On 3/15/11 7:38 AM, Luke Howard wrote:
> On 16/03/2011, at 12:36 AM, Peter Saint-Andre wrote:
>
>> On 3/14/11 11:02 PM, Luke Howard wrote:
>>> I managed to get GSS-EAP working with Jabber, using Adium and
>>> jabberd2. Although I did compile from source to aid debugging, in
>>> theory all that should be necessary is to set SASL_PATH to the
>>> directory containing libgs2.so.
>>>
>>> (Of course, it assumes a well-behaved application that supports
>>> arbitrary SASL mechanisms, multiple round trips, etc. Adium is one of
>>> these; it appears iChat, unfortunately, is not.)
>>
>> Excellent news! I've forwarded this message to the primary discussion
>> list for Jabber/XMPP developers. A few questions:
>>
>> 1. Have you tested with any other clients? Likely prospects include Psi,
>> Gajim, Swift, and Pidgin <http://xmpp.org/xmpp-software/clients/>
>>
>> 2. Have you tested with any other servers? Likely prospects include
>> Prosody, ejabberd, and Openfire <http://xmpp.org/xmpp-software/servers/>
>
> Not yet. Although I presume anything that uses libpurple should just work.
That would be Pidgin and Adium. Most Jabber clients have are built using
one of the libraries at http://xmpp.org/xmpp-software/libraries/ or have
their own monolithic code stack. But I'll keep poking folks in the XMPP
community about getting involved here. :)
> I took a quick look at ejabberd but I don't think esasl supports GS2.
Right. IMHO the Prosody server is the most actively developed of the
open-source servers out there (or at least it has the most public
developer community) so I'll ping them.
Peter
--
Peter Saint-Andre
https://stpeter.im/
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