Quick Setup
In this short guide we will set MongooseIM up and get users chatting right away. The goal is to get to know MongooseIM, set it up, go through basic operations and validation.
You should have MongooseIM already installed on your machine and the mongooseimctl
command available.
If you have not installed MIM, please refer to the installation instructions.
Warning
This setup is not intended for production.
Note
This procedure has been tested on an Ubuntu 18.04.x LTS.
Running MongooseIM
Warning
MongooseIM will use its default database - Mnesia, which is faster and simpler to set up, but not intended for production purposes when it comes to persistent data.
It is possible to use external databases instead - for more information, see the database backend configuration page.
The following command will start the MongooseIM server:
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When you change the config file and want to restart the MongooseIM server:
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Use the following command to stop the MongooseIM server:
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At any given time, the following command shows the status of a MongooseIM server:
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nodedown
then MongooseIM is not running. Else it will show its status starting
, started
, or stopping
, and its version.
When needed, you can also launch the server in the interactive mode:
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For running MongooseIM in a non-interactive way within a supervision system (e.g. systemd), it is recommended to use the foreground mode:
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You can check server loglevel:
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Run bootstrap scripts for initial configuration:
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It executes scripts inside the scripts/
directory with a bootstrap
prefix in alphabetical order. More information
Execute Hello
from the scripts/bootstrap01-hello.sh
script that you can find in the release directory $REPO_DIR/_build/prod/rel/mongooseim
.
Chat users
Registering (creating) users
The default XMPP domain served by MongooseIM right after installation is localhost
.
You can register (create) users with the mongooseimctl
utility.
This command registers the user user@localhost
using password secret
.
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Warning
The password is entered manually in the command line and history is accessible to the command line users. This method is not recommended for production use, you may prefer for example LDAP.
You can check that the user account has been created:
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Now you can list all registered users in your host:
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If you want to delete a user from your host:
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Populate the contact lists (rosters)
As an example, let's add bob@localhost
as a contact of alice@localhost
:
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You need to quote ["friends"]
because it is a list of strings - JSON syntax is required for such complex types. The single quotes are there to prevent bash
from interpreting special characters like "
.
If you want alice@locahost
to receive presences from bob@localhost
, you need to firstly request the subscription:
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Then, accept the subscription request:
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Verify the contact list:
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Note that bob@localhost
has alice@localhost
in his contacts as well, but he is not subscribed to her presences - the subscriptions are unidirectional.
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To quickly set up mutual subscriptions between users, you can use mongooseimctl roster setMutualSubscription
.
Basic MongooseIM configuration
The main configuration file of MongooseIM is mongooseim.toml
:
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mongooseim.toml
sections.
For each change, edit the configuration file using the right Linux/Unix user. Save (and optionally backup, archive, or version) the configuration file and restart the MongooseIM server.
Logging
Set your own loglevel in the configuration file:
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Save and exit your editor, restart MongooseIM and check your loglevel from the command line:
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Read the mongooseim.log
file:
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You can use commands such cat
, more
or less
, even head
or tail
.
In order to see live logs:
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Ctrl+C
to exit.
MUC (Multi-User Chat) for groupchats
Enable MUC, or Multi-User Chat, for groupchats/channels in the mongooseim.toml
file:
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Roster versioning
For faster contact list downloads at each client/app (re)connection, edit the configuration file:
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Review configuration
If MongooseIM does not start because the configuration file is broken in some way:
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Using an XMPP/Jabber client/app
The following steps use the registered users on the MongooseIM server, done above.
Users that are registered on your server can now add their accounts in a chat application like Gajim (specifying either the server’s IP address or domain name), and start chatting!
Note about session conflicts
If you're going to connect several clients with the same username and domain (for example a phone and a laptop), please make sure they are using different resource names (a kind of device/client identifier). This should be configurable in the account settings of every XMPP client.
Otherwise, the clients will keep disconnecting each other, because MongooseIM always terminates the older session in case of a conflict.
Connect Gajim
Gajim is available on Ubuntu, CentOS & Windows.
Warning
Gajim has an obsolete UX. However, it is still well maintained, and has a console that is extremely useful for debugging and testing/validation purposes at the XMPP protocol level.
- Launch Gajim. Ignore the window with Plugin updates.
- Go to Edit -> Accounts.
- Click Add in the left part of the window and select I already have an account I want to use, click Forward
- Enter the user, domain and password for the accounts registered previously on the command line
- Click Forward and then Finish
- Ignore the TLS/SSL error/warning and continue
- Close the Account window.
Add your three created users: alice
, bob
, and carol
.
Check what users are currently connected.
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The result shows that Bob is currently connected.
Chat with another person
Use alice
's account to send messages directly to bob
and use bob
's account to reply directly to alice
.
It is possible to send a message from the command line:
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You need to quote Hi Bob!
, because it contains a space.
If you do it while Bob is connected, he should receive the message in the XMPP client.
Group chats
Use alice
's account to create a groupchat channel
on your muc.localhost
service, and configure it by making it persistent. Invite bob
and carol
. From bob
's' and carol
's accounts, accept the invitation and join the channel
groupchat. All three users exchange messages.
Contact lists
Use carol
's account to add alice
and bob
to her contact list. Use alice
's and bob
's accounts accept those additions.
Verify on the MongooseIM server:
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Profile (vCard)
Edit alice
's profile (vCard) in Gajim: Modify Account..., then Profile, just set her Name to Alice
.
Verify on the MongooseIM server:
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Summary
Now you have the minimum knowledge: you know how to deploy MongooseIM, configure some basic features, check/verify a few useful items, validate it both on the client and server side, and utilize a few good practices.
Summary: command line
You know mongooseimctl
, with basic server management commands such as:
start
,restart
,stop
,status
,live
,foreground
get_loglevel
Other commands shown above correspond to the GraphQL Admin API operations, and they are grouped into the following categories:
account
containsregisterUser
,checkUser
,listUsers
,removeUser
roster
containsaddContact
,subscription
,listContacts
,setMutualSubscription
session
containslistSessions
stanza
containssendMessage
vcard
containsgetVcard
There are more categories and commands. For a list of categories, use mongooseimctl
without any arguments. To get a list of commands in a particular category, call mongooseimctl
category
. You can also get more information about a particular command with mongooseimctl
category command
--help
.
Summary: files
You know basic entries in the files:
/etc/mongooseim/mongooseim.toml
/var/log/mongooseim/mongooseim.log
Summary: client/app
In an app, you know how to:
- connect
- chat with another user
- create/join groupchats
- manage contact lists (roster)
- edit profile (vCard)
Go further
For the next steps, we now encourage you to:
- Deploy it as a single node, on a publicly accessible server, with a real routable domain name with its certificate
- Add an RDBMS for persistent data, and LDAP for user directory
- Enable message history with MAM (Message Archive Management)
- Enable file exchange with HTTP file upload, with an S3-compatible object storage server
- Use a mobile app for users to chat