| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Only a starting point is supported due to the way response:send_file()
sends everything it gets from the provided file handle but does not have
any way to specify how much to read.
This matches what Conversations appears to be doing.
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Backs out 1d0862814bfc and 2fdd71b08126
Largely unused, undocumented and did not have enough tests to provide
confidence in its correct operation.
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Previously no 'proxy65_acl' option would allow unrestricted access by local or
remote JIDs.
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The de-facto interpretation of this (undocumented) option is to indicate to
the client whether it is allowed to invite other users to the MUC.
This is differs from the existing option in our config form, which only
controls the behaviour of sending of invites in a members-only MUC (we always
allow invites in open rooms).
Conversations is one client known to use this disco#info item to determine
whether it may send invites.
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secrets
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stanza size limits
c2s/bosh/ws streams will default to 256KB, s2s and components to 512KB.
These values are aligned with ejabberd's default settings, which should reduce
issues related to inconsistent size limits between servers on the XMPP network.
The previous default (10MB) is excessive for any production server, and allows
significant memory usage by even unauthenticated sessions.
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Originally added in 5b048ccd106f
Merged wrong in ca01c449357f
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The metric subsystem of Prosody has had some shortcomings from
the perspective of the current state-of-the-art in metric
observability.
The OpenMetrics standard [0] is a formalization of the data
model (and serialization format) of the well-known and
widely-used Prometheus [1] software stack.
The previous stats subsystem of Prosody did not map well to that
format (see e.g. [2] and [3]); the key reason is that it was
trying to do too much math on its own ([2]) while lacking
first-class support for "families" of metrics ([3]) and
structured metric metadata (despite the `extra` argument to
metrics, there was no standard way of representing common things
like "tags" or "labels").
Even though OpenMetrics has grown from the Prometheus world of
monitoring, it maps well to other popular monitoring stacks
such as:
- InfluxDB (labels can be mapped to tags and fields as necessary)
- Carbon/Graphite (labels can be attached to the metric name with
dot-separation)
- StatsD (see graphite when assuming that graphite is used as
backend, which is the default)
The util.statsd module has been ported to use the OpenMetrics
model as a proof of concept. An implementation which exposes
the util.statistics backend data as Prometheus metrics is
ready for publishing in prosody-modules (most likely as
mod_openmetrics_prometheus to avoid breaking existing 0.11
deployments).
At the same time, the previous measure()-based API had one major
advantage: It is really simple and easy to use without requiring
lots of knowledge about OpenMetrics or similar concepts. For that
reason as well as compatibility with existing code, it is preserved
and may even be extended in the future.
However, code relying on the `stats-updated` event as well as
`get_stats` from `statsmanager` will break because the data
model has changed completely; in case of `stats-updated`, the
code will simply not run (as the event was renamed in order
to avoid conflicts); the `get_stats` function has been removed
completely (so it will cause a traceback when it is attempted
to be used).
Note that the measure_*_event methods have been removed from
the module API. I was unable to find any uses or documentation
and thus deemed they should not be ported. Re-implementation is
possible when necessary.
[0]: https://openmetrics.io/
[1]: https://prometheus.io/
[2]: #959
[3]: #960
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Can happen in case opportunistic_writes is enabled and the session got
destroyed while writing that tag.
Thanks Ge0rG
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Ge0rG)
Could happen with the 'opportunistic_writes' setting, since then the
stream opening is written directly to the socket, which can in turn
trigger session destruction if the socket somehow got closed just after
the other sent their stream header.
Error happens later when it tries to `hosts[session.host == nil].events`
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This many returns deserve their own line.
`session["sasl_handler"]` style isn't used anywhere else.
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We don't use the quoted table indexing style that often, it's not needed
here and it's enough to check for falsyness rather than `nil`.
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Unclear how this happens.
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Fixes #1515
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Fixes #1507
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s2sout.lib was removed in 756b8821007a along with srv_hosts and
srv_choice
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Lets an external upload service know this so it can do expiry itself.
Could possibly have been calculated based on the token expiry or
issuance time, explicit > implicit.
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In case an external upload service wants to have the original creation
time, or calculate the token expiry itself.
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util.error.coerce() doesn't work well with iolib
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It's annoying that Lua interpolates the filename into the error message.
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Use case: Enable module that provides a virtual occupant object for bots
Before, if there is no occupant then either some other part of MUC would
reject the message or `occupant.nick` would have caused an error.
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Maybe the original idea was that you would measure storage separately?
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Background: Found a few files in my store that did not match the size
recorded in the slot, so I needed a way to check which which those were.
As it was a bit too much to type into the shell I added it here instead.
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This just gave an unhelpful 500 error.
It would be nice to have some wrapper code that could untangle the
embedded filename in the io libs errors.
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Should help inform on whether the cache size should be increased.
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This is neat, O(1) reporting, why don't we do this everywhere?
Gives you an idea of how much stuff is in the caches, which may help
inform decisions on whether the size is appropriate.
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mod_offline also already advertises this feature, so it's added twice.
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Easier to see which timers are happening soon vs further in the future
if they are in some sensible order.
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It was confusing that the connection would just close without much
explanation.
Wanted this while investigating https://github.com/conversejs/converse.js/issues/2438
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XEP-0060 6.2.2
This is a MAY but it makes it nice and symmetric with the subscription
response. Reduces the need to remember which node you unsubscribed from.
Explicit > implicit etc.
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In "opportunistic writes" mode, prevents ondisconnect from happening
while writing the stream closing tag.
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Both session.incoming and session.outgoing are truthy here, but
session.direction indicates the "real" direction in the way that matters
for the order of events when opening or closing streams.
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Trying to move everything relating to proxies and X-Forwarded-Foo into a
single place.
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Because it already sets request.secure, which depends on the connection,
just like the IP, so it makes sense to do both in the same place.
Dealing with proxies can be left to mod_http for now, but maybe it could
move into some util some day?
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