forked from GNUsocial/gnu-social
26fdf0c9d2
Queue handlers for XMPP individual & firehose output now send their XML stanzas to another output queue instead of connecting directly to the chat server. This lets us have as many general processing threads as we need, while all actual XMPP input and output go through a single daemon with a single connection open. This avoids problems with multiple connected resources: * multiple windows shown in some chat clients (psi, gajim, kopete) * extra load on server * incoming message delivery forwarding issues Database changes: * queue_item drops 'notice_id' in favor of a 'frame' blob. This is based on Craig Andrews' work branch to generalize queues to take any object, but conservatively leaving out the serialization for now. Table updater (preserves any existing queued items) in db/rc3to09.sql Code changes to watch out for: * Queue handlers should now define a handle() method instead of handle_notice() * QueueDaemon and XmppDaemon now share common i/o (IoMaster) and respawning thread management (RespawningDaemon) infrastructure. * The polling XmppConfirmManager has been dropped, as the message is queued directly when saving IM settings. * Enable $config['queue']['debug_memory'] to output current memory usage at each run through the event loop to watch for memory leaks To do: * Adapt XMPP i/o to component connection mode for multi-site support. * XMPP input can also be broken out to a queue, which would allow the actual notice save etc to be handled by general queue threads. * Make sure there are no problems with simply pushing serialized Notice objects to queues. * Find a way to improve interactive performance of the database-backed queue handler; polling is pretty painful to XMPP. * Possibly redo the way QueueHandlers are injected into a QueueManager. The grouping used to split out the XMPP output queue is a bit awkward. |
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.. | ||
locale | ||
facebookaction.php | ||
facebookapp.css | ||
facebookhome.php | ||
facebookinvite.php | ||
facebooklogin.php | ||
facebooknoticeform.php | ||
FacebookPlugin.php | ||
facebookqueuehandler.php | ||
facebookremove.php | ||
facebooksettings.php | ||
facebookutil.php | ||
FBC_XDReceiver.php | ||
FBConnect.css | ||
FBConnectAuth.php | ||
FBConnectLogin.php | ||
FBConnectSettings.php | ||
fbfavicon.ico | ||
README |
This plugin allows you to use Facebook Connect with StatusNet, provides a Facebook application for your users, and allows them to update their Facebook statuses from StatusNet. Facebook Connect ---------------- Facebook connect allows users to register and login using nothing but their Facebook credentials. With Facebook Connect, your users can: - Authenticate (register/login/logout -- works similar to OpenID) - Associate an existing StatusNet account with a Facebook account - Disconnect a Facebook account from a StatusNet account Built-in Facebook Application ----------------------------- The plugin also installs a StatusNet Facebook application that allows your users to automatically update their Facebook statuses with their latest notices, invite their friends to use the app (and thus your site), view their notice timelines, and post notices -- all from within Facebook. The application is built into the StatusNet Facebook plugin and runs on your host. Quick setup instructions* ------------------------- Install the Facebook Developer application on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/developers/ Use it to create a new application and generate an API key and secret. Add a Facebook app section of your config.php and copy in the key and secret, e.g.: // Config section for the built-in Facebook application $config['facebook']['apikey'] = 'APIKEY'; $config['facebook']['secret'] = 'SECRET'; In Facebook's application editor, specify the following URLs for your app: - Canvas Callback URL : http://example.net/mublog/facebook/app/ - Post-Remove Callback URL: http://example.net/mublog/facebook/app/remove - Post-Add Redirect URL : http://apps.facebook.com/yourapp/ - Canvas Page URL : http://apps.facebook.com/yourapp/ - Connect URL : http://example.net/mublog/ *** ATTENTION *** These URLs have changed slightly since StatusNet version 0.8.1, so if you have been using the Facebook app previously, you will need to update your configuration! Replace "example.net" with your host's URL, "mublog" with the path to your StatusNet installation, and 'yourapp' with the name of the Facebook application you created. (If you don't have "Fancy URLs" on, you'll need to change http://example.net/mublog/ to http://example.net/mublog/index.php/). Additionally, Choose "Web" for Application type in the Advanced tab. In the "Canvas setting" section, choose the "FBML" for Render Method, "Smart Size" for IFrame size, and "Full width (760px)" for Canvas Width. Everything else can be left with default values. * NOTE: For more under-the-hood detailed instructions about setting up a Facebook application and getting an API key, check out the following pages on the Facebook wiki: http://wiki.developers.facebook.com/index.php/Connect/Setting_Up_Your_Site http://wiki.developers.facebook.com/index.php/Creating_your_first_application Finally you must activate the plugin by adding the following line to your config.php: addPlugin('Facebook'); Testing It Out -------------- If the Facebook plugin is enabled and working, there will be a new Facebook Connect Settings tab under each user's Connect menu. Users can connect and disconnect* to their Facebook accounts from it. To try out the plugin, fire up your browser and connect to: http://SITE/PATH_TO_STATUSNET/main/facebooklogin or, if you do not have fancy URLs turned on: http://SITE/PATH_TO_STATUSNET/index.php/main/facebooklogin You should see a page with a blue button that says: "Connect with Facebook" and you should be able to login or register. From within Facebook, you should also be able to get to the Facebook application, and run it by hitting the link you specified above when configuring it: http://apps.facebook.com/yourapp/ That link should be present you with a login screen. After logging in to the app, you are given the option to update their Facebook status via StatusNet. * Note: Before a user can disconnect from Facebook, she must set a normal StatusNet password. Otherwise, she might not be able to login in to her account in the future. This is usually only required for users who have used Facebook Connect to register their StatusNet account, and therefore haven't already set a local password. Offline Queue Handling ---------------------- For larger sites needing better performance it's possible to enable queuing and have users' notices posted to Facebook via a separate "offline" FacebookQueueHandler (facebookqueuhandler.php in the Facebook plugin directory), which will be started by the plugin along with their other daemons when you run scripts/startdaemons.sh. See the StatusNet README for more about queuing and daemons. TODO ---- - Invite Facebook friends to use your StatusNet installation via Facebook Connect - Auto-subscribe Facebook friends already using StatusNet - Share StatusNet favorite notices to your Facebook stream - Allow users to update their Facebook statuses once they have authenticated with Facebook Connect (no need for them to use the Facebook app if they don't want to). - Re-design the whole thing to support multiple instances of StatusNet