Openfire

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Description

Openfire (formerly Wildfire) is a real time collaboration (RTC) server dual-licensed under the Open Source GPL and commercially. It uses the only widely adopted open protocol for instant messaging, XMPP (also called Jabber). Openfire is easy to setup and administer, but offers rock-solid security and performance.

Prerequisite for SME 9.x

The Java Runtime Environment included in the Openfire RPM requires that an additional library be installed 64-bit versions of SME 9.0. To install it, run

# yum install glibc.i686

Download and install Openfire

You can find the latest version of Openfire at http://www.igniterealtime.org/downloads/index.jsp. Download the RPM to your SME server, then run

# yum install openfire-*.rpm

Create the Database

To create the Openfire Database, you'll need to perform each of the following steps:

# mysqladmin create openfiredb
# mysql -e "grant all privileges on openfiredb.* to openfireuser@localhost identified by 'yourpassword'"
# mysql -e "flush privileges"


  Warning:
You may wish to alter the "openfireuser" and "yourpassword" information in the grant privileges line above. Be sure to remember to remember what you used as the web manager will ask you for it!


Edit the database schema (this change does not seem to be necessary with SME 9.0 and Openfire 3.9.3):

# cd /opt/openfire/resources/database
# nano openfire_mysql.sql

At line 57 starts:

CREATE TABLE ofRoster (
  rosterID              BIGINT          NOT NULL,
  username              VARCHAR(64)     NOT NULL,
  jid                   VARCHAR(1024)   NOT NULL,

Change the jid line from 1024 to 255 as shown:

  jid                   VARCHAR(255)    NOT NULL,

Import the revised database schema:

# mysql openfiredb < openfire_mysql.sql

Access MySQL from the local network

To use the MySQL database you will need to run a script to make port 3306 available to the Openfire Instant Messaging Server.

/sbin/e-smith/config setprop mysqld LocalNetworkingOnly no
/sbin/e-smith/expand-template /etc/my.cnf
/etc/rc.d/rc7.d/S50mysqld restart

Start the Openfire Messaging Server

/etc/rc.d/init.d/openfire start

Visit admin web page to complete Openfire configuration

Go to http://yourserver:9090 (insecure) or https://yourserver:9091 (secure)and follow through the setup via the browser. The only area that may be confusing is the database setup area. See example configuration below.

 

 

 



Database Driver Presets: MySql

JDBC Driver Class: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver


Database URL: jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/openfiredb

Username: openfireuser

Password: yourpassword

 

LDAP Authentication

Openfire can be configured to authenticate users through your SME Server's OpenLDAP server. This will allow you to use a single user and password source, rather than needing to maintain two or more separate databases. This is recommended unless you have a particular reason to want a separate user list for your Openfire installation. To begin, on the Profile Settings screen, select Directory Server (LDAP):

 

Fill in the Connection Settings screen as shown below, replacing yourdomain and tld with your primary domain name and top-level domain, as appropriate. For example, if your domain were example.com, you'd enter dc=example,dc=com. For the password field, enter your admin user's password.

 

Click Test Settings to make sure you're able to connect. Then click Save & Continue.

On the User Mapping page, just scroll to the bottom and click Save & Continue.

 

Similarly, on the Group Mapping page, click Save & Continue.

 

On the Administrator Account screen, enter admin and click Add.

 

On the next page, your admin account will be listed. Click the Test button to confirm that it will authenticate this account.

 

You should see the Success page below. If you do, you can close it. You can optionally add other administrator users on this page.

 

SME Server specific configuration

config set openfire service TCPPorts '5222,5223,7777' access public status enabled
signal-event remoteaccess-update

Add startup link:

ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d/e-smith-service /etc/rc.d/rc7.d/S99openfire

Optional

If you would like to have web access to the openfire documentation has been installed on your server, this section will show you how to make an e-smith custom template.

Make the custom-template directory:

mkdir -p /etc/e-smith/templates-custom/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
cd /etc/e-smith/templates-custom/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf

Create and edit a file called "99openfire"

nano -w 99openfire

(add the code shown below to the template) (you can select and copy then paste in PuTTY with right click)

# Openfire instant messaging server

Alias /openfiredocs /opt/openfire/documentation/docs

<Directory /opt/openfire/documentation/docs>
     AddType application/x-httpd-php .php .php3 .phtml
     Options Indexes +Includes FollowSymLinks
     order deny,allow
     deny from all
     allow from all
</Directory>

# end of Openfire fragment

ctrl-x to save, y to agree, and [Enter] to exit the PICO editor

Expand the template

expand-template /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
/etc/rc.d/init.d/httpd-e-smith restart

access your documentation at:

http://yourservername-or-IP/openfiredocs/

To reiterate, this is NOT an essential step in the installation process and only provides local access to the documentation.

Uninstalling Openfire

Commands to remove openfire

/etc/rc.d/init.d/openfire stop
yum remove openfire
rm -Rf /opt/openfire
mysqladmin drop openfiredb
config delete openfire
signal-event remoteaccess-update