Mercurial > prosody-modules
view mod_client_proxy/README.markdown @ 5285:8e1f1eb00b58
mod_sasl2_fast: Fix harmless off-by-one error (invalidates existing tokens!)
Problem:
This was causing the key to become "<token>--cur" instead of the expected
"<token>-cur". As the same key was used by the code to both set and get, it
still worked.
Rationale for change:
Although it worked, it's unintended, inconsistent and messy. It increases the
chances of future bugs due to the unexpected format.
Side-effects of change:
Existing '--cur' entries will not be checked after this change, and therefore
existing FAST clients will fail to authenticate until they attempt password
auth and obtain a new FAST token.
Existing '--cur' entries in storage will not be cleaned up by this commit, but
this is considered a minor issue, and okay for the relatively few FAST
deployments.
author | Matthew Wild <mwild1@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 29 Mar 2023 16:12:15 +0100 |
parents | 3dd7840cb923 |
children |
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--- labels: - 'Stage-Alpha' summary: 'Proxy multiple client resources behind a single component' ... What it does ============ This module must be used as a component. For example: Component "proxy.domain.example" "client_proxy" target_address = "some-user@some-domain.example" All IQ requests against the proxy host (in the above example: proxy.domain.example) are sent to a random resource of the target address (in the above example: some-user@some-domain.example). The entity behind the target address is called the "implementing client". The IQ requests are JAT-ed (JAT: Jabber Address Translation) so that when the implementing client answers the IQ request, it is sent back to the component, which reverts the translation and routes the reply back to the user. Let us assume that user@some-domain.example sends a request. The proxy.domain.example component has the client_proxy module loaded and proxies to some-user@some-domain.example. some-user@some-domain.example has two resources, /a and /b. user -> component: <iq type='get' id='1234' to='proxy.domain.example' from='user@some-domain.example/abc'> component -> implementing client: <iq type='get' id='1234' to='some-user@some-domain.example/a' from='proxy.domain.example/encoded-from'> implementing client -> component: <iq type='result' id='1234' to='proxy.domain.example/encoded-from' from='some-user@some-domain.example/a'> component -> user: <iq type='result' id='1234' to='user@some-domain.example/abc' from='proxy.domain.example'> The encoded-from resource used in the exchange between the proxy component and the implementing client is an implementation-defined string which allows the proxy component to revert the JAT. Use cases ========= * Implementation of services within clients instead of components, thus making use of the more advanced authentication features. * Load-balancing requests to different client resources. * General evilness Configuration ============= To use this module, it needs to be loaded on a component: Component "proxy.yourdomain.example" "client_proxy" target_address = "implementation@yourdomain.example" It will then send a subscription request to implementation@yourdomain.example which MUST be accepted: this is required so that the component can detect the resources to which IQ requests can be dispatched. Limitations =========== * It does not handle presence or message stanzas. * It does not allow the implementing client to initiate IQ requests