146 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
146 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
# Fluux XMPP
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[![Codeship Status for FluuxIO/xmpp](https://app.codeship.com/projects/dba7f300-d145-0135-6c51-26e28af241d2/status?branch=master)](https://app.codeship.com/projects/262399) [![GoDoc](https://godoc.org/gosrc.io/xmpp?status.svg)](https://godoc.org/gosrc.io/xmpp) [![GoReportCard](https://goreportcard.com/badge/gosrc.io/xmpp)](https://goreportcard.com/report/fluux.io/xmpp) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/FluuxIO/go-xmpp/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/FluuxIO/go-xmpp?branch=master)
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Fluux XMPP is a Go XMPP library, focusing on simplicity, simple automation, and IoT.
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The goal is to make simple to write simple XMPP clients and components:
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- For automation (like for example monitoring of an XMPP service),
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- For building connected "things" by plugging them on an XMPP server,
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- For writing simple chatbot to control a service or a thing,
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- For writing XMPP servers components.
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The library is designed to have minimal dependencies. For now, the library does not depend on any other library.
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## Configuration and connection
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### Allowing Insecure TLS connection during development
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It is not recommended to disable the check for domain name and certificate chain. Doing so would open your client
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to man-in-the-middle attacks.
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However, in development, XMPP servers often use self-signed certificates. In that situation, it is better to add the
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root CA that signed the certificate to your trusted list of root CA. It avoids changing the code and limit the risk
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of shipping an insecure client to production.
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That said, if you really want to allow your client to trust any TLS certificate, you can customize Go standard
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`tls.Config` and set it in Config struct.
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Here is an example code to configure a client to allow connecting to a server with self-signed certificate. Note the
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`InsecureSkipVerify` option. When using this `tls.Config` option, all the checks on the certificate are skipped.
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```go
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config := xmpp.Config{
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Address: "localhost:5222",
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Jid: "test@localhost",
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Credential: xmpp.Password("Test"),
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TLSConfig: tls.Config{InsecureSkipVerify: true},
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}
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```
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## Supported specifications
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### Clients
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- [RFC 6120: XMPP Core](https://xmpp.org/rfcs/rfc6120.html)
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- [RFC 6121: XMPP Instant Messaging and Presence](https://xmpp.org/rfcs/rfc6121.html)
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### Components
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- [XEP-0114: Jabber Component Protocol](https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0114.html)
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- [XEP-0355: Namespace Delegation](https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0355.html)
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- [XEP-0356: Privileged Entity](https://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0356.html)
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## Package overview
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### Stanza subpackage
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XMPP stanzas are basic and extensible XML elements. Stanzas (or sometimes special stanzas called 'nonzas') are used to
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leverage the XMPP protocol features. During a session, a client (or a component) and a server will be exchanging stanzas
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back and forth.
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At a low-level, stanzas are XML fragments. However, Fluux XMPP library provides the building blocks to interact with
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stanzas at a high-level, providing a Go-friendly API.
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The `stanza` subpackage provides support for XMPP stream parsing, marshalling and unmarshalling of XMPP stanza. It is a
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bridge between high-level Go structure and low-level XMPP protocol.
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Parsing, marshalling and unmarshalling is automatically handled by Fluux XMPP client library. As a developer, you will
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generally manipulates only the high-level structs provided by the stanza package.
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The XMPP protocol, as the name implies is extensible. If your application is using custom stanza extensions, you can
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implement your own extensions directly in your own application.
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To learn more about the stanza package, you can read more in the
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[stanza package documentation](https://github.com/FluuxIO/go-xmpp/blob/master/stanza/README.md).
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### Router
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TODO
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### Getting IQ response from server
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TODO
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## Examples
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We have several [examples](https://github.com/FluuxIO/go-xmpp/tree/master/_examples) to help you get started using
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Fluux XMPP library.
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Here is the demo "echo" client:
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```go
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package main
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import (
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"fmt"
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"log"
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"os"
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"gosrc.io/xmpp"
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"gosrc.io/xmpp/stanza"
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)
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func main() {
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config := xmpp.Config{
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TransportConfiguration: xmpp.TransportConfiguration{
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Address: "localhost:5222",
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},
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Jid: "test@localhost",
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Credential: xmpp.Password("Test"),
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StreamLogger: os.Stdout,
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Insecure: true,
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}
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router := xmpp.NewRouter()
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router.HandleFunc("message", handleMessage)
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client, err := xmpp.NewClient(config, router)
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if err != nil {
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log.Fatalf("%+v", err)
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}
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// If you pass the client to a connection manager, it will handle the reconnect policy
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// for you automatically.
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cm := xmpp.NewStreamManager(client, nil)
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log.Fatal(cm.Run())
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}
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func handleMessage(s xmpp.Sender, p stanza.Packet) {
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msg, ok := p.(stanza.Message)
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if !ok {
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_, _ = fmt.Fprintf(os.Stdout, "Ignoring packet: %T\n", p)
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return
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}
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_, _ = fmt.Fprintf(os.Stdout, "Body = %s - from = %s\n", msg.Body, msg.From)
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reply := stanza.Message{Attrs: stanza.Attrs{To: msg.From}, Body: msg.Body}
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_ = s.Send(reply)
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}
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```
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## Reference documentation
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The code documentation is available on GoDoc: [gosrc.io/xmpp](https://godoc.org/gosrc.io/xmpp)
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