slots, in many cases allowing replies without using a slot. When all slots are filled, messages to new targets will not be accepted. Messages to targets already filling a slot will be accepted. If all slots are full, you will receive the ERR_TARGCHANGE numeric, number 707 in the form: : 707 :Targets changing too fast, message dropped The slots are operated in an LRU (least recently used), so the person or channel you have talked to least recently will be replaced. The number of slots in use will be kept through a reconnection, though the information in those slots will be dropped. However, you will always receive one free slot on a reconnection. Other servers using this mechanism will also be made aware of details about slots. Target change does not apply if you are opped or voiced in a channel, and you are messaging that channel or a client within that channel. The latter can be done explicitly using the CNOTICE and CPRIVMSG commands, see /quote help cnotice and /quote help cprivmsg, but is also implicit in a normal /msg, /notice or /invite.