forked from GNUsocial/gnu-social
0e852def6a
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. |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
daemons | ||
locale | ||
README | ||
twitter.php | ||
twitterauthorization.php | ||
twitterbasicauthclient.php | ||
TwitterBridgePlugin.php | ||
twitteroauthclient.php | ||
twitterqueuehandler.php | ||
twittersettings.php |
This Twitter "bridge" plugin allows you to integrate your StatusNet instance with Twitter. Installing it will allow your users to: - automatically post notices to thier Twitter accounts - automatically subscribe to other Twitter users who are also using your StatusNet install, if possible (requires running a daemon) - import their Twitter friends' tweets (requires running a daemon) Installation ------------ To enable the plugin, add the following to your config.php: addPlugin("TwitterBridge"); OAuth is used to to access protected resources on Twitter (as opposed to HTTP Basic Auth)*. To use Twitter bridging you will need to register your instance of StatusNet as an application on Twitter (http://twitter.com/apps), and update the following variables in your config.php with the consumer key and secret Twitter generates for you: $config['twitter']['consumer_key'] = 'YOURKEY'; $config['twitter']['consumer_secret'] = 'YOURSECRET'; When registering your application with Twitter set the type to "Browser" and your Callback URL to: http://example.org/mublog/twitter/authorization The default access type should be, "Read & Write". * Note: The plugin will still push notices to Twitter for users who have previously setup the Twitter bridge using their Twitter name and password under an older versions of StatusNet, but all new Twitter bridge connections will use OAuth. Deamons ------- For friend syncing and importing notices running two additional daemon scripts is necessary (synctwitterfriends.php and twitterstatusfetcher.php). In the daemons subidrectory of the plugin are three scripts: * Twitter Friends Syncing (daemons/synctwitterfriends.php) Users may set a flag in their settings ("Subscribe to my Twitter friends here" under the Twitter tab) to have StatusNet attempt to locate and subscribe to "friends" (people they "follow") on Twitter who also have accounts on your StatusNet system, and who have previously set up a link for automatically posting notices to Twitter. The plugin will try to start this daemon when you run scripts/startdaemons.sh. * Importing statuses from Twitter (daemons/twitterstatusfetcher.php) To allow your users to import their friends' Twitter statuses, you will need to enable the bidirectional Twitter bridge in your config.php: $config['twitterimport']['enabled'] = true; The plugin will then start the TwitterStatusFetcher daemon along with the other daemons when you run scripts/startdaemons.sh. Additionally, you will want to set the integration source variable, which will keep notices posted to Twitter via StatusNet from looping back. The integration source should be set to the name of your application, exactly as you specified it on the settings page for your StatusNet application on Twitter, e.g.: $config['integration']['source'] = 'YourApp'; * TwitterQueueHandler (daemons/twitterqueuehandler.php) This script sends queued notices to Twitter for user who have opted to set up Twitter bridging. It's not strictly necessary to run this queue handler, and sites that haven't enabled queuing are still able to push notices to Twitter, but for larger sites and sites that wish to improve performance, this script allows notices to be sent "offline" via a separate process. The plugin will start this script when you run scripts/startdaemons.sh.