Prosody
From the official website:
- Prosody is a modern XMPP communication server. It aims to be easy to set up and configure, and efficient with system resources. Additionally, for developers it aims to be easy to extend and give a flexible system on which to rapidly develop added functionality, or prototype new protocols.
Installation
Optional dependencies
Prosody has optional depedencies that although not strictly required for its operation, provide useful features. These dependencies may also have to be built and installed from the AUR. If you are unfamiliar with how to build and install packages from the AUR please see Arch User Repository#Installing and upgrading packages. As of prosody version 0.11.2, Lua 5.2 is needed.
- TLS/SSL Support (Recommended)
- Allow Prosody to encrypt streams to prevent eavesdropping.
Requires: lua52-sec
- MySQL/Postgresql Backend
- Allow Prosody to use a MySQL/mariadb/Postgresql backend for better scaling and performance.
Requires: lua52-dbi
- Better Connection Scaling (Recommended)
- Allow Prosody to use libevent to handle a greater number of simultaneous connections.
Requires: lua52-eventAUR
- Stream Compression
- Allow Prosody to compress client-to-server streams for compatible clients to save bandwidth.
Requires: lua52-zlib
Configuration
posix
module and pidfile
setting contained in the default configuration file are required for Prosody's proper operation.The main configuration file is located at /etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua
. Information on how to configure Prosody can be found in Prosody's documentation. The syntax of the configuration file can be checked after any changes are made by running:
# luac5.2 -p /etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua
No output means the syntax is correct.
Authentication
The default configuration uses mod_auth_internal_hashed. If you remove the line, it will default to mod_auth_internal_plain.
Logging
The prosody package is pre-configured to log to syslog. Thus, by default, Prosody log messages are available in the systemd journal.
Operation
Start/enable the prosody.service
systemd service.
Prosody uses the default XMPP ports, 5222 and 5269, for client-to-server and server-to-server communications respectively. Configure your firewall as necessary.
You can manipulate Prosody users by using the prosodyctl
program. To add a user:
# prosodyctl adduser <JID>
admins
list in the configuration file.Issue prosodyctl(1) to see the man page for prosodyctl
.
Security
User registration
Prosody supports XMPP's in-band registration standard, which allows users to register with an XMPP client from within their client and change their passwords. While this is convenient for users it does not allow administrators to moderate the registration of new users. As such, the register
module is enabled in the default configuration but allow_registration
is set to false
. This allows existing users to change their passwords from within their client but does not allow new users to register themselves.
watchregistrations
and welcome
modules useful.Stream encryption
Prosody can utilize TLS certificates to encrypt client-to-server communications (if the proper dependencies are installed). See the relevant sections of prosody.cfg.lua
to configure Prosody to utilize these certificates.
To require encryption for client-to-server communications add the following to your configuration file:
/etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua
Host "*" c2s_require_encryption = true
Similarly, for server-to-server communications you may do:
/etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua
Host "*" s2s_require_encryption = true
While requiring client-to-server encryption is generally a good idea, please keep in mind that some popular XMPP services such as Google Talk/Gmail do not support server-to-server encryption.
Listing users
A simple way to see a list of the registered users is
# ls -l /var/lib/prosody/*/accounts/*
alternatively, you can download the module mod_listusers.lua, and use it as
# prosodyctl mod_listusers
Removal
After normally uninstalling Prosody with pacman, the /etc/prosody
and /var/lib/prosody
directories may be left on your filesystem, and you may want to remove them if you do not plan on reinstalling Prosody.
Tips and tricks
Components
Prosody supports XMPP components, which provide extra services to clients. Components are either provided internally by special Prosody modules or externally using the protocol specified in XEP-0114.
VirtualHost
names defined in prosody.cfg.lua
. Attempting to host a component on the same hostname as a defined VirtualHost
will result in errors.By default, Prosody will listen for external components. If you do not plan to use any external components with Prosody you can disable this behavior by adding the following your configuration:
/etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua
component_ports = {}
Multi-User Chat
A common component used with XMPP servers is Multi-User Chat (MUC), which allows conferences between multiple users. MUC is provided as an internal component with Prosody. To enable MUC add the following to your configuration file:
/etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua
Component "conference.example.com" "muc"
This will enable the MUC component on host conference.example.com
.
Prosody modules
Prosody Modules is a collection of extra modules not distributed with Prosody. These modules are in various states of development from highly experimental to relatively stable. You should consult a given module's wiki page for more information. An example of an extra module is pastebin
, which when loaded will intercept long messages (for example, log file output) and replace them with a link to a pastebin hosted using Prosody's internal HTTP server (provided by the core module, httpserver
).
To use an extra module download its raw file(s) from the source browser (when viewing a file, search for the link "View raw file"). Alternatively and likely easier, use Mercurial to clone the entire repository:
- Prosody 0.9+
$ hg clone https://hg.prosody.im/prosody-modules/ prosody-modules
- Prosody 0.8
$ hg clone http://0-8.prosody-modules.googlecode.com/hg/ prosody-modules
Now you can copy the module (and any additional files it needs) to Prosody's module directory at /usr/lib/prosody/modules
. To enable the module add it to your modules_enabled
list in your prosody.cfg.lua
for the host or component you wish to use it for. For example, to use the pastebin
module on a MUC component:
/etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua
Component "conference.example.com" "muc" modules_enabled = { "pastebin" }
mod_foo.lua
but simply enabled by adding foo
to the modules_enabled
list.Console
console
module on a multi-user system.The console
module provides a telnet console from which administrative operations and queries can be performed. You can connect to the console by issuing:
$ telnet localhost 5582
You of course need the telnet
program provided by the inetutils
package. Use the help
command in the console to get usage help.
The console even allows you to execute Lua commands directly on the server by preceding a command with >
. For example to see if a client connection is compressed:
> full_sessions["romeo@montague.lit/Resource"].compressed
Will return true
if the connection is compressed or nil
if it is not.
Troubleshooting
One of Prosody's primary design principles is to be simple to use and configure. However, issues can still arise (and likely will as is the case with any complex software). If you encounter a problem there are a variety of steps you can take to narrow down the cause:
-
Check for known issues
Look at the release notes for your Prosody version to see if your issue is listed as a known issue. Also check the issue tracker to see if your issue has already been reported. -
Check configuration syntax
Runluac5.1 -p /etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua
to check for any syntax errors in your configuration file. If there is no output your syntax is fine. -
Check the log
Errors are only logged if there is a critical problem so always address those issues. If you think you have a very low level issue (like protocol compatibility between clients and servers with Prosody) then you can enable the very verbose debug level logging. -
Check permissions
The Prosody package should add a newprosody
user and group to your system and set appropriate permissions, but it is always good to double check. Ensure that/etc/prosody
and/var/lib/prosody
are owned by theprosody
user and that the user has appropriate permissions to read and write to those paths and all contained files. -
Check listening ports
When troubleshooting connection issues make sure that Prosody is actually listening for connections. You may do so by runningss -tul
and making sure thatxmpp-client
(port 5222) andxmpp-server
(port 5269) are listed. -
Restart
Like most things, it does not hurt to restart Prosody (systemctl restart prosody
) to see if it resolves an issue.
If you are unable to resolve your issue yourself there are a variety of resources you can use to seek help. In order of immediacy with which you will likely receive help:
- XMPP Conference:
prosody@conference.prosody.im
- Mailing List:
prosody-users@googlegroups.com
, web interface - Arch Forums (for package issues)
Development
A development packages is maintained for Prosody in the AUR, prosody-hgAUR. prosody-hg
tracks the Mercurial repository tip for Prosody and will always contain the latest code as it is checked in. Both packages are built similarly to the stable package.
Communication
- Mailing Lists: prosody-dev, prosody-users
- Conference:
prosody@conference.prosody.im
- Blog: Prosodical Thoughts
See also
- Official documentation
- Prosodical Thoughts (Blog)
- Issue Tracker
- Prosody Modules (Extra Modules)