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Practical XMPP

You're reading from   Practical XMPP Unleash the power of XMPP in order to build exciting, realtime, federated applications based on open standards in a secure and highly scalable fashion

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785287985
Length 250 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Steven Watkin Steven Watkin
Author Profile Icon Steven Watkin
Steven Watkin
David Koelle David Koelle
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David Koelle
Lloyd Watkin Lloyd Watkin
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Lloyd Watkin
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. An Introduction to XMPP and Installing Our First Server FREE CHAPTER 2. Diving into the Core XMPP Concepts 3. Building a One-on-One Chat Bot - The "Hello World" of XMPP 4. Talking XMPP in the Browser Using XMPP-FTW 5. Building a Multi-User Chat Application 6. Make Your Static Website Real-Time 7. Creating an XMPP Component 8. Building a Basic XMPP-Based Pong Game 9. Enhancing XMPPong with a Server Component and Custom Messages 10. Real-World Deployment and XMPP Extensions

Connection flow for components


The rather simple connection flow for a component is as follows: once a connection is established between the component and the XMPP server, the component sends the following stream opening:

<stream:stream 
    xmlns='jabber:component:accept' 
    xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams' 
    to='component.mcfly.fam'> 

Note that the to address is the address that the component would like to be called with once it is attached to the server. It is not the address of the XMPP server (which would be mcfly.fam) as you might expect.

Once the server receives this stream opener and knows that it is configured for a component on this address, it responds with another stream, as follows:

<stream:stream xmlns:stream='http://etherx.jabber.org/streams' 
    xmlns='jabber:component:accept' id='88mph' 
    from='component.mcfly.fam'> 

In order to prove their identity, components make use of a simple pre-shared string. This is combined with the stream ID sent...

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