1 \syntax{cnct FNET HOSTNAME [(KEY VALUE)...]}
4 Instructs the daemon to connect to a hub. The \param{FNET} parameter
5 is the name of the protocol that the hub will be running, and the
6 \param{HOSTNAME} parameter is the network name of the
7 hub. Currently, the only supported value for \param{FNET} is
8 \texttt{dc}, indicating the Direct Connect
9 protocol. \param{HOSTNAME} may be either an IPv4 address or a
10 symbolic hostname, followed by a colon and the port number to
11 connect to. Zero or more key-value pairs may be supplied as well,
12 setting certain parameters of the protocol operation. Currently
16 \item \texttt{nick}: The nickname to use when speaking to the hub,
17 instead of the daemon's default nickname.
18 \item \texttt{password}: The password to supply if the hub asks for
20 \item \texttt{charset}: For Direct Connect hubs, the character
21 encoding to use instead of the default CP1252.
30 The daemon has created a node for the hub and will be attempting to
31 connect to it. The \param{ID} parameter is the unique numeric ID for
34 The \param{HOSTNAME} parameter could not be converted to the local
35 character set on the system running the daemon, so no connection
36 attempt could be made.
38 The \param{HOSTNAME} parameter was invalid and could not be parsed
41 The daemon does not support the protocol named by the \param{FNET}
44 The daemon administrator has set a quota restricting the maximum
45 number of connected hubs, and a new connection attempt would violate