Mercurial > prosody-modules
view mod_csi_muc_priorities/README.markdown @ 4877:adc6241e5d16
mod_measure_process: Report the enforced limit
The soft limit is what the kernel actually enforces, while the hard
limit is is how far you can change the soft limit without privileges.
Unless the process dynamically adjusts the soft limit, knowing the hard
limit is not as useful as knowing the soft limit.
Reporting the soft limit and the number of in-use FDs allows placing
alerts on expressions like 'process_open_fds / process_max_fds >= 0.95'
author | Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se> |
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date | Tue, 18 Jan 2022 18:55:20 +0100 |
parents | 562d3b219876 |
children |
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# Introduction This module lets users specify which of the group chats they are in are less important. This influences when [mod_csi_simple][doc:modules:mod_csi_simple] decides to send stanzas vs waiting until there is more to send. Users in many large public channels might benefit from this. # Configuration The module is configured via ad-hoc an command called *Configure group chat priorities* that should appear in the menus of compatible clients. The command presents a form that accepts a list of XMPP addresses. Currently there is a single priority, *Lower priority*, which is suitable for e.g. noisy public channels. mod_csi_simple considers groupchat messages important by default on the assumptions that smaller and more important private chats are more common among most users. A message of type groupchat from an address in this list will not be considered important enough to send it to an inactive client, unless it is from the current user or mentions of their nickname. **Note** that mention support require the separate module [mod_track_muc_joins] to also be loaded. ``` {.lua} modules_enabled = { -- other modules etc "csi_simple", "csi_muc_priorities", "track_muc_joins", -- optional } ```