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authorMaxim Cournoyer <maxim.cournoyer@gmail.com>2021-08-02 15:48:59 -0400
committerMaxim Cournoyer <maxim.cournoyer@gmail.com>2021-08-02 15:48:59 -0400
commit4673f817938d9d2b1b40a072ab2e0c44a32ccc97 (patch)
treed3f12240903c4b2631849b2eff660ba0aa55dfec /doc/guix.texi
parent69dcc24c9f0cdfea674eb690e7755d26a25ced2b (diff)
downloadguix-4673f817938d9d2b1b40a072ab2e0c44a32ccc97.tar.gz
Revert "services: Add a service for Jami."
This reverts commit 69dcc24c9f0cdfea674eb690e7755d26a25ced2b.  It broke 'guix
pull'.
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@@ -22526,234 +22526,6 @@ and Error.
 @node Telephony Services
 @subsection Telephony Services
 
-@cindex telephony, services
-The @code{(gnu services telephony)} module contains Guix service
-definitions for telephony services.  Currently it provides the following
-services:
-
-@subsubheading Jami
-
-@cindex jami, service
-
-This section describes how to configure a Jami server that can be used
-to host video (or audio) conferences, among other uses.  The following
-example demonstrates how to specify Jami account archives (backups) to
-be provisioned automatically:
-
-@lisp
-(service jami-service-type
-         (jami-configuration
-          (accounts
-           (list (jami-account
-                  (archive "/etc/jami/unencrypted-account-1.gz"))
-                 (jami-account
-                  (archive "/etc/jami/unencrypted-account-2.gz"))))))
-@end lisp
-
-When the accounts field is specified, the Jami account files of the
-service found under @file{/var/lib/jami} are recreated every time the
-service starts.
-
-Jami accounts and their corresponding backup archives can be generated
-using either the @code{jami-qt} or @code{jami-gnome} Jami clients.  The
-accounts should not be password-protected, but it is wise to ensure
-their files are only readable by @samp{root}.
-
-The next example shows how to declare that only some contacts should be
-allowed to communicate with a given account:
-
-@lisp
-(service jami-service-type
-         (jami-configuration
-          (accounts
-           (list (jami-account
-                  (archive "/etc/jami/unencrypted-account-1.gz")
-                  (peer-discovery? #t)
-                  (rendezvous-point? #t)
-                  (allowed-contacts
-                   '("1dbcb0f5f37324228235564b79f2b9737e9a008f"
-                     "2dbcb0f5f37324228235564b79f2b9737e9a008f")))))))
-@end lisp
-
-In this mode, only the declared @code{allowed-contacts} can initiate
-communication with the Jami account.  This can be used, for example,
-with rendezvous point accounts to create a private video conferencing
-space.
-
-To put the system administrator in full control of the conferences
-hosted on their system, the Jami service supports the following actions:
-
-@example sh
-# herd doc jami list-actions jami
-(list-accounts
- list-account-details
- list-banned-contacts
- list-contacts
- list-moderators
- add-moderator
- ban-contact
- enable-account
- disable-account)
-@end example
-
-The above actions aim to provide the most valuable actions for
-moderation purposes, not to cover the whole Jami API.  Users wanting to
-interact with the Jami daemon from Guile may be interested in
-experimenting with the @code{(gnu build jami-service)} module, which
-powers the above Shepherd actions.
-
-@c TODO: This should be auto-generated from the doc already defined on
-@c the shepherd-actions themselves in (gnu services telephony).
-The @code{add-moderator} and @code{ban-contact} actions accept a contact
-@emph{fingerprint} (40 characters long hash) as first argument and an
-account fingerprint or username as second argument:
-
-@example sh
-# herd add-moderator jami 1dbcb0f5f37324228235564b79f2b9737e9a008f \
-  f3345f2775ddfe07a4b0d95daea111d15fbc1199
-
-# herd list-moderators jami
-Moderators for account f3345f2775ddfe07a4b0d95daea111d15fbc1199:
-  - 1dbcb0f5f37324228235564b79f2b9737e9a008f
-
-@end example
-
-In the case of @code{ban-contact}, the second username argument is
-optional; when omitted, the account is banned from all Jami accounts:
-
-@example sh
-# herd ban-contact jami 1dbcb0f5f37324228235564b79f2b9737e9a008f
-
-# herd list-banned-contacts jami
-Banned contacts for account f3345f2775ddfe07a4b0d95daea111d15fbc1199:
-  - 1dbcb0f5f37324228235564b79f2b9737e9a008f
-
-@end example
-
-Banned contacts are also stripped from their moderation privileges.
-
-The @code{disable-account} action allows to completely disconnect an
-account from the network, making it unreachable, while
-@code{enable-account} does the inverse.  They accept a single account
-username or fingerprint as first argument:
-
-@example sh
-# herd disable-account jami f3345f2775ddfe07a4b0d95daea111d15fbc1199
-
-# herd list-accounts jami
-The following Jami accounts are available:
-  - f3345f2775ddfe07a4b0d95daea111d15fbc1199 (dummy) [disabled]
-
-@end example
-
-The @code{list-account-details} action prints the detailed parameters of
-each accounts in the Recutils format, which means the @command{recsel}
-command can be used to select accounts of interest (@pxref{Selection
-Expressions,,,recutils, GNU recutils manual}).  Note that period
-characters (@samp{.}) found in the account parameter keys are mapped to
-underscores (@samp{_}) in the output, to meet the requirements of the
-Recutils format.  The following example shows how to print the account
-fingerprints for all accounts operating in the rendezvous point mode:
-
-@example sh
-# herd list-account-details jami | \
-  recsel -p Account.username -e 'Account.rendezVous ~ "true"'
-Account_username: f3345f2775ddfe07a4b0d95daea111d15fbc1199
-@end example
-
-The remaining actions should be self-explanatory.
-
-The complete set of available configuration options is detailed below.
-
-@c TODO: Ideally, the following fragments would be auto-generated at
-@c build time, so that they needn't be manually duplicated.
-@c Auto-generated via (configuration->documentation 'jami-configuration)
-@deftp {Data Type} jami-configuration
-Available @code{jami-configuration} fields are:
-
-@table @asis
-@item @code{jamid} (default: @code{libring}) (type: package)
-The Jami daemon package to use.
-
-@item @code{dbus} (default: @code{dbus}) (type: package)
-The D-Bus package to use to start the required D-Bus session.
-
-@item @code{nss-certs} (default: @code{nss-certs}) (type: package)
-The nss-certs package to use to provide TLS certificates.
-
-@item @code{enable-logging?} (default: @code{#t}) (type: boolean)
-Whether to enable logging to syslog.
-
-@item @code{debug?} (default: @code{#f}) (type: boolean)
-Whether to enable debug level messages.
-
-@item @code{auto-answer?} (default: @code{#f}) (type: boolean)
-Whether to force automatic answer to incoming calls.
-
-@item @code{accounts} (default: @code{disabled}) (type: maybe-jami-account-list)
-A list of Jami accounts to be (re-)provisioned every time the Jami
-daemon service starts.  When providing this field, the account
-directories under @file{/var/lib/jami/} are recreated every time the
-service starts, ensuring a consistent state.
-
-@end table
-
-@end deftp
-
-@c Auto-generated via (configuration->documentation 'jami-account)
-@deftp {Data Type} jami-account
-Available @code{jami-account} fields are:
-
-@table @asis
-@item @code{archive} (type: string-or-computed-file)
-The account archive (backup) file name of the account.  This is used to
-provision the account when the service starts.  The account archive
-should @emph{not} be encrypted.  It is highly recommended to make it
-readable only to the @samp{root} user (i.e., not in the store), to guard
-against leaking the secret key material of the Jami account it contains.
-
-@item @code{allowed-contacts} (default: @code{disabled}) (type: maybe-account-fingerprint-list)
-The list of allowed contacts for the account, entered as their 40
-characters long fingerprint.  Messages or calls from accounts not in
-that list will be rejected.  When unspecified, the configuration of the
-account archive is used as-is with respect to contacts and public
-inbound calls/messaging allowance, which typically defaults to allow any
-contact to communicate with the account.
-
-@item @code{moderators} (default: @code{disabled}) (type: maybe-account-fingerprint-list)
-The list of contacts that should have moderation privileges (to ban,
-mute, etc.  other users) in rendezvous conferences, entered as their 40
-characters long fingerprint.  When unspecified, the configuration of the
-account archive is used as-is with respect to moderation, which
-typically defaults to allow anyone to moderate.
-
-@item @code{rendezvous-point?} (default: @code{disabled}) (type: maybe-boolean)
-Whether the account should operate in the rendezvous mode.  In this
-mode, all the incoming audio/video calls are mixed into a conference.
-When left unspecified, the value from the account archive prevails.
-
-@item @code{peer-discovery?} (default: @code{disabled}) (type: maybe-boolean)
-Whether peer discovery should be enabled.  Peer discovery is used to
-discover other OpenDHT nodes on the local network, which can be useful
-to maintain communication between devices on such network even when the
-connection to the the Internet has been lost.  When left unspecified,
-the value from the account archive prevails.
-
-@item @code{bootstrap-hostnames} (default: @code{disabled}) (type: maybe-string-list)
-A list of hostnames or IPs pointing to OpenDHT nodes, that should be
-used to initially join the OpenDHT network.  When left unspecified, the
-value from the account archive prevails.
-
-@item @code{name-server-uri} (default: @code{disabled}) (type: maybe-string)
-The URI of the name server to use, that can be used to retrieve the
-account fingerprint for a registered username.
-
-@end table
-
-@end deftp
-
-@subsubheading Murmur (VoIP server)
-
 @cindex Murmur (VoIP server)
 @cindex VoIP server
 This section describes how to set up and run a Murmur server.  Murmur is