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mod_auth_ha1/README.md @ 6057:cc665f343690
mod_firewall: SUBSCRIBED: Flip subscription check to match documentation
The documentation claims that this condition checks whether the recipient is
subscribed to the sender.
However, it was using the wrong method, and actually checking whether the
sender was subscribed to the recipient.
A quick poll of folk suggested that the documentation's approach is the right
one, so this should fix the code to match the documentation.
This should also fix the bundled anti-spam rules from blocking presence from
JIDs that you subscribe do (but don't have a mutual subscription with).
author | Matthew Wild <mwild1@gmail.com> |
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date | Fri, 22 Nov 2024 13:50:48 +0000 |
parent | 6003:fe081789f7b5 |
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--- labels: - 'Stage-Beta' - 'Type-Auth' summary: | Authentication module for 'HA1' hashed credentials in a text file, as used by reTurnServer ... Introduction ============ This module authenticates users against hashed credentials stored in a plain text file. The format is the same as that used by reTurnServer. Configuration ============= Name Default Description ----------------- ---------- --------------------------------- auth\_ha1\_file auth.txt Path to the authentication file Prosody reads the auth file at startup and on reload (e.g. SIGHUP). File Format =========== The file format is text, with one user per line. Each line is broken into four fields separated by colons (':'): username:ha1:host:status Field Description ---------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- username The user's login name ha1 An MD5 hash of "username:host:password" host The XMPP hostname status The status of the account. Prosody expects this to be just the text "authorized" More info can be found [here](https://github.com/resiprocate/resiprocate/blob/master/reTurn/users.txt). Example ------- john:2a236a1a68765361c64da3b502d4e71c:example.com:authorized mary:4ed7cf9cbe81e02dbfb814de6f84edf1:example.com:authorized charlie:83002e42eb4515ec0070489339f2114c:example.org:authorized Constructing the hashes can be done manually using any MD5 utility, such as md5sum. For example the user 'john' has the password 'hunter2', and his hash can be calculated like this: echo -n "john:example.com:hunter2" | md5sum - Compatibility ============= ------ ------- 0.9 Works 0.10 Works ------ -------