Mercurial > prosody-modules
view mod_audit/README.md @ 5646:d67980d9e12d
mod_http_oauth2: Apply refresh token ttl to refresh token instead of grant
The intent in 59d5fc50f602 was for refresh tokens to extend the lifetime
of the grant, but the refresh token ttl was applied to the grant and
mod_tokenauth does not change it, leading to the grant expiring
regardless of refresh token usage.
This makes grant lifetimes unlimited, which seems to be standard
practice in the wild.
author | Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 11 Sep 2023 10:48:31 +0200 |
parents | dc058fcc3fe3 |
children | 561503e0c0f1 |
line wrap: on
line source
--- summary: Audit Logging rockspec: {} ... This module provides infrastructure for audit logging inside Prosody. ## What is audit logging? Audit logs will contain security sensitive events, both for server-wide incidents as well as user-specific. This module, however, only provides the infrastructure for audit logging. It does not, by itself, generate such logs. For that, other modules, such as `mod_audit_auth` or `mod_audit_register` need to be loaded. ## A note on privacy Audit logging is intended to ensure the security of a system. As such, its contents are often at the same time highly sensitive (containing user names and IP addresses, for instance) and allowed to be stored under common privacy regulations. Before using these modules, you may want to ensure that you are legally allowed to store the data for the amount of time these modules will store it. Note that it is currently not possible to store different event types with different expiration times. ## Viewing the log You can view the log using prosodyctl. This works even when Prosody is not running. For example, to view the full audit log for example.com: ```shell prosodyctl mod_audit example.com ``` To view only host-wide events (those not attached to a specific user account), use the `--global` option (or use `--no-global` to hide such events): ```shell prosodyctl mod_audit --global example.com ``` To narrow results to a specific user, specify their JID: ```shell prosodyctl mod_audit user@example.com ```