xmpp-proxy/integration/23-s2s-websocket-host-meta/prosody1.cfg.lua

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--Important for systemd
-- daemonize is important for systemd. if you set this to false the systemd startup will freeze.
daemonize = false
run_as_root = true
pidfile = "/run/prosody/prosody.pid"
plugin_paths = { "/opt/xmpp-proxy/prosody-modules", "/opt/prosody-modules" }
-- Prosody Example Configuration File
--
-- Information on configuring Prosody can be found on our
-- website at https://prosody.im/doc/configure
--
-- Tip: You can check that the syntax of this file is correct
-- when you have finished by running this command:
-- prosodyctl check config
-- If there are any errors, it will let you know what and where
-- they are, otherwise it will keep quiet.
--
-- The only thing left to do is rename this file to remove the .dist ending, and fill in the
-- blanks. Good luck, and happy Jabbering!
---------- Server-wide settings ----------
-- Settings in this section apply to the whole server and are the default settings
-- for any virtual hosts
-- This is a (by default, empty) list of accounts that are admins
-- for the server. Note that you must create the accounts separately
-- (see https://prosody.im/doc/creating_accounts for info)
-- Example: admins = { "user1@example.com", "user2@example.net" }
admins = { }
-- Enable use of libevent for better performance under high load
-- For more information see: https://prosody.im/doc/libevent
--use_libevent = true
-- Prosody will always look in its source directory for modules, but
-- this option allows you to specify additional locations where Prosody
-- will look for modules first. For community modules, see https://modules.prosody.im/
--plugin_paths = {}
-- This is the list of modules Prosody will load on startup.
-- It looks for mod_modulename.lua in the plugins folder, so make sure that exists too.
-- Documentation for bundled modules can be found at: https://prosody.im/doc/modules
modules_enabled = {
-- Generally required
"roster"; -- Allow users to have a roster. Recommended ;)
"saslauth"; -- Authentication for clients and servers. Recommended if you want to log in.
--"tls"; -- Add support for secure TLS on c2s/s2s connections
"dialback"; -- s2s dialback support
"disco"; -- Service discovery
-- Not essential, but recommended
"carbons"; -- Keep multiple clients in sync
"pep"; -- Enables users to publish their avatar, mood, activity, playing music and more
"private"; -- Private XML storage (for room bookmarks, etc.)
"blocklist"; -- Allow users to block communications with other users
"vcard4"; -- User profiles (stored in PEP)
"vcard_legacy"; -- Conversion between legacy vCard and PEP Avatar, vcard
"limits"; -- Enable bandwidth limiting for XMPP connections
-- Nice to have
"version"; -- Replies to server version requests
"uptime"; -- Report how long server has been running
"time"; -- Let others know the time here on this server
"ping"; -- Replies to XMPP pings with pongs
"register"; -- Allow users to register on this server using a client and change passwords
--"mam"; -- Store messages in an archive and allow users to access it
--"csi_simple"; -- Simple Mobile optimizations
-- Admin interfaces
"admin_adhoc"; -- Allows administration via an XMPP client that supports ad-hoc commands
--"admin_telnet"; -- Opens telnet console interface on localhost port 5582
-- HTTP modules
--"bosh"; -- Enable BOSH clients, aka "Jabber over HTTP"
--"websocket"; -- XMPP over WebSockets
--"http_files"; -- Serve static files from a directory over HTTP
-- Other specific functionality
--"groups"; -- Shared roster support
--"server_contact_info"; -- Publish contact information for this service
--"announce"; -- Send announcement to all online users
--"welcome"; -- Welcome users who register accounts
--"watchregistrations"; -- Alert admins of registrations
--"motd"; -- Send a message to users when they log in
--"legacyauth"; -- Legacy authentication. Only used by some old clients and bots.
--"proxy65"; -- Enables a file transfer proxy service which clients behind NAT can use
"net_proxy";
"s2s_outgoing_proxy";
}
-- These modules are auto-loaded, but should you want
-- to disable them then uncomment them here:
modules_disabled = {
-- "offline"; -- Store offline messages
-- "c2s"; -- Handle client connections
-- "s2s"; -- Handle server-to-server connections
-- "posix"; -- POSIX functionality, sends server to background, enables syslog, etc.
}
-- Disable account creation by default, for security
-- For more information see https://prosody.im/doc/creating_accounts
allow_registration = false
-- we don't need prosody doing any encryption, xmpp-proxy does this now
-- these are likely set to true somewhere in your file, find them, make them false
-- you can also remove all certificates from your config
s2s_require_encryption = false
s2s_secure_auth = false
-- xmpp-proxy outgoing is listening on this port, make all outgoing s2s connections directly to here
s2s_outgoing_proxy = { "192.5.0.40", 15270 }
-- handle PROXY protocol on these ports
proxy_port_mappings = {
[15222] = "c2s",
[15269] = "s2s"
}
--[[
Specifies a list of trusted hosts or networks which may use the PROXY protocol
If not specified, it will default to: 127.0.0.1, ::1 (local connections only)
An empty table ({}) can be configured to allow connections from any source.
Please read the module documentation about potential security impact.
]]--
proxy_trusted_proxies = {
"192.5.0.40"
}
-- don't listen on any normal c2s/s2s ports (xmpp-proxy listens on these now)
-- you might need to comment these out further down in your config file if you set them
c2s_ports = {}
legacy_ssl_ports = {}
-- you MUST have at least one s2s_ports defined if you want outgoing S2S to work, don't ask..
s2s_ports = {15268}
-- Force clients to use encrypted connections? This option will
-- prevent clients from authenticating unless they are using encryption.
c2s_require_encryption = false
allow_unencrypted_plain_auth = true
-- Some servers have invalid or self-signed certificates. You can list
-- remote domains here that will not be required to authenticate using
-- certificates. They will be authenticated using DNS instead, even
-- when s2s_secure_auth is enabled.
--s2s_insecure_domains = { "insecure.example" }
-- Even if you disable s2s_secure_auth, you can still require valid
-- certificates for some domains by specifying a list here.
--s2s_secure_domains = { "jabber.org" }
-- Enable rate limits for incoming client and server connections
limits = {
c2s = {
rate = "10kb/s";
};
s2sin = {
rate = "30kb/s";
};
}
-- Select the authentication backend to use. The 'internal' providers
-- use Prosody's configured data storage to store the authentication data.
authentication = "internal_hashed"
-- Select the storage backend to use. By default Prosody uses flat files
-- in its configured data directory, but it also supports more backends
-- through modules. An "sql" backend is included by default, but requires
-- additional dependencies. See https://prosody.im/doc/storage for more info.
--storage = "sql" -- Default is "internal"
-- For the "sql" backend, you can uncomment *one* of the below to configure:
--sql = { driver = "SQLite3", database = "prosody.sqlite" } -- Default. 'database' is the filename.
--sql = { driver = "MySQL", database = "prosody", username = "prosody", password = "secret", host = "localhost" }
--sql = { driver = "PostgreSQL", database = "prosody", username = "prosody", password = "secret", host = "localhost" }
-- Archiving configuration
-- If mod_mam is enabled, Prosody will store a copy of every message. This
-- is used to synchronize conversations between multiple clients, even if
-- they are offline. This setting controls how long Prosody will keep
-- messages in the archive before removing them.
archive_expires_after = "1w" -- Remove archived messages after 1 week
-- You can also configure messages to be stored in-memory only. For more
-- archiving options, see https://prosody.im/doc/modules/mod_mam
-- Logging configuration
-- For advanced logging see https://prosody.im/doc/logging
log = {
-- info = "prosody.log"; -- Change 'info' to 'debug' for verbose logging
-- error = "prosody.err";
--info = "*syslog"; -- Uncomment this for logging to syslog
debug = "*console"; -- Log to the console, useful for debugging with daemonize=false
}
-- Uncomment to enable statistics
-- For more info see https://prosody.im/doc/statistics
-- statistics = "internal"
-- Certificates
-- Every virtual host and component needs a certificate so that clients and
-- servers can securely verify its identity. Prosody will automatically load
-- certificates/keys from the directory specified here.
-- For more information, including how to use 'prosodyctl' to auto-import certificates
-- (from e.g. Let's Encrypt) see https://prosody.im/doc/certificates
-- Location of directory to find certificates in (relative to main config file):
certificates = "certs"
-- HTTPS currently only supports a single certificate, specify it here:
--https_certificate = "/etc/prosody/certs/localhost.crt"
----------- Virtual hosts -----------
-- You need to add a VirtualHost entry for each domain you wish Prosody to serve.
-- Settings under each VirtualHost entry apply *only* to that host.
VirtualHost "one.example.org"
--VirtualHost "example.com"
-- certificate = "/path/to/example.crt"
------ Components ------
-- You can specify components to add hosts that provide special services,
-- like multi-user conferences, and transports.
-- For more information on components, see https://prosody.im/doc/components
---Set up a MUC (multi-user chat) room server on conference.example.com:
--Component "conference.example.com" "muc"
--- Store MUC messages in an archive and allow users to access it
--modules_enabled = { "muc_mam" }
---Set up an external component (default component port is 5347)
--
-- External components allow adding various services, such as gateways/
-- transports to other networks like ICQ, MSN and Yahoo. For more info
-- see: https://prosody.im/doc/components#adding_an_external_component
--
--Component "gateway.example.com"
-- component_secret = "password"