Mercurial > prosody-modules
view mod_pubsub_post/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 | 8d4b91a703af |
children | 18774cc621d6 |
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--- labels: - 'Stage-Stable' summary: Publish to PubSub nodes from via HTTP POST/WebHooks --- # Introduction This module is a fairly generic WebHook receiver that lets you easily publish data to PubSub using a HTTP POST request. The payload can be Atom feeds, arbitrary XML, or arbitrary JSON. The type should be indicated via the `Content-Type` header. - JSON data is wrapped in a [XEP-0335] container. - An Atom feed may have many `<entry>` and each one is published as its own PubSub item. - Other XML is simply published to the item with ID `current`. ## JSON example ``` {.bash} curl http://localhost:5280/pubsub_post/princely_musings \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ --data-binary '{"musing":"To be, or not to be: that is the question"}' ``` ## Atom example ``` {.bash} curl http://localhost:5280/pubsub_post/princely_musings \ -H "Content-Type: application/xml" \ --data-binary '<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"> <entry><title>Hello</title></entry></feed>' ``` ## Simple form-data ``` {.bash} curl http://localhost:5280/pubsub_post/princely_musings \ --data musing="To be, or not to be: that is the question" ``` # Configuration All settings are optional. ## Actor identification First we have to figure out who is making the request. This is configured on a per-node basis like this: ``` {.lua} -- Per node secrets pubsub_post_actors = { princely_musings = "hamlet@denmark.lit" } pubsub_post_default_actor = "nobody@nowhere.invalid" ``` `pubsub_post_default_actor` is used when trying to publish to a node that is not listed in `pubsub_post_actors`. Otherwise the IP address of the connection is used. ## Authentication [WebSub](https://www.w3.org/TR/2018/REC-websub-20180123/) [Authenticated Content Distribution](https://www.w3.org/TR/2018/REC-websub-20180123/#authenticated-content-distribution) authentication is used. ``` {.lua} pubsub_post_secrets = { princely_musings = "shared secret" } pubsub_post_default_secret = "default secret" ``` `pubsub_post_default_secret` is used when trying to publish to a node that is not listed in `pubsub_post_secrets`. Otherwise the request proceeds with the previously identified actor. ::: {.alert .alert-danger} If configured without a secret and a default actor that has permission to create nodes the service becomes wide open. ::: ## Authorization Authorization is handled via pubsub affiliations. Publishing requires an affiliation with the _publish_ capability, usually `"publisher"`. ### Setting up affiliations Prosodys PubSub module supports [setting affiliations via XMPP](https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0060.html#owner-affiliations), in trunk since [revision 384ef9732b81](https://hg.prosody.im/trunk/rev/384ef9732b81), so affiliations can be configured with a capable client. It can however be done from another plugin: ``` {.lua} local mod_pubsub = module:depends("pubsub"); local pubsub = mod_pubsub.service; pubsub:create("princely_musings", true); pubsub:set_affiliation("princely_musings", true, "127.0.0.1", "publisher"); ``` ## Data mappings The datamapper library added in trunk allows posting JSON and having it converted to XML based on a special JSON Schema. ``` json { "properties" : { "content" : { "type" : "string" }, "title" : { "type" : "string" } }, "type" : "object", "xml" : { "name" : "musings", "namespace" : "urn:example:princely" } } ``` And in the Prosody config file: ``` lua pubsub_post_mappings = { princely_musings = "musings.json"; } ``` Then, POSTing a JSON payload like ``` json { "content" : "To be, or not to be: that is the question", "title" : "Soliloquy" } ``` results in a payload like ``` xml <musings xmlns="urn:example:princely"> <title>Soliloquy</title> <content>To be, or not to be: that is the question</content> </musings> ``` being published to the node.