view mod_http_roster_admin/README.markdown @ 5398:38da5ca498dd

mod_http_oauth2: Advertise supported grant types Seems redundant, since it's just the response types with other labels.
author Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se>
date Tue, 02 May 2023 16:07:09 +0200
parents af1b3cef52e1
children
line wrap: on
line source

---
labels:
- 'Stage-Beta'
summary: Delegate roster management to an external service
...

*NOTE: THIS MODULE IS RELEASED UNDER THE MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE VERSION 2.*

Normally the XMPP server will store and maintain the users' contact
rosters. This module lets you delegate roster management to an external
service.

Prosody will make an HTTP request to fetch the roster from the external
service. The service will need to notify Prosody whenever a user's roster
changes, so that Prosody can fetch a new roster for that user.

## Configuring this module

This module relies on `mod_storage_memory` and `mod_block_subscriptions`.

In `.parts/prosody/etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua`, where your particular
`VirtualHost` is being configured, add the following:

``` lua
modules_enabled = {
    "http_roster_admin",
    "block_subscriptions",
    "storage_memory",
    "http_files"
}
modules_disabled = {
     -- Prosody will get the roster from the backend app,
     -- so we disable the default roster module.
    "roster"
}
storage = { roster = "memory" }
http_roster_url = "http://localhost/contacts/%s" -- %s will be replaced by an URL-encoded username
```

The `http_roster_url` parameter needs to be configured to point to the
URL in the backend application which returns users' contacts rosters.

In this URL, the pattern `%s` is replaced by an URL-encoded username.

When the user *john* then connects to Prosody, and `http_roster_url` is
set to “http://app.example.org/contacts/%s”, then Prosody will make a
GET request to http://app.example.org/contacts/john

## Protocol

### Fetching rosters (Prosody to web app)

Prosody considers the web application to always hold the most accurate and up-to-date
version of the user's roster. When a user first connects, Prosody fetches the roster
from the web application and caches it internally.

Prosody will make a GET request to the URL specified in Prosody's configuration parameter
'http_roster_url'. In this URL, the pattern '%s' is replaced by an URL-encoded username.

For example, when the user 'john' connects to Prosody, and http_roster_url is set
to "http://app.example.com/contacts/%s", Prosody will make a GET request to "http://app.example.com/contacts/john".

The web app must return a JSON object, where each key is the JID of a contact, and the corresponding
value is data about that contact.

If the user 'john' has friends 'marie' and 'michael', the web app would return a HTTP '200 OK' response
with the following contents:

``` json
{
    "marie@example.com": {
        "name": "Marie"
    },

    "michael@example.com": {
        "name": "Michael"
    }
}
```

### Notifying Prosody of roster changes

The external service needs to notify Prosody whenever a user's roster
changes. To do this, it must make an HTTP POST request to either:

- http://localhost:5280/roster_admin/refresh
- https://localhost:5281/roster_admin/refresh

Make sure that the "http_files" module is enabled in Prosody's configuration,
for the above URLs to served.

Ports 5280/5281 can be firewalled and the web server (i.e. Apache or Nginx)
can be configured to reverse proxy those URLs to for example
https://example.org/http-bind.

The contents of the POST should be a JSON encoded array of usernames whose
rosters have changed.

For example, if user ‘john’ became friends with ‘aaron’, both john’s
contact list and aaron’s contact lists have changed:

``` json
["john", "aaron"]
```

When the operation is complete Prosody will reply with a summary of the
operation - a JSON object containing:

- **status**: either “ok” (success) or “error” (operation completely failed)
- **message**: A human-readable message (for logging and debugging purposes)
- **updated**: The number of rosters successfully updated
- **errors**: The number of rosters that failed to update

Example:

``` json
{
    "status":  "ok",
    "message": "roster update complete",
    "updated": 2,
    "errors":  0
}
```

Prosody may also return status codes `400` or `500` in case of errors (such
as a missing/malformed body).