Mercurial > prosody-modules
view mod_compression_unsafe/README.markdown @ 5193:2bb29ece216b
mod_http_oauth2: Implement stateless dynamic client registration
Replaces previous explicit registration that required either the
additional module mod_adhoc_oauth2_client or manually editing the
database. That method was enough to have something to test with, but
would not probably not scale easily.
Dynamic client registration allows creating clients on the fly, which
may be even easier in theory.
In order to not allow basically unauthenticated writes to the database,
we implement a stateless model here.
per_host_key := HMAC(config -> oauth2_registration_key, hostname)
client_id := JWT { client metadata } signed with per_host_key
client_secret := HMAC(per_host_key, client_id)
This should ensure everything we need to know is part of the client_id,
allowing redirects etc to be validated, and the client_secret can be
validated with only the client_id and the per_host_key.
A nonce injected into the client_id JWT should ensure nobody can submit
the same client metadata and retrieve the same client_secret
author | Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 03 Mar 2023 21:14:19 +0100 |
parents | 4b7e6c01aa1c |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
**NOTE:** XMPP compression has unresolved [security concerns](https://mail.jabber.org/pipermail/standards/2014-October/029215.html), and this module has been removed from Prosody and renamed. While the bandwidth usage of XMPP isn't that much, compressing the data sent to/from your server can give significant benefits to those on slow connections, such as dial-up or mobile networks. Prosody supports compression for client-to-server (if your client supports it) and server-to-server streams using the mod\_compression plugin. # Details mod\_compression implements [XEP-0138], and supports the zlib compression algorithm. ## Dependencies The XMPP protocol specifies that all clients and servers supporting compression must support the "zlib" compression method, and this is what Prosody uses. However you will need to install zlib support for Lua on your system. There are different ways of doing this depending on your system. If in doubt whether it is installed correctly, the command `lua -lzlib` in a console should open a Lua prompt with no errors. Debian/Ubuntu : `apt-get install lua-zlib` LuaRocks : `luarocks install lua-zlib` Source : <https://github.com/brimworks/lua-zlib> # Usage ``` lua modules_enabled = { -- Other modules "compression_unsafe"; -- Enable mod_compression_unsafe } ``` ## Configuration The compression level can be set using the `compression_level` option which can be a number from 1 to 9. Higher compression levels will use more resources but less bandwidth. ## Example ``` lua modules_enabled = { -- Other modules "compression_unsafe"; -- Enable mod_compression_unsafe } compression_level = 5 ```