JSJaC is an XMPP (formerly known as Jabber) client library written in JavaScript to ease implementation of web based XMPP clients. For communication with an XMPP server it needs to support either HTTP Polling or XMPP Over BOSH (formerly known as HTTP Binding) or XMPP Over WebSocket. JSJaC has an object oriented interface which should be quite easy to use. Communication is done by using the HTTPRequest object (also refered to as AJAX technology) or WebSocket. Your browser must support this. JSJaC is fully compatible with all major JavaScript frameworks.
Note: As security restrictions of most modern browsers prevent HTTP Polling from being usable anymore this module is disabled by default now. If you want to compile it in use 'make polling'.
JSJaC is licensed under the terms of the Mozilla Public License version 1.1 or, at your option, under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 or subsequent, or the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 or subsequent.
The complete text of each of these license can be found in the same directory as this file. See
- MPL-1.1.txt - for version 1.1 of the Mozille Public License
- gpl-2.0.txt - for version 2 of the GNU General Public License
- lgpl-2.1.txt - for version 2.1 of the GNU Lesser General Public License
In order to build a single compressed file to be included from within
your app please run make
at the top level directory of this project.
Let's say your JSJaC based web application is located at http://example.com/. Your XMPP server is at jabber-example.com and it's HTTP Binding service is located at http://jabber-example.org:5280/ or https://jabber-example.org:5281/.
- You could use mod_proxy and mod_rewrite to connect to jabber server:
<VirtualHost *>
Servername example.com
DocumentRoot /var/www
AddDefaultCharset UTF-8
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule ^/http-bind/ http://jabber-example.com:5280/http-bind/ [P]
</VirtualHost>
With this you'd end up having access to the Jabber server's service at http://example.com/http-bind/ (the httpbase address).
- You could use cross domain requests directly to jabber server without any proxy server:
var oDbg = new JSJaCConsoleLogger(3);
var connector = new JSJaCHttpBindingConnection({
oDbg: oDbg,
httpbase: 'http://jabber-example.org:5280/http-bind/',
timerval: 500
});
More information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-origin_resource_sharing
JSJaCConnection supports use of JSDebugger which is available separately.
JSJaC also ships with a class JSJaCConsoleLogger
which lets you log to
Firebug's and Safari's console.
For an example on how to use this library within your web application
please have to look at examples/simpleclient.html
or
examples/simpleCrossDomainClient.html
.
The following browsers are known to work with HTTP Binding. Let me know about others!
- Microsoft Internet Explorer 6/7/8/9
- Firefox 2.0.x and newer (and probably most other Gecko based browsers)
- Opera 9 and newer
- Chrome/Safari (and probably most other Webkit based browsers)
The following browsers are known to work with cross domain requests.
- Internet Explorer 8 and newer
- Opera 12 and newer
- Firefox 3.5 and newer
- Google Chrome 3 and newer
The following browsers are known to work with WebSocket.
- Microsoft Internet Explorer 10
- Firefox 16 and newer
- Chrome 16 and newer
- Opera 12.10, but will not work if a proxy is configured
Documentation is provided by JSDoc under the docs/ subdirectory if
you've downloaded JSJaC as a tarball. Otherwise you can generate it on
your own by make doc
.
There's also an online version available at http://sstrigler.github.com/JSJaC/.