view mod_onhold/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>
date Tue, 18 Jan 2022 18:55:20 +0100
parents 4d73a1a6ba68
children
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---
labels:
summary: 'Module enabling "on-hold" functionality'
...

Introduction
============

Enable mod\_onhold to allow temporarily placing messages from particular
JIDs "on hold" -- i.e. store them, but do not deliver them until the
hold status is taken away.

Details
=======

Right now, it is configured through adding JIDs to a list in
prosody.cfg.lua. Eventually, more dynamically configurable support will
be added (i.e. with ad-hoc commands or some such thing).

Simply enable mod\_onhold in your list of modules, and then add a line:

onhold\_jids = { "someone@address.com", "someoneelse@address2.com" }

Until those JIDs are removed, messages from those JIDs will not be
delivered. Once they are removed and prosody is restarted, they will be
delivered the next time the user to which they are directed logs on.