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author | Goffi <goffi@goffi.org> |
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date | Fri, 17 Jun 2022 14:15:23 +0200 |
parents | cebfdfff3e99 |
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.. _components: =================== Libervia Components =================== Libervia can act as an XMPP server component, which can be seen as a generic plugin for XMPP servers. This page explains which components are available and how to use them. Running a component =================== Components are linked to a Libervia profile in the same way as normal clients. To run a component, you'll need to know its *entry point*, which is the name of the import name of plugin managing it. The entry point to use will be specified in the component installation documentation. You'll also have to declare the component on your XMPP server, this is a server dependent step and you'll have to check your server documentation for details. You'll have to specify a **shared secret** (can also be named simply *password*) that must be set both on the XMPP server and as the XMPP password of the Libervia profile. Here is a list of relevant documentation for most common servers: ejabberd https://docs.ejabberd.im/admin/configuration/listen-options/ MongooseIm https://esl.github.io/MongooseDocs/latest/configuration/listen/#xmpp-components-listenservice OpenFire use the web-based admin panel Prosody https://prosody.im/doc/components Tigase https://docs.tigase.net/tigase-server/stable-snapshot/Administration_Guide/webhelp/externalComponentConfiguration.html On Libervia, setup is done with Libervia CLI's :ref:`profile create <li_profile_create>` command. You'll usually want to have the component to start automatically when the backend is started, for this you must unset the profile password (not to be confused with the XMPP password which is the one also set on the server configuration) with ``-p ""`` and set auto-connection with ``-A``. You'll specify the XMPP password (also named *shared secret* in `XEP-0144`_ terminology) with ``-x <your_shared_secret>`` and the JID to use with ``-j <component_subdomain>.<server.tld>``. The component entry point is specified with ``-C <entry_point>``. .. _XEP-0144: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0114.html example ------- Louise wants to run an ActivityPub gateway on her server ``example.org`` with the JID ``ap.example.org``. The shared secret is ``xmpp_rocks`` and she wants the component to start automatically with the backend, thus she doesn't set a profile password. The entry-point for ActivityPub component is ``ap-gateway``, and she wants to use the same name for the profile. To do this, she enters the following command:: $ li profile create ap-gateway -j ap.example.org -p "" -x xmpp_rocks -C ap-gateway -A The component will then be started next time Libervia Backend is launched. If Louise wants to connect it immediately, she can use:: $ li profile connect -cp ap-gateway Available Components ==================== Below is a list of currently available components in Libervia, and instructions on what they do and how to use them. File Sharing ------------ **entry_point:** ``file-sharing`` File Sharing component manage the hosting of user files. Users can upload file there using either `Jingle File Transfer`_ or `HTTP File Upload`_. There is no limit to the size of files which can be uploaded, but administrators can set a quota to limit the space that can be used. Files can be retrieved using `File Information Sharing`_, and deleted using `Ad-Hoc Commands`_. Files can be shared with a public HTTP link, or made available only to a specified list of entities (JIDs). Permissions can be set through Ad-Hoc Commands. .. _Jingle File Transfer: https://xmpp.org/extensions/ .. _HTTP File Upload: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0363.html .. _File Information Sharing: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0329.html .. _Ad-Hoc Commands: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0050.html Configuration ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ All options are to be set in ``[component file-sharing]`` section. ``http_upload_port`` port to use for HTTP File Upload **default**: 8888 ``http_upload_connection_type`` either ``http`` or ``https``. **default**: ``https`` Note that HTTP Upload should always be ``https`` to end-user, the ``http`` option is to be used only if you use a HTTP server as a proxy, and this server is already set for TLS. ``http_upload_public_facing_url`` must be set to the URL that end-user will see. Notably useful if the component is behind a proxy. **default**: ``https://<component host>:<http_upload_port`` ``quotas_json`` a JSON object indicating quotas to use for users. The object can have 3 keys: ``admins`` quotas to use for administrators (i.e. profiles set in ``admins_list``) ``users`` quotas to use for normal users (i.e. non admin profiles) ``jids`` per-jid specific quotas. The value is a JSON object where key is a user bare jid and value is a quota. Quotas can be either ``null`` for unlimited space, or a size value (`SI prefixes and binary prefixes`_ can be used). example:: quotas_json = { "admins": null, "users": "50 Mio", "jids": {"pierre@example.org": "1 Gio"} } .. _SI prefixes and binary prefixes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octet_(computing)#Unit_multiples ActivityPub Gateway ------------------- **entry_point:** ``ap-gateway`` .. note:: this component is currently in active development, and not yet fully functional. This documentation will be updated during evolution of component. You can follow the development by reading `Libervia Progress Notes`_. .. _Libervia Progress Notes: https://www.goffi.org/tag/Libervia%20progress This gateway will provide a bidirectional gateway between XMPP and `ActivityPub`_ (or AP below). That means that user from XMPP will be able to follow actors or comments messages from any software compatible with ActivityPub protocol, and vice versa. .. _ActivityPub: https://activitypub.rocks/ .. note:: this component is mostly tested with Prosody as XMPP server reference, and Mastodon as AP server reference, but it should work with any XMPP or AP server. The component launches a HTTP server (necessary to communicate with AP software). This server needs to handle HTTP requests made at paths ``/.well-known/webfinger`` and ``/_ap`` (or the ``ap_path`` set in configuration, see below). If the component is not directly facing internet (e.g. integrated in an existing website though a proxy), you'll have to redirect the requests made to those path to the HTTP server (i.e. to component host at the port set at ``http_port``, see configuration below). Please check your HTTP server documentation to find how this must be done. Configuration ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ All options are to be set in ``[component ap-gateway]`` section. ``public_url`` Main user-facing domain of the HTTP server, this will be used to construct all AP URLs **default**: if not set, ``xmpp_domain`` is used. If ``xmpp_domain`` is not set either, an error is raised. ``http_port`` port where the HTTP server should listen. Port ``80`` is not used directly as it would require root privileges, and it is strongly recommended against launching Libervia under a privileged account. An HTTP Proxy or a port redirection should be set to redirect the ``80`` port to the port specified here. **default**: ``8123`` ``http_connection_type`` either ``http`` or ``https``. If you have a HTTP proxy such as Apache or NGINX which already handles HTTPS, you may want to use ``http``. **default**: ``https`` Note that the HTTP server should always use ``https`` with end-user, the ``http`` option is only to be used with an HTTPS proxy. ``local_only`` A boolean value indicating if the gateway is allowed to convert pubsub node from external XMPP service or not. A JID is considered external if its domain part doesn't end with the gateway's server. For instance, if a gateway ``ap.example.org`` is set on the server ``example.org``, the JIDs ``pierre@example.org`` or ``some-node@pubsub.example.org`` will be considered local, but ``buenaventura@example.net`` won't (note the different domain). Most of time, ``local_only`` should be used. **default**: ``true`` ``ap_path`` Path prefix to use for ActivityPub request. It's usually not necessary to change the default value. **default**: ``_ap`` ``comments_max_depth`` An integer value indicating the maximum number of comment nodes that can be created. See :ref:`ap-xmpp-threads-conversion` .. _ap-actor-from-xmpp: How to Address an AP Actor from XMPP ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When addressing an ActivityPub actor from XMPP, you must use a JID corresponding to the actor. The domain part of the JID correspond to the gateway JID (the one set in gateway profile), while the local part (before the ``@``) is used to specify the AP actor. `XEP-0106`_ (JID Escaping) is used to indicate the AP actor identifier, thus the ``@`` must be escaped with ``\40``. .. _XEP-0106: JID Escaping **example** If Louise wants to talk to Pierre which is on the ``example.net`` AP server, she can use her XMPP AP gateway which is at ``ap.example.org``. Pierre AP's actor identifier is ``pierre@example.net``, Louise can access it via the JID ``pierre\40example.net@ap.example.org``. Of course, this is a bit cumbersome to do by hand, it is expected that XMPP clients will do the (un)escaping automatically for end-user, in a way that Louise could enter ``pierre@example.net`` directly, with an indicator to show that this is an ActivityPub actor identifier rather than an XMPP JID. .. _xmpp-node-from-ap: How to Address an XMPP Entity from AP ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To access an XMPP entity, it is a little bit more complicated for 2 reasons: - XMPP use a wider range of allowed characters than most AP implementations [#AP_chars]_. - to get XMPP items, we need 2 data: the entity JID, and a pubsub node However, Libervia AP gateway tries to make it as user friendly as possible, thus it works like this: - in the most common case, one just wants to access the personal blog of a user, and basic ASCII characters (with possibly ``-``, ``_`` or ``.``) are used. in this case, the XMPP JID can be directly used as AP actor handle - when a pubsub node needs to be specified it is most of time with a pubsub JID which has not user part (something like ``pubsub.example.org``). In this case, the pubsub node can be used as AP actor handle's user part, Libervia will use XMPP discovery to know that it's a pubsub service. So if you want to access the blog named ``xmpp_news`` at ``pubsub.example.org``, you can use the handle ``xmpp_news@pubsub.example.org`` (be sure that the domain ``pubsub.example.org`` links to the Libervia AP gateway HTTP server) - if you want to use a specific node with an entity which already has a user part, then a special encoding must be used, where ``---`` (three dashes) are used to separate node from entity: ``some_node--some_user@example.org`` - if you need to use special characters, then you'll have to use ``___`` followed by the special encoding (see below). The encoding is explained in the documentation of the following method: .. automethod:: sat.plugins.plugin_comp_ap_gateway.APGateway.getJIDAndNode .. [#AP_chars] Most if not all AP implementations use webfinger `acct` URI as a de-facto standard to manage user-friendly handles (something like ``user@example.org``). Those handles, according to `RFC7565`_, should manage a wide variety of characters thanks to the support of percent-encoding. Unfortunately, at least one of the most-used AP implementation (Mastodon, which is used a reference implementation for this gateway), only uses a limited subset of allowed characters. In addition, Mastodon needs an associated handle [#m_wf]_ thus an alternate way to encode characters had to be found. An issue has been opened to improve this situation on Mastodon bug tracker: https://github.com/mastodon/mastodon/issues/17222 .. _RFC7565: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7565 .. [#m_wf] https://docs.joinmastodon.org/spec/webfinger/ **example** If Pierre wants to talk to Louise, he can directly use the JID which is the same as the AP actor identifier, i.e. ``louise@example.org`` (note that on AP software, a ``@`` prefix is often required, thus Pierre will look for ``@louise@example.org``). .. note:: The actor endpoint can also be used directly in AP software (in the example above, it would be by default ``https://example.org/_ap/actor/louise%40example.org``). Getting AP Message from XMPP ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To retrieve ActivityPub messages of an actor from an XMPP client with blogging capabilities (like Libervia or Movim), just use the associated JID as explained in :ref:`ap-actor-from-xmpp`. The actor messages (from ``outbox`` collection) should appear as regular XMPP blog items. .. note:: Due to limitation of `ActivityStream Collection Paging`_, the conversion from XMPP `RSM`_ requests is inneficient beyond first or last page. This problem is avoided if anybody subscribe to the gateway node (i.e. follow the AP actor), as the collection will then be cached, and efficiently delivered. .. _ActivityStream Collection Paging: https://www.w3.org/TR/activitystreams-core/#h-paging .. _RSM: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0059.html Getting XMPP Items from ActivityPub ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To get XMPP items from an ActivityPub implementation, just use the handle as explained at :ref:`xmpp-node-from-ap` (often handle searches are triggered with a ``@`` before the handle in AP implementations, e.g.: ``@louise@example.org``). .. note:: Some AP implementations such as Mastodon don't retrieve existing items, but only keep new ones once an actor is followed. That means that you won't see any message published before your entity is followed. Other implementations may work differently. .. _ap-xmpp-threads-conversion: ActivyPub to XMPP Discussion Threads Conversion ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ By default, each (micro)blog publication converted from ActivityPub to XMPP Pubsub is associated with a comment node (see `XEP-0277 comments`_) to allow user to post a reply on any on them. This result in a "tree-like" comments threading model, which is similar to what you can see on popular website such as Reddit, Hacker News, or LinuxFr. However, some XMPP clients may not play nicely with this kind of threading model. To work around this, the ``comments_max_depth`` option allows to limit the maximum number of thread. It is an integer value which indicate how many comments nodes may exist for a root post. If set to ``1``, only one comment node will be made, and ActivityPub items below this level will be moved to this single XMPP pubsub comment node. The default value of ``0`` means unlimited max depth. An example can probably make it more clear. Imagine that you have a message ``root message``, with a comment to it named ``1``, a comment to ``1`` named ``2`` and so on until ``5``. With ``comments_max_depth`` set to ``0``, you'll have one comment node per item, resulting in following threads model:: root message ┑ ┕ 1 ┑ ┕ 2 ┑ ┕ 3 ┑ ┕ 4 ┑ ┕ 5 With ``comments_max_depth`` set to ``2``, only 2 nodes will be created, and items below depth ``2`` will be put on the same level:: root message ┑ ┕ 1 ┑ ┝ 2 ┝ 3 ┝ 4 ┕ 5 This way, admins can configure the model which suits best the clients which is expected to be mainly used on the instance. .. _XEP-0277 comments: https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0277.html#comments Publishing an Item ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To publish a new item (e.g. a blog post), you just need to publish normally on your own PEP/pubsub node, AP actors following you will be notified. To reply to an AP item, just publish to the corresponding pubsub node managed by the gateway. This is transparent for AP and XMPP end users. For instance, if Pierre has posted an interesting message on his AP server, and Louise wants to reply to it, she just use a client to reply on the comments node of this message, this will be delivered as an AP object to Pierre's AP server. On the other hand, if Louise is publishing a new blog post on her XMPP server, Pierre will receive corresponding AP object because he's following her. If Pierre answer using his AP client, the corresponding message will be published on the comments node of the message that Louise has initially published. Following, Subscribing and Cache ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When you try to access an uncached AP collection from XMPP (e.g. blog posts), a best effort is done to translate XMPP pagination (which uses `XEP-0059 (Result Set Management)`_) to the less powerful `AP Collection Paging`_. This is inefficient due to technical limitations (page size can't be specified in AP, there is not standard way to request item after or before a specific ID, implementations may not implement reverse pagination). That's one of the reason why whenever possible, collections are cached locally. Once cached, it's easier to return items according to complex requests. However, to cache correctly an AP collection, you need to keep it in sync, and thus to receive update when something change (e.g. a new blog item is published). In AP, this is done by following an actor, in XMPP this correspond to a node subscription. When you subscribe to a blog node managed by this gateway, this will be translated to a *follow* activity on AP side, and vice versa. When an AP actor is followed, its *outbox* collection (i.e. message published), are automatically cached, and will be updated when events will be received. That means that you can use pubsub cache search on followed actors, e.g. to retrieve all items about a specific topic or published at specific time range. Reciprocally, unsubscribing from a node will *unfollow* the corresponding AP actor. If an AP actor is following or unfollowing an actor mapping an XMPP entity, they nodes will be subscribed to or unsubscribed from. All subscriptions are made public as specified by `XEP-0465 (Pubsub Public Subscriptions)`_. .. _XEP-0059 (Result Set Management): https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0059.html .. _AP Collection Paging: https://www.w3.org/TR/activitystreams-core/#h-paging .. _XEP-0465 (Pubsub Public Subscriptions): https://xmpp.org/extensions/inbox/pubsub-public-subscriptions.html Following/Followers Collections and Public Pubsub Subscription ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The AP *following* collection is mapped to `XEP-0465 (Pubsub Public Subscriptions)`_. In the same spirit, the AP *followers* collection correspond to public subscribers to the microblog node. Because AP doesn't send any event when *following* or *followers* collections are modified, those collections can't be cached, and thus the translation to public pubsub subscriptions is done as best as possible given the constraints. Messages Delivery ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The gateway can convert AP publications to either XMPP pubsub items (using `XEP-0277 (Microblogging over XMPP)`_ when suitable) or to XMPP messages (`<message>` stanzas, i.e. the ones used for instant messaging). Of course it also converts in a similar way in the other direction (XMPP → ActivityPub). A received AP item will be converted to an XMPP pubsub item if any of the following conditions is fulfilled: - it is addressed to the special `*public* collection`_ - it is addressed to a local *followers* collection A received AP item will be converted to an XMPP message if all the following conditions are fulfilled: - it is **not** addressed to the special *public* collection - it is **not** addressed to a any local *followers* collection. In other words, if an AP item is addressed directly to one or more local users, is not public and is not addressed to a *followers* collection, it will be converted to an XMPP message, otherwise it will be converted to an XMPP pubsub item. The behaviour is symmetric, thus if you send an XMPP message it will be converted to an AP item which will be only addressed to your recipient. If you write using XMPP pubsub, the suitable followers collections of the target AP actor will be automatically added, and the item will have the special *public* collection added. .. note:: ActivyPub doesn't do any kind of `end-to-end encryption`_, it is **not** the same level of privacy as XMPP. Messages will be at minimum readable by the administrators of the AP gateway and of the ActivyPub server of the destinee. Be sure to understand that before sending messages. If you need more privacy, you need to use either XMPP only (without the ActivityPub gateway) with clients implementing correctly end-to-end encryption, or an other software. Depending of the level of pricacy required, you may want to use authentication by a separated channel, a client which has been audited, encryption by default, etc. This is beyond the scope of this AP gateway documentation. In short, don't use ActivityPub if you need a high level of privacy. This is a current protocol limitation, and there is nothing that this gateway can do about this until ActivityPub and its implementations evolve. .. _XEP-0277 (Microblogging over XMPP): https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0277.html .. _*public* collection: https://www.w3.org/TR/activitypub/#public-addressing .. _end-to-end encryption: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-to-end_encryption Using the Component (for developers) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Publication of AP items can be tested using the following method (with can be accessed through the ``APSend`` bridge method, client is then replaced by the ``profile`` name, as last argument): .. automethod:: sat.plugins.plugin_comp_ap_gateway.APGateway.publishMessage The method can be used either with CLI's :ref:`debug bridge method <li_debug_bridge_method>` or with any D-Bus tool like ``qdbus`` or ``d-feet`` (only if you use the D-Bus bridge). example ~~~~~~~ On its ``example.net`` Mastodon instance, Pierre has published a message with the id ``https://example.net/@pierre/106986412193109832``. To send a reply to this message, Louise can use the following command:: $ li debug bridge method -c APSend '"{\"node\": \"https://example.net/@pierre/106986412193109832\", \"content\": \"A lille hello from XMPP\"}","pierre\\40example.net@ap.example.org", "louise"' Note the double escaping, one for the shell argument, and the other to specify JSON object.