* The normal privilege levels are:-
0 - user privilege.
+ 1 - remote user user privilege
5 - sysop privilege.
+ 8 - maximum recommended remote sysop privilege
9 - console privilege.
The sysop privilege is for things that you are prepared for remote
you can have one callsign, you can have several. Interpret your
arguments; so for example:-
- set/locator jo02lq - sets your own locator to JO02LQ
- set/locator g1tlh jo02lq - sets G1TLH's locator (if you are allowed)
+ set/qra jo02lq - sets your own locator to JO02LQ
+ set/qra g1tlh jo02lq - sets G1TLH's locator (if you are allowed)
or
- show/locator - displays your locator (and other info?)
- show/locator in92jo - displays the bearing and distance to
- IN92JO using your lat/long or locator
- show/locator jn56in in92jo - bearing and distance between two
- locators
- show/locator gb7dxc - bearing and distance to gb7dxc if poss.
+ show/qra in92jo - displays the bearing and distance to
+ IN92JO using your lat/long or locator
+ show/qra jn56in in92jo - bearing and distance between two
+ locators
+
+* It is important that you remember when you have tie hashes using MLDBM
+ et al. If you do a DXUser->get($call) you will get a different (older)
+ thing than the one in $self->$user. This is almost certainly NOT what
+ you want if want to modify a user that is currently connected.
+
+* If you want to debug something, start the cluster.pl up thus:-
+
+ perl -d cluster.pl
+ dbg> r
+
+ Then you can go into debug mode at anytime by using the command :-
+
+ debug
+
+ or you can put the line:-
+
+ $DB::single = 1;
+
+ in an appropriate place in a command. This will only have an effect
+ if you are running in perl debug mode.
* Anything you output with a > as the last character is taken to mean
that this is a prompt and will not have a \r or \n appended to it.
have a '.hlp' appended to the command name rather than a '.pl'. All
in the help file are sent to the user except those starting with a '#'
character.
+
+* PLEASE add your new commands to the Commands_*.hlp file so that
+ people know about and how to use them!