/lʊʁç/. In German, an Axolotl is a type of Lurch, which simply means 'amphibian'. This plugin brings Axolotl, by now renamed to double ratchet, to libpurple applications such as Pidgin by implementing the XEP-0384: OMEMO Encryption. For a higher-level overview, see the official OMEMO homepage.
(Plus I thought the word sounds funny.)
This section is now the changelog.
Below you can find the command to install the dependencies for popular distribution families. Make sure that you use at least version 2.7 of mxml, and 2.10.10 of libpurple.
Debian, Ubuntu
sudo apt install git cmake libpurple-dev libmxml-dev libxml2-dev libsqlite3-dev libgcrypt20-dev build-essential
ArchLinux, Parabola
sudo pacman -S base-devel git cmake pidgin libpurple mxml libxml2 sqlite libgcrypt
Fedora
sudo dnf install git cmake libpurple-devel mxml-devel libxml2-devel libsqlite3x-devel libgcrypt-devel
git clone https://github.com/gkdr/lurch/
cd lurch
git submodule update --init --recursive
make install-home
If you just pull a newer version (git pull
), remember to also update the submodules as they might have changed!
The last command compiles the whole thing and copies the plugin into your local libpurple plugin directory.
The next time you start Pidgin, or another libpurple client, you should be able to activate it in the "Plugins" window.
Thanks to EionRobb, Windows users can use the dlls he compiled and provides here: https://eion.robbmob.com/lurch/
Program Files (x86)\Pidgin\plugins
directory.Program Files (x86)\Pidgin
directory.These instructions can also be found at the provided link.
Homebrew should have all dependencies:
brew install cmake pidgin glib libxml2 libmxml sqlite libgcrypt
This should work on newer versions of MacOS, but if you run into problems check out #8 for some hints. Complete instructions on how to get this running with Pidgin appreciated!
Alternatively, if you use Adium, you should definitely check out shtrom's Lurch4Adium!
The current version of libpurple's XMPP protocol plugin does not support many XEPs by itself. For more features and compatibility with other clients such as Conversations you can install the pulgins below.
If you have multiple devices and want messages sent and received by one device show up on all others, XEP-0280: Message Carbons is what you are looking for.
You can find my plugin for it here: https://github.com/gkdr/carbons
In order to support the checkmarks for delivered messages, you could install this plugin implementing XEP-0184: Message Delivery Receipts:
https://app.assembla.com/spaces/pidgin-xmpp-receipts/git/source
The first thing you can do to check if this plugin works is enter the /lurch help
command in any conversation window. You will receive a list of the other commands you can use. I know this is a bit clunky, but using the command interface for interactions makes the plugin usable in clients that do not have a GUI.
After you have made sure it was installed correctly, you do not have to activate it specifically for each conversation partner you want to use it with, unlike with e.g. OTR. If it detects that the other side is using OMEMO (by the existence of an OMEMO devicelist), the conversation will be encrypted automatically. If you do not want this, you can blacklist the user by typing /lurch blacklist add
in the conversation window.
This plugin will set the window title to notify the user if encryption is enabled or not. If it is, it will generally not send plaintext messages. If a plaintext message is received in a chat that is supposed to be encrypted, the user will be warned.
Group chats (via XEP-0045: Multi-User Chat aka MUCs) are not part of the OMEMO specification, but can work under specific circumstances as outlined on the Conversations README. These are:
/config
.Once you have confirmed these conditions are met, every member has to activate OMEMO him- or herself. Using this plugin it works by typing /lurch enable
. Warning messages are displayed if it does not work for every user in the conference, hopefully helping to fix the issue.
It is recommended you confirm the fingerprints look the same on each device, including among your own. To do this, you can e.g. display all fingerprints participating in a conversation using /lurch show fp conv
.
In order to uninstall this plugin, you should call the /lurch uninstall
command.
It will remove this client from the OMEMO device list, notifying other OMEMO clients that they do not need to encrypt messages for it any longer.
Afterwards, you can just deactivate the plugin in the Tools > Plugins window.
In order to completely remove all data related to this plugin, e.g. for a fresh installation, you will need to delete the following files from your .purple directory:
your@xmpp.account_omemo_db.sqlite
to delete the device list cache your@xmpp.account_axc_db.sqlite
to delete your keypair and all sessions with other deviceslurch.[so|dll]
found in the plugins directoryIf something does not work as expected, don't hesitate to open an issue.
You can also reach me on the Pidgin IRC channel (#pidgin on freenode) as riba
, or send me an email.
It will usually be helpful (i.e. I will probably ask for it anyway) if you provide me with some information from the debug log, which you can find at Help > Debug Window in Pidgin.
There, you will see a scary error from the XML parser every time you receive a message, which you can safely ignore. It is due to the nonstandard namespace used by OMEMO and looks something like this: jabber: XML parser error for JabberStream 0x5631ed678670: Domain 3, code 100, level 1: xmlns: URI eu.siacs.conversations.axolotl is not absolute
.
In addition to just reading logs, you can get a bit more active, as again I will probably ask for this anyway. Pidgin comes with an XMPP console, but you have to activate the plugin first (Tools > Plugins). Afterwards you can find it at Tools > XMPP Console and send queries to the server.
If you are having trouble sending or receiving messages, you should look up if you can find the device in the device list. You can do so by pasting the following into the XMPP console, replacing the to
attribute with the device's owner's JID:
<iq type='get'
to='b@localhost'
id='whatever123'>
<pubsub xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub'>
<items node='eu.siacs.conversations.axolotl.devicelist'/>
</pubsub>
</iq>
Sometimes, a device might be on the list, but it did not publish a bundle, which is necessary to establish a session. In this case, you can query this bundle by pasting the following, replacing the to
attribute as well as the DEVICE_ID
suffix of the bundles
node:
<iq type='get'
to='b@localhost'
id='whatever456'>
<pubsub xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/pubsub'>
<items node='eu.siacs.conversations.axolotl.bundles:DEVICE_ID' max_items='1'/>
</pubsub>
</iq>
Finally, in case it is more serious and Pidgin crashes, I will have to ask you for a backtrace. You can obtain it in the following way:
gdb pidgin
run
bt
(or backtrace
)Yes, it was (briefly) tested with:
See https://omemo.top/ for additional clients.
It should, but I only tried it briefly.
OMEMO is not 'whatever Conversations can do', but a very specific XEP.
For instance, if you don't install the additional plugin mentioned above, this is probably not the right thing to use if you have multiple clients running at the same time, as there is no message carbons support in libpurple as of now.
At the moment, there is no XEP-0313: Message Archive Management aka MAM support in libpurple, so there are no 'offline messages'.
Finally, I can't stress this enough: This plugin is highly experimental, so you should not trust your life on it.