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I was hoping to implement a simple XMPP server in Java.

What I need is a library which can parse and understand xmpp requests from a client. I have looked at Smack (mentioned below) and JSO. Smack appears to be client only so while it might help parsing packets it doesn't know how to respond to clients. Is JSO maintained it looks very old. The only promising avenue is to pull apart Openfire which is an entire commercial (OSS) XMPP server.

I was just hoping for a few lines of code on top of Netty or Mina, so I could get started processing some messages off the wire.


Joe -

Well the answer to what I am trying to do is somewhat long - I'll try to keep it short.

There are two things, that are only loosely related:

1) I wanted to write an XMPP server because I imagine writing a custom protocol for two clients to communicate. Basically I am thinking of a networked iPhone app - but I didn't want to rely on low-level binary protocols because using something like XMPP means the app can "grow up" very quickly from a local wifi based app to an internet based one...

The msgs exchanged should be relatively low latency, so strictly speaking a binary protocol would be best, but I felt that it might be worth exploring if XMPP didn't introduce too much overhead such that I could use it and then reap benefits of it's extensability and flexability later.

2) I work for Terracotta - so I have this crazy bent to cluster everything. As soon as I started thinking about writing some custom server code, I figured I wanted to cluster it. Terracotta makes scaling out Java POJOs trivial, so my thought was to build a super simple XMPP server as a demonstration app for Terracotta. Basically each user would connect to the server over a TCP connection, which would register the user into a hashmap. Each user would have a LinkedBlockingQueue with a listener thread taking message from the queue. Then any connected user that wants to send a message to any other user (e.g. any old chat application) simply issues an XMPP message (as usual) to that user over the connection. The server picks it up, looks up the corresponding user object in a map and places the message onto the queue. Since the queue is clustered, regardless of wether the destination user is connected to the same physical server, or a different physical server, the message is delivered and the thread that is listening picks it up and sends it back down the destination user's tcp connection.

So - not too short of a summary I'm afraid. But that's what I want to do. I suppose I could just write a plugin for Openfire to accomplish #1 but I think it takes care of a lot of plumbing so it's harder to do #2 (especially since I was hoping for a very small amount of code that could fit into a simple 10-20kb Maven project).

4
  • 1
    I looked at Smack too - but somehow got the feeling it was for a client connection only - am I wrong? Oct 7, 2008 at 7:48
  • My limited experience of XMPP suggested that there's no much difference between servers and clients. Hopefully you can do the server socket handling yourself (pretty simple in Java), and then use Smack to handle the XMPP streams on server.
    – skaffman
    Oct 7, 2008 at 7:52
  • It is a client library. Why are you not using OpenFire instead of rolling your own.
    – Robin
    Oct 7, 2008 at 13:29
  • 2
    Because I was looking for more of a development platform than a pre-rolled server. Openfire looks great - don't get me wrong - for running a real system. That's not what I am really after - I am looking to hack. Oct 12, 2008 at 4:23

10 Answers 10

51

http://xmpp.org/xmpp-software/libraries/ has a list of software libraries for XMPP. Here is an outdated snapshot of it:

ActionScript

C

C++

C# / .NET / Mono

Erlang

Flash

Haskell

Java

JavaScript

Lisp

Objective-C

Perl

PHP

Python

Ruby

Tcl

2
  • Google App Engine also provides Python, Java, and Go XMPP libraries: developers.google.com/appengine/docs/java/xmpp
    – Ky -
    Mar 30, 2014 at 6:04
  • Hi @prakash. I've been trying to create an XMPPConnection but the the connection fails. The XMPPServer starts OK, though. Could you please look at my question here and see if you can help? thank you in advance. Jul 7, 2015 at 7:00
9

I went through the same search. I first tried Smack and then realized it's targeted at c2s (client to server) and didn't have what I need. I looked at Tinder but didn't like the licensing model (also when I looked it was much more raw). I finally looked at Whack and realized it was what I needed - but it's missing a lot (that's why Tinder came about I think).

So..my solution? Forked Whack, added some code to abstract out things, and try to make it easier to use: http://github.com/Communitivity/Adirondack

I wrote a Scala library based on that to help create external component based agents, see http://github.com/Communitivity/Shellack and http://github.com/Communitivity/MinimalScalaXMPPComponent

One of my main goals was to make it easy to write a component quickly. An example of such a component is below:

object Main {

/**
* @param args the command line arguments
*/
  def main(args: Array[String]) :Unit = {
      new XMPPComponent(
        new ComponentConfig() {
            def secret() : String = { "secret.goes.here" }
            def server() : String = { "communitivity.com" }
            def subdomain() : String = { "weather" }
            def name() : String = { "US Weather" }
            def description() : String = { "Weather component that also supported SPARQL/XMPP" }
        },
       actor {
        loop {
            react {
                case (pkt:Packet, out : Actor) =>
                    Console.println("Received packet...\n"+pkt.toXML)
                    pkt match {
                        case message:Message =>
                            val reply = new Message()
                            reply.setTo(message.getFrom())
                            reply.setFrom(message.getTo())
                            reply.setType(message.getType())
                            reply.setThread(message.getThread())
                            reply.setBody("Received '"+message.getBody()+"', tyvm")
                            out ! reply
                        case _ =>
                            Console.println("Received something other than Message")
                    }
                 case _ =>
                    Console.println("Received something other than (Packet, actor)")
            }
        }
       }
    ).start
  }
}
3
  • Hi @Bill, I'm very new to XMPP, and we're studying if we can use it to our project, and I saw something you wrote "I first tried Smack and then realized it's targeted at c2s (client to server) and didn't have what I need.", which caught my attention. Do you mean with this you can't push a notification from Server to Client using aSmack on the client? I assume we must use some other library for the server side.
    – mdelolmo
    Jun 6, 2011 at 15:39
  • 1
    Hi @mdelolmo and welcome to XMPP land! Smack is designed for use by a client. If you are writing a server, or an external component, then Smack probably isn't the best choice. Last I checked Whack was their server-side library. Now that said...if you are using Smack on the side and you have anything on server that talks normal XMPP then Smack will understand it on the client side. IgniteRealtime heavily focused on their Flash product, so I don't know how current it is. Most of my work now is in Erlang or Node. Jul 1, 2011 at 22:44
  • Some url movements: github.com/Java-Communitivity/Adirondack github.com/Java-Communitivity/Shellack github.com/Java-Communitivity/MinimalScalaXMPPComponent Some readme for this repos would be nice :)
    – tg44
    Nov 9, 2016 at 11:06
4

Ignite Realtime shares its Tinder API which is a basic building block extracted from OpenFire just for the creation of server-side components and possibly other servers. It implements basic XMPP building blocks and you are free to start from there.

3

Also from Ignite Realtime is the Whack API which is specifically for building XMPP components

Whack is an Open Source XMPP (Jabber) component library for XMPP components. A pure Java library, it can be embedded into your applications to create anything from a full XMPP component to simple XMPP integrations such as sending intercepting and acting on certain messages.

2

Your best bet is to use an existing server, and add your functionality to it. Writing an entire server from scratch, even using a library, is going to be a lot harder than you expect.

Can you tell us more about the problem you are trying to solve? We can then point you to an appropriate server, and help you with the right place to plug in.

1
  • Hi @Joe Hildebrand. I've been trying to create an XMPPConnection but the the connection fails. The XMPPServer starts OK, though. Could you please look at my question here and see if you can help? thank you in advance. Jul 7, 2015 at 7:02
1

check this out:

this is a lower level library. it is in incubation status and it seems nobody is pushing it. but it is a great api and i hope it will progress.

http://java.net/project/jso-jabber-stream-objects

1

I think you already looked at the right solution: Openfire

It's not a commercial solution. It's an XMPP Server on top of Mina and Jetty written in Java released under the Apache License. Comes pretty close to what you asked for. While I know that you asked for a library, why not use some stable developed open source software that can easily be extended like openfire?

2
  • Hi @Flow. I've been trying to create an XMPPConnection but the the connection fails. The XMPPServer starts OK, though. Could you please look at my question here and see if you can help? thank you in advance. Jul 7, 2015 at 7:01
  • That link is 404. Can you check it, please? Jul 7, 2015 at 18:13
0

I found a good xmpp server based on Java : http://www.tigase.org/

0

Have a look at Vorpal. Its a Java EE 6 framework that implements XEP-0114 protocol.

0

I know that the intent is to build a small hack in the OP. However, if there is ever an interest in scaling it, end-to-end security, etc. I would suggest looking at Soapbox from Coversant. They are our partner. We use SMACK on our hard realtime virtual machine environment, JamaicaVM to communicate with Soapbox.

Also, if the intent is to communicate with a server app, and not to reimplement an XMPP server (e.g. Soapbox), the SMACK client can be used for that. It is a client to the XMPP server, but the instance of actual communications can be from client to client through the XMPP server.

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