This docker image provides you with a configured [Prosody](https://prosody.im/) XMPP server. The image is intended to run on a Raspberry Pi (as it is based on _resin/rpi-raspbian_).
The server was tested using the Android App [Conversations](https://conversations.im/) and the Desktop client [Gajim](https://gajim.org).
While Conversations got everything set-up out-of-the-box, Gajim was used with the following extensions:
* HttpUpload
* Off-The-Record Encryption
* OMEMO (requires _python-axolotl_ to be installed)
* Url Image preview
## Features
* Secure by default
* SSL certificate required
* End-to-end encryption required (using [OMEMO](https://conversations.im/omemo/) or [OTR](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-the-Record_Messaging))
* You need a SSL certificate. I recommend [LetsEncrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/) for that.
* Your Raspberry Pi should have docker set-up and running. You could use the Raspberry image for [Hypriot OS](http://blog.hypriot.com/downloads/) to get started quickly.
There is a helper script that eases installing additional prosody modules: ```docker-prosody-module-install```
It downloads the current [prosody-modules](https://hg.prosody.im/prosody-modules/) repository. The specified modules are copied and its name is added to the ```modules_enabled``` variable within ```conf.d/01-modules.cfg.lua```.
If you need additional configuration just overwrite the respective _cfg.lua_ file or add new ones.
### Debugging
Change to verbose logging by replacing the following config lines within ```prosody.cfg.lua```: