--- date: '2020-02-18' subtitle: 'I setup Prosody yesterday---here''s how I did it' title: Setting up Prosody for XMPP url: prosody --- Remember the [IRC for DMs](/blog/irc-for-dms/) article I wrote a while back? Well...it's safe to say that IRC didn't hold up too well. It first started with the bot. Buggy code, crashed a lot---we eventually gave up and didn't bring the bot back up. Then came the notifications, or lack thereof. Revolution IRC has a bug where your custom notification rules just get ignored after a while. In my case, this meant that notifications for `#crimson` stopped entirely. Unless, of course, Nerdy pinged me each time. Again, none of these problems are inherent to IRC itself. IRC is fantastic, but perhaps wasn't the best fit for our usecase. I still do use IRC though, just not for 1-on-1 conversations. Why XMPP? --------- For one, it's better suited for 1-on-1 conversations. It also has support for end-to-end encryption (via OMEMO), something IRC doesn't have.[^1] Also, it isn't centralized (think: email). So...Prosody ------------ [Prosody](https://prosody.im) is an XMPP server. Why did I choose this over ejabberd, OpenFire, etc.? No reason, really. Their website looked cool, I guess. ### Installing Setting it up was pretty painless (I've [experienced worse](/blog/mailserver)). If you're on a Debian-derived system, add: # modify according to your distro deb https://packages.prosody.im/debian buster main to your `/etc/apt/sources.list`, and: # apt update # apt install prosody ### Configuring Once installed, you will find the config file at `/etc/prosody/prosody.cfg.lua`. Add your XMPP user (we will make this later), to the `admins = {}` line. admins = {"user@chat.example.com"} Head to the `modules_enabled` section, and add this to it: modules_enabled = { "posix"; "omemo_all_access"; ... -- uncomment these "groups"; "mam"; -- and any others you think you may need } We will install the `omemo_all_access` module later. Set `c2s_require_encryption`, `s2s_require_encryption`, and `s2s_secure_auth` to `true`. Set the `pidfile` to `/tmp/prosody.pid` (or just leave it as default?). By default, Prosody stores passwords in plain-text, so fix that by setting `authentication` to `"internal_hashed"` Head to the `VirtualHost` section, and add your vhost. Right above it, set the path to the HTTPS certificate and key: certificates = "certs" -- relative to your config file location https_certificate = "certs/chat.example.com.crt" https_key = "certs/chat.example.com.key" ... VirtualHost "chat.example.com" I generated these certs using Let's Encrypt's `certbot`, you can use whatever. Here's what I did: # certbot --nginx -d chat.example.com This generates certs at `/etc/letsencrypt/live/chat.example.com/`. You can trivially import these certs into Prosody's `/etc/prosody/certs/` directory using: # prosodyctl cert import /etc/letsencrypt/live/chat.example.com ### Plugins All the modules for Prosody can be `hg clone`'d from https://hg.prosody.im/prosody-modules. You will, obviously, need Mercurial installed for this. Clone it somewhere, and: # cp -R prosody-modules/mod_omemo_all_access /usr/lib/prosody/modules Do the same thing for whatever other module you choose to install. Don't forget to add it to the `modules_enabled` section in the config. ### Adding users `prosodyctl` makes this a fairly simple task: $ prosodyctl adduser user@chat.example.com You will be prompted for a password. You can optionally, enable user registrations from XMPP/Jabber clients (security risk!), by setting `allow_registration = true`. I may have missed something important, so here's [my config](https://x.icyphox.sh/prosody.cfg.lua) for reference. Closing notes ------------- That's pretty much all you need for 1-on-1 E2EE chats. I don't know much about group chats just yet---trying to create a group in Conversations gives a "No group chat server found". I will figure it out later. Another thing that doesn't work in Conversations is adding an account using an `SRV` record.[^2] Which kinda sucks, because having a `chat.` subdomain isn't very clean, but whatever. Oh, also---you can message me at [icy\@chat.icyphox.sh](xmpp:icy@chat.icyphox.sh). [^1]: I'm told IRC supports OTR, but I haven't ever tried. [^2]: https://prosody.im/doc/dns