Personally I have an affinity with ejabberd and have used it very recently with mod_jinglenodes to hack around with some jingle clients.
I suppose you could also use mongoose-im (ejabberd fork). I have used prosody in the past, but I prefer writing extensions in Erlang rather than lua and I've got more experience using ejabberd. Cheers Kirk Bateman On 13 Sep 2014 01:05, "Chris Fortmüller" <chrits...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi All, > > I am working on a little app that will have XMPP ability, and need a > jabber server for this. > > I hope that user numbers will at least go into the ten thousands, maybe > more. > > I am planning on hosting the server on the Amazon Web Services cloud. > > Does anyone favour any specific server implementations? I am currently > looking at openfire and ejabberd, and would like to know what others think > is a good choice and why. Of course, it would be nice to have a server that > is easily clusterable/scalable, so as to handle a large amount of traffic > as smoothly as posible > > I would also like for the server to support as many XEPs as possible. > > What would also be cool is if there is some support for Jingle, but I am > not sure if any servers do this, since I am not sure if Jingle is part of > XMPP/XEPs yet, and also, since I havent looked at the technical details of > Jingle yet, I am not sure if the server needs to implement it at all, since > it seems to be p2p. > > Would be happy to receive any and all input/suggestions/ideas! > > Thanks and best regards, > > Chris Fortmueller > > _______________________________________________ > JDev mailing list > Info: http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/jdev > Unsubscribe: jdev-unsubscr...@jabber.org > _______________________________________________ > >
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