Wow that was super fast!. Gr8! -Cheers! /Steffen
On Jul 8, 2013, at 9:02 PM, Peter Saint-Andre <[email protected]> wrote: > Done! > > http://xmpp.org/xmpp-software/libraries/ > > On 7/8/13 11:58 AM, Peter Saint-Andre wrote: >> Good stuff. I'll add both to the library page. >> >> Peter >> >> On 7/8/13 11:55 AM, Steffen Larsen wrote: >>> Hi Lloyd!, >>> >>> First of all, super project!. I would say its more a library than an >>> actual client (almost on the same level as strophe.js and stanza.io). >>> Even though I use strophe for web stuff I still see the use cases for >>> this library and others of the same kind. >>> >>> Talking about stanza.io, I don't see that one on the site either?. >>> Shouldn't we promote these libraries, even though they are quite new? >>> >>> /Steffen >>> >>> On Jul 8, 2013, at 7:16 PM, Steven Lloyd Watkin >>> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: >>> >>>> Hi all, >>>> >>>> Now that I'm getting to the point where i'm happy with this project >>>> I'd like to request that XMPP-FTW be added to xmpp.org >>>> <http://xmpp.org/> -however I'm not sure whether client or libraries >>>> is most suitable for it (?). Also included a little introduction >>>> below for those who haven't come across it yet. >>>> >>>> Cheers, Lloyd. >>>> >>>> *What is it?* >>>> >>>> XMPP-FTW exposes XMPP over a websocket* and allows users to interact >>>> using named 'events' and JSON. The server itself sits between the >>>> browser and an XMPP server and translates messages on-the-fly. Events >>>> allow the server to fill in gaps which allows the JSON messages to >>>> only include the parts they need. >>>> >>>> Theoretically it is also able to run in a browser and talk to an XMPP >>>> server over BOSH/websocket but I haven't tried to do this yet. >>>> >>>> *Who is it for?* >>>> >>>> Web-based developers who would like to create XMPP-powered >>>> applications for the browser but are put off by things like XML, BOSH, >>>> and the complexity of building stanzas. >>>> >>>> *Website / Source code* >>>> >>>> The project is hosted at https://xmpp-ftw.jit.su >>>> <https://xmpp-ftw.jit.su/> with a demo system and full manual. The >>>> source code is all Apache 2.0 licenced and hosted on github (and >>>> available though node.js's NPM). >>>> >>>> Its actually broken down into several projects which developer can use >>>> as much or as little of: >>>> >>>> * https://github.com/lloydwatkin/xmpp-ftw ::: xmpp-ftw ::: core xmpp >>>> * https://github.com/lloydwatkin/xmpp-ftw ::: xmpp-ftw-muc >>>> * https://github.com/lloydwatkin/xmpp-ftw ::: xmpp-ftw-pubsub >>>> * https://github.com/lloydwatkin/xmpp-ftw ::: xmpp-ftw-disco >>>> * https://github.com/lloydwatkin/xmpp-ftw ::: xmpp-ftw-demo ::: >>>> packaged demo system >>>> * https://github.com/lloydwatkin/xmpp-ftw-item-parser ::: >>>> xmpp-ftw-item-parser ::: build/parse standard pubsub payloads >>>> * https://github.com/lloydwatkin/xmpp-ftw-superfeedr ::: >>>> xmpp-ftw-superfeedr ::: Superfeedr extension >>>> * https://github.com/lloydwatkin/xmpp-ftw-buddycloud ::: >>>> xmpp-ftw-buddycloud ::: buddycloud extension (in progress) >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> * or any other transport you can make compatible >> _______________________________________________ >> JDev mailing list >> Info: http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/jdev >> Unsubscribe: [email protected] >> _______________________________________________ >> > > > -- > Peter Saint-Andre > https://stpeter.im/ > > > _______________________________________________ > JDev mailing list > Info: http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/jdev > Unsubscribe: [email protected] > _______________________________________________ _______________________________________________ JDev mailing list Info: http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/jdev Unsubscribe: [email protected] _______________________________________________
