![]() ![]() Ha.just when you thought it was so, so, easy! It’s actually pretty easy but it’s not well documented. Then navigate to your domain prefixed by https and it should work. You*may* need to restart jitsi to do that try this: /etc/init.d/jitsi-videobridge start Follow the instructions and it ‘just works’. The script should just ask you for a valid email address. So to get it running do this (as root or using sudo): cd /usr/share/jitsi-meet/scripts/ ![]() On Ubuntu you can find it in /usr/share/jitsi-meet/scripts/ There is a nice script for it which is already present but you need to find it. LetsencryptĪlso easy, except it doesn’t say anywhere how to do it. Thanks to Juan Gutierrez for working out the above changes to the files. The copy the first one to this file /etc/jitsi/videobridge/config where and uncomment the secret, eg: # sets the shared secret used to authenticate to the XMPP serverĭo the same for the second secret by adding it to this file /etc/jitsi/jicofo/config, eg: # sets the secret used to authenticate as an XMPP component Open the file located at /etc/prosody/conf.d/.cfg.lua, it should look something like this: Component "jitsi-videobridge."Ĭhange both secrets to a random string of the same length. ![]() ) that you add the above subdomains on top of that eg not Make sure that if your Jitsi-meet is already using a subdomain (eg. Not mentioned in the rest of the docs is this….you need to set up several sub-domains, namely: Use this: echo 'deb unstable/ ' > /etc/apt//jitsi-unstable.list We couldn’t get them to work with conferences – we could only get 1 person in a meeting which…er… isn’t a meeting! So, instead use the unstable sources, which means don’t use this: echo 'deb stable/ ' > /etc/apt//jitsi-stable.list Working out letsencrypt is soso documented but also easy, working out how to get desktop sharing working is barely documented. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |