view mod_invites_api/README.md @ 6319:04c3273cb81f

mod_auth_cyrus: Add empty 'profile' table to SASL handler objects This is for compatibility with Prosody's built-in util.sasl objects. A SASL profile table usually includes methods supported by the backend, which can be used by SASL mechanism handlers to perform operations (such as testing the password). It also optionally contains a 'cb' field with channel binding method handlers. The Cyrus backend doesn't support channel binding, and doesn't have the same concept of auth backend methods (it handles all that internally, and Prosody has no insight or control over it). Thus, we create an empty profile which informs Prosody that the SASL handler does not support any of the auth or channel binding methods. Some features will not work, but they didn't work anyway. This just makes it explicit. This fixes a traceback in mod_sasl2_fast, which expected SASL handlers to always contain a 'profile' field.
author Matthew Wild <mwild1@gmail.com>
date Thu, 04 Sep 2025 10:14:46 +0100
parents fe081789f7b5
children
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---
labels:
- 'Stage-Beta'
summary: 'Authenticated HTTP API to create invites'
...

Introduction
============

This module is part of the suite of modules that implement invite-based
account registration for Prosody. The other modules are:

- [mod_invites]
- [mod_invites_adhoc]
- [mod_invites_page]
- [mod_invites_register]
- [mod_invites_register_web]
- [mod_register_apps]

For details and a full overview, start with the [mod_invites] documentation.

Details
=======

mod_invites_api provides an authenticated HTTP API to create invites
using mod_invites.

You can use the command-line to create and manage API keys.

Configuration
=============

There are no specific configuration options for this module.

All the usual [HTTP configuration options](https://prosody.im/doc/http)
can be used to configure this module.

API usage
=========

Step 1: Create an API key, with an optional name to help you remember what
it is for

```
$ prosodyctl mod_invites_api create example.com "My test key"
```

**Tip:** Remember to put quotes around your key name if it contains spaces.

The command will print out a key:

```
HTwALnKL/73UUylA-2ZJbu9x1XMATuIbjWpip8ow1
```

Step 2: Make a HTTP request to Prosody, containing the key

```
$ curl -v https://example.com:5281/invites_api?key=HTwALnKL/73UUylA-2ZJbu9x1XMATuIbjWpip8ow1
```

Prosody will respond with a HTTP status code "201 Created" to indicate
creation of the invite, and per HTTP's usual rules, the URL of the created
invite page will be in the `Location` header:

```
< HTTP/1.1 201 Created
< Access-Control-Max-Age: 7200
< Connection: Keep-Alive
< Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
< Date: Sun, 13 Sep 2020 09:50:19 GMT
< Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Content-Type
< Access-Control-Allow-Methods: OPTIONS, GET
< Content-Length: 0
< Location: https://example.com/invite?c-vhJjyB5Pb4HpAf
```

Sometimes for convenience, you may want to just visit the URL in the
browser. Append `&redirect=true` to the URL, and instead Prosody will
return a `303 See Other` response code, which will tell the browser to
redirect straight to the newly-created invite. This is super handy in a
bookmark :)

If using the API programmatically, it is recommended to put the key in
the `Authorization` header if possible. This is quite simple:

```
Authorization: Bearer HTwALnKL/73UUylA-2ZJbu9x1XMATuIbjWpip8ow1
```

Key management
==============

At any time you can view authorized keys using:

```
prosodyctl mod_invites_api list example.com
```

This will list out the id of each key, and the name if set:

```
HTwALnKL	My test key
```

You can revoke a key by passing this key id to the 'delete` sub-command:

```
prosodyctl mod_invites_api delete example.com HTwALnKL
```