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Jitsi for Windows – Secure Instant Messaging and VoIP

Posted: February 11, 2017 at 7:55 am

Posted10 August 2016

Jitsi is cross-platform, free and open-source software client that supports Instant Messaging (IM), voice and video chat over the internet. It supports many of the most popular and widely used IM and telephony protocols, including Jabber/XMPP (used by Facebook and Google Talk), AIM, ICQ, MSN, Yahoo! Messenger and the SIP Voice-over-IP (VoIP) protocol. It supports additional independent encryption for IM through the OTR (Off-the-Record) protocol and for voice and video sessions through ZRTP and SRTP.

Jitsi is cross-platform, free and open-source software client for Instant Messaging (IM), Voice over IP (VoIP) and video chat. It is compatible with many popular IM and telephony protocols, including Jabber/XMPP, Facebook Messenger, AIM, ICQ, MSN, Yahoo! Messenger and SIP. It provides end-to-end encryption for text chats through the Off-the-Record (OTR) protocol. It also supports end-to-end encrypted voice chat using ZRTP over SIP, though it tends to be somewhat unstable when used in this way.

Important: If you and those with whom you communicate use OTR encryption for text chats and ZRTP encryption for voice calls, Jitsi will protect the content of your conversations from service providers like Google and Facebook. However, these providers can still monitor certain metadata about the conversations you have through Jitsi. Examples include:

They can share this information with third parties, including other companies and governments. For conversations where such metadata could be sensitive, you and those with whom you communicate should consider using a trusted, independent service provider for your XMPP/Jabber chats and SIP calls.

Jitsi allows you to communicate securely through your existing accounts by using end-to-end encryption. This not only makes the content of your communication inaccessible to various third parties, such as government or corporate surveillance platforms, but it also protects your conversations from those who operate the chat services themselves (such as Facebook, if you are using Facebook Messenger, or Google, if you are using Google Talk).

Note: Jitsi was written in the Java programming language. As such, Java must be installed on your computer in order for it to work. Though Java itself does not represent a significant security risk, Java browser extensions are often found to contain vulnerabilities that allow malicious websites to install malware or assume control of your computer. If your browser has a Java plugin installed, we strongly recommend that you disable it.

Jitsi is available for MS Windows, GNU Linux and Mac OS. It can be used to communicate with other XMPP or SIP clients that support end-to-end encryption through OTR (for text chat) or ZRTP (for voice calls). Examples are recommended below:

To install Jitsi, follow the steps below:

Step 1. Browse to the Jitsi download page: https://jitsi.org/Main/Download

Figure 1: The Jitsi download page

Step 2. Scroll down and click [Microsoft Windows Installers] to download Jitsi.

Figure 2: Downloading the Jitsi package

Step 3. Right-click on the downloaded Jitsi file and select [Open], as illustrated below:

Figure 3: Opening the downloaded Jitsi file

Step 4. Click [Next] to start installing Jitsi on your computer.

Figure 4: Jitsi Setup Wizard

Step 5. Read Jitsi's License Agreement and check [I accept the terms in the License Agreement].

Figure 5: Jitsi End-User License Agreement

Step 6. Click [Next] to proceed with the installation process.

Step 7. Click [Next] to install Jitsi to the default folder. Alternatively, click [Change...] to select the folder you would like to install Jitsi to.

Figure 6: Jitsi installation destination folder

Step 8. Select shortcuts, settings and associated protocols through the following window and click [Next]. The default settings here are fine.

Figure 7: Jitsi Setup Wizard Addtional Tasks

Step 9. Click [Install] to install Jitsi on your computer.

Figure 8: Installation of Jitsi

Wait while Jitsi gets installed.

Figure 9: Installing Jitsi

Step 10. Click [Finish] to complete the installation process.

Figure 10: Completing the installation process of Jitsi

Jitsi supports many different protocols and services for chat. The first time you launch it, you will see the window shown in Figure 1, which allows you to add the accounts you want to access through Jitsi.

Figure 1: Jitsi's initial account configuration screen

Note: Both Google Talk and Facebook may require that you change certain account settings before you can access their chat services through Jitsi. To learn how, see the following two sections:

You can use this screen to enter a username and password for each of the services displayed, thereby adding up to four accounts in one easy step. But you must already have accounts on these services to do so. The sections below describe how to set up accounts for various IM and VoIP service providers.

As shown in Figure 1 of the previous section, the first time you launch Jitsi, you will see an account configuration screen that allows you to add various chat services to the application. After you have added at least one account, this screen will no longer appear. In order to add additional accounts, follow the steps below.

Step 1. Click [File] in Jitsi's menu bar and select [Add new account...] to choose the service or protocol you want to use.

Figure 1: Adding a new account

Step 2. Select [Google Talk] from the Network list.

Figure 2: Selecting Google Talk

Step 3. Type your Google username and passphrase.

Figure 3: Entering a Google username and password

Step 4. (Optional) Uncheck the Remember password box

Important: If you want Jitsi to remember your passphrases for you, you should first enable its Master Password feature.

Step 5. Click [Add].

You can now use Jitsi to communicate through the Google Talk account you have added.

Note: If you are using 2-step verification to protect access to your Gmail account, you might see an error like the one shown in Figure 4 when Jitsi tries to access your account. (It will display the same error if you get your passphrase wrong.) To log in using Jitsi, you will need to generate an "application-specific password". To learn how, see Google's instructions.

Figure 4: Google Talk authentication failed (possibly as a result of "2-step verification" settings)

There are two settings that you might need to change, on the Facebook website, for Jitsi to use Facebook as a chat service.

Facebook Username

Before Jitsi can connect to Facebook, you must assign a username to your Facebook account. Unlike most Web services, Facebook does not require you to select a username when you create your account, but it does allow you to create one if you wish. You can confirm your username by signing into your Facebook account. Your username is what appears in the location bar of your browser after https://www.facebook.com/ when you view your Timeline or Page. So, if your username is elena.s.katerina, you should see https://www.facebook.com/elena.s.katerina in your browser's location bar when viewing your Timeline. Your username is also part of your Facebook email address (elena.s.katerina@facebook.com, for example).

If you do not have a Facebook username, you can choose one by signing into your account and selecting Settings > General or by browsing to https://www.facebook.com/username. Facebook might require that you verify your account before allowing you to select a username. This might require giving Facebook a mobile phone number at which you can receive a text message. For more details see Facebooks explanation of usernames.

App Settings

You must turn on Facebooks application platform in order to give Jitsi access to your account. To do this, sign in, select Settings > Apps and confirm that the Apps, Websites and Plugins setting is Enabled.

Note: Turning on Facebooks application platform opens up much of your Facebook data to third-party application developers. This data is available not only to the Facebook applications that you use, but also to the Facebook applications used by your friends. After turning on Facebooks Apps, Websites and Plugins, be sure to check the settings under Apps others use. This setting allows you to hide some personal information from applications used by your friends. Unfortunately, Facebook does not offer settings to hide all personal information. As long as the application platform is Enabled, certain categories of data (including your friend list, your gender, and any information you have made public) are accessible to apps used by others. If this is unacceptable, you should disable Apps, Websites and Plugins and avoid using Jitsi with Facebook Messenger.

Once you have chosen a Facebook username and enabled the application platform, you can add your Facebook account to Jitsi.

As shown in Figure 1 of the Add accounts to Jitsi section, the first time you launch Jitsi, you will see an account configuration screen that allows you to add various chat services to the application. After you have added at least one account, this screen will no longer appear. In order to add additional accounts, follow the steps below.

Step 1. Click [File] in Jitsi's menu bar and select [Add new account...] to choose the service or protocol you want to use.

Figure 1: Adding a new account

Step 2. Select [Facebook] from the Network list.

Figure 2: Selecting Facebook

Step 3. Type your Facebook username and password.

Figure 3: Entering a username and password into the Add New Account screen

Step 4. (Optional) Uncheck the Remember password box.

Important: If you want Jitsi to remember your passphrases for you, you should first enable its Master Password feature.

Step 5. Click [Add].

You can now use Jitsi to communicate through the Facebook account you have added.

XMPP and Jabber are different names for the same instant messaging protocol. It is an open standard, and there are many providers who offer free Jabber/XMPP accounts that you can use with Jitsi. The IM Observatory allows you to evaluate some security properties of public Jabber/XMPP services.

If you have experience running online services, you can also install a Jabber/XMPP server (such as ejabberd or Prosody IM) on your own server and provide accounts to members of a particular community or organization.

Below, we recommend a few services that have a great deal of experience protecting their users' privacy.

Note: Even if you trust your service provider, It is still important that you use OTR encryption to keep your instant messages confidential. So make sure that you and those with whom you communicate know how to use it properly. This is covered in the section on Using Jitsi for secure instant messaging

The Chaos Computer Club (CCC) hosts a free Jabber service. Their servers are located in Germany. From within Jitsi, you can simultaneously create an account on jabber.ccc.de and add it to Jitsi. This works for many traditional Jabber/XMPP services.

Step 1. Click [File] in Jitsi's menu bar and select [Add new account...] to choose the service or protocol you want to use.

Figure 1: Add new accounts

Step 2. Select [XMPP] from the Network list.

Figure 2: Selecting XMPP

The steps below assume that you do not yet have a jabber.ccc.de account. (If you do, just enter your username and passphrase and click [Add].)

Step 3. Select [Create a new XMPP account].

Figure 3: Creating a new jabber.ccc.de account, within Jitsi, using the Add New Account screen

Step 4. Type [jabber.ccc.de] in the Server box.

Step 5. Choose a username and type it into the XMPP username box.

Step 6. Choose a passphrase and type it into the Password and Confirm Password boxes.

Step 7. Click [Add] to request the username you have chosen.

If the username you requested is unavailable, the registration process will fail, and Jitsi will announce that it: failed to create your account due to the following error: Could not confirm data. You can try again by repeating the process with a different username.

If you do not log in to your jabber.ccc.de account for 12 months, your account will be removed, and your username will be made available for registration by others.

Riseup is a collective dedicated to providing secure services for individuals and organizations committed to political and social justice. Their servers are located in the United States.

If you already have a Riseup.net email account, you can use the same account for their Jabber/XMPP service. In order to create an account, you will need two invitation codes from two different Riseup.net members. You can then visit https://user.riseup.net and create an account. Once your account is active, you can add it to Jitsi by following the steps below.

As shown in Figure 1 of the Add accounts to Jitsi section, the first time you launch Jitsi, you will see an account configuration screen that allows you to add various chat services to the application. After you have added at least one account, this screen will no longer appear. In order to add additional accounts, follow the steps below.

Step 1. Click [File] in Jitsi's menu bar and select [Add new account...] to choose the service or protocol you want to use.

Figure 1: Adding new accounts

Step 2. Select [XMPP] from the Network list.

Figure 2: Selecting XMPP

Step 3. Type the username for your Jabber/XMPP account on this service.

Figure 3: Entering a username and password into the Add New Account screen

Your username should include the **@** symbol and the hostname of the service. For example

Step 4. Type the passphrase for your Jabber/XMPP account on this service.

Step 5. (Optional) Uncheck the Remember password box.

Important: If you want Jitsi to remember your passphrases for you, you should first enable its Master Password feature.

Step 6. Click [Add].

You can now use Jitsi to communicate through this Jabber/XMPP account.

In this section, we recommend only a single Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) provider, ostel.co. Their servers are located in United States. There are many free SIP services online, but ostel.co appears to offer the most reliable support for end-to-end encryption through ZRTP.

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Jitsi for Mac – Download – jitsi.en.softonic.com

Posted: February 6, 2017 at 2:54 pm

Jitsi is a free messenger client for Mac, which supports most major protocols and even supports video and audio conversations.

Simply choose the IM protocol that you'd like to connect to including SIP, Google Talk, XMPP/Jabber, MSN or Windows Live Messenger, AIM, Bonjour, ICQ, Yahoo Messenger and Facebook chat. In the main window, you'll find all your personal contacts.

In the Jitsi chat window, you can exchange IM messages or initiate video or audio chats including group chats. There are a limited number of emoticons and the Jitsi keeps a history of your chats. Although the interface isn't quite as intuitive as Adium. However, the fact that you can initiate audio and video chats gives it a serious advantage.

Note that this download link takes you to the nightly build page because Jitsi is being updated so regularly, that you can choose the latest version more easily.

Jitsi might not be quite as slick as other IM clients but wide support of IM protocols plus audio and video chatting makes it a very interesting option.

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Jitsi softphone for Windows OnSIP Support

Posted: November 23, 2016 at 9:57 pm

Updated 10/26/2015 Jitsi version 2.8.5426 for Windows. Tested on Windows 7 64bit with SP1. Step 1: Gather information.

Each user has a set of credentials which will be needed to configure each phone. For each phone that you are configuring, obtain the following:

You can find this information in the user detail pages under the Users tab in the Phone Configuration section.

These images are based on using a Windows 7 64bit computer.

A. When you first open Jitsi after installation it will open setup wizard. DO NOT enter any data, click on Cancel to continue.

B. Click on Tools then Options

C.Click on Add

D. Choose SIP for Network then click on Advanced, DO NOT enter any user info

E. Enter User Name and SIP Password in Account page

F. In Connection page, enter the following information

G. On Encoding page, move up the following codec and uncheck all the other codec

H. Click Next, then click on Sign In. Jitsi should now beregistered and ready for use.

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Trying to install jitsi meet with apache2 – Stack Overflow

Posted: October 29, 2016 at 11:45 am

I know there are already post on this subject, but they don't produce good results and I would like to share, here, my thinking on this subject. Feel free to moderate my post if you think it's a bad idea.

Server: Ubuntu 16.04.1, Apache2.4.18

DNS conf:

Like I said I try to run Jitsi meet on apache2. By following the steps described in Quick install (https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet/blob/master/doc/quick-install.md)

If I install Jitsi meet on my server just after installing Ubuntu so without Apache or Nginx. Jitsi works great. If I install Jitsi meet on my server after installing Nginx. Jitsi works great.

With the same method of installation, I try to install Jitsi meet after installing Apache2, so I notice that Jitsi meet does not configure itself apache2, so I tried this first configuration:

When I load the page meet.mydomain.xx I get the following error:

"It works! Now your customer BOSH points to this URL to connect to Prosody.

For more information see Prosody. Setting up BOSH "

But when I look at the /etc/prosody/conf.avail/meet.mydomain.xx.cfg.lua file, I notice that bosh is already enabled and the rest of the configuration is ok with what is explain here https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet/blob/master/doc/manual-install.md The log contains no errors. If you have an idea to fix this problem I'm interested.

Second configuration that I tested:

With this setup the result seems better, I can see the home page of Jitsi meet but without the text, without the logo and when I click on the go button, nothing happend. The log contains no errors.

So here I don't no really what to do. If someone have some advices or ideas, thank you to share it !

Bye, thank you for reading

Gspohu

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Jitsi – Wikipedia

Posted: October 27, 2016 at 11:58 am

Jitsi Original author(s) Emil Ivov Developer(s) Jitsi Team and Contributors Initial release 2003(2003) Stable release 2.8 (build.5426) (March19, 2015; 18 months ago(2015-03-19)) [] Preview release 2.9 (nightly) [] Development status Active Written in Java Operating system Linux, Mac OS X, Windows (all Java supported) Size 52.4 MB Windows (bundles its own private JRE)[1] 78.8MB Mac OS X (includes private JRE)[2] 22MB Linux 65MB source code[3] Available in Asturian, English, French, German, Bulgarian, Japanese, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, Greek and 25 more Type Voice over Internet Protocol / instant messaging / videoconferencing License Apache 2.0[4] Website jitsi.org

Jitsi (formerly SIP Communicator) is a free and open source multiplatform[5]voice (VoIP), videoconferencing and instant messaging application for Windows, Linux, Mac OS X and Android. It supports several popular instant-messaging and telephony protocols, including open recognised encryption protocols for chat (OTR) and voice/video/streaming and voice/video conferencing (SIP/RTP/SRTP/ZRTP), as well as built-in IPv6, NAT traversal and DNSSEC. Jitsi and its source code are released under the terms of the Apache Software Licence.[6]

Work on Jitsi (then SIP Communicator) started in 2003 in the context of a student project by Emil Ivov at the University of Strasbourg.[7] It was originally released as an example video phone in the JAIN-SIP stack and later spun off as a standalone project.[8]

Originally the project was mostly used as an experimentation tool because of its support for IPv6.[9][10] Through the years, as the project gathered members, it also added support for protocols other than SIP.

Jitsi has received support from various institutions such as the NLnet Foundation,[11][12] the University of Strasbourg and the Region of Alsace[13] and it has also had multiple participations in the Google Summer of Code program.[14][15]

In 2009, Emil Ivov founded the BlueJimp company which has employed some of Jitsi's main contributors[16][17] in order to offer professional support and development services[18] related to the project.

In 2011, after successfully adding support for audio/video communication over XMPPs Jingle extensions, the project was renamed to Jitsi since it was no longer "a SIP only Communicator".[19][20] This name originates from the Bulgarian "" (wires).[21]

On November 4, 2014, "Jitsi + Ostel" scored 6 out of 7 points on the Electronic Frontier Foundation's secure messaging scorecard. They lost a point because there has not been a recent independent code audit.[22]

On February 1, 2015, Hristo Terezov, Ingo Bauersachs and the rest of the team released[23] version 2.6 from their stand at the Free and Open Source Software Developers' European Meeting 2015 event in Brussels. This release includes security fixes, removes support of the deprecated MSN protocol, along with SSLv3 in XMPP. Among other notable improvements, the OS X version bundles a Java 8 runtime, enables echo cancelling by default, and uses the CoreAudio subsystem. The Linux build addresses font issues with the GTK+ native LookAndFeel, and fixes some long standing issues about microphone level on call setup when using the PulseAudio sound system. This release also adds the embedded Java database Hyper SQL Database to improve performance for users with huge configuration files, a feature which is disabled by default. A full list of changes is[24] available on the project web site.

Jitsi supports multiple operating systems, including Windows as well as Unix-like systems such as Linux, Mac OS X and BSD. "Beta" packages built for Android are available[25] but the project's roadmap describes the porting to Android as "on hold".[26] It also includes:[27]

The following protocols are currently supported by Jitsi:[5]

Jitsi is mostly written in Java[32] which helps reuse most of the same code over the various operating systems it works on. Its GUI is based upon Swing. The project also uses native code for the implementation of platform specific tasks such as audio/video capture and rendering, IP address selection, and access to native popup notification systems such as Growl.

The project uses the Apache Felix OSGi implementation[33] for modularity.

Among others Jitsi uses the JAIN-SIP protocol stack for SIP support and the Jive Software Smack library[34] for XMPP.[35]

As Jitsi can handle IPv6 it is especially interesting for direct PC-to-PC (peer-to-peer) communication, for instance, if both sides were 'trapped' behind NAT routers, but could obtain a reachable IPv6 address via a tunnel-broker.[citation needed]

The Jitsi community has also completed an ICE implementation called ice4j.org, which it uses to provide NAT traversal capabilities, and assist IPv4 to IPv6 transition.[36]

Audio systems supported are PortAudio, PulseAudio and WASAPI (Windows Audio Session API).

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Jitsi – Mensajera instantnea segura de texto, audio y …

Posted: August 10, 2016 at 9:07 pm

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Lo que usted obtiene:

GNU Linux, Mac OS, Microsoft Windows y otros programas compatibles.:

Jitsi est disponible para GNU Linux y Mac OS, as como para MS Windows (y prximamente para Android OS). A continuacin se recomiendan otros programas con los que Jitsi se puede comunicar usando el cifrado independiente OTR o ZRTP:

Para mensajes de texto: Pidgin (MS Windows y GNU Linux), Miranda (MS Windows), Adium (Mac OS X), ChatSecure (Android OS y iOS, conocido anteriormente como Gibberbot).

Para llamadas de voz: CSipSimple (Android OS), Linphone (GNU Linux, MS Windows, Mac OS X, Android OS, iOS y otros).

1.1 Cosas que debera saber acerca de esta herramienta antes de comenzar

Jitsi es compatible con diferentes tipos de cuentas y protocolos de comunicacin y, por lo tanto, puede comunicarse con contactos que utilicen otros programas. Algunos de esos programas ofrecen funciones similares para mejorar la seguridad de su comunicacin (como los programas mencionados en la seccin anterior), y soportan el cifrado independiente de texto y voz (OTR y ZRTP). Otros programas podran no tener implementadas estas funciones, especialmente los propios (por ejemplo, el chat de Facebook o Google Talk). Sin embargo, con Jitsi podr comunicarse de todas formas con contactos que utilicen dichos programas propios, slo que sin los beneficios adicionales de las funciones de seguridad de Jitsi.

Sin importar si se comunica mediante texto, voz o vdeo, los proveedores de servicios como Facebook Chat, Google Talk, Yahoo! Messenger, Skype o Viber tienen acceso a sus sesiones de comunicacin y pueden ofrecer el acceso a terceros, tales como corporaciones o gobiernos. Jitsi le permite comunicarse de manera segura y privada usando sus cuentas existentes con la ayuda de un cifrado adicional. Esto hace que el contenido de sus comunicaciones sea inaccesible para los proveedores de cuentas y posibles terceros. Para poder proteger sus sesiones de chat y conversaciones privadas, Jitsi utiliza mtodos criptogrficos, inclusive Off-the-Record (OTR) para conversaciones de texto, y ZRTP/SRTP para llamadas de voz.

Otra diferencia a notar entre Jitsi y programas como Skype es que Jitsi permite que los usuarios sigan usando sus cuentas existentes con un proveedor de servicio distinto, independiente de los desarrolladores del programa. Esto tambin significa que necesita configurar una cuenta antes de poder utilizar Jitsi.

Nota: Jitsi utiliza el lenguaje de programacin Java, de forma que el programa Java debe estar instalado en el equipo para que funcione. Se sabe que Oracle Java tiene varias vulnerabilidades de seguridad que pueden permitir que usuarios remotos tomen control del equipo e instalen spyware para acceder o controlar todos sus datos y comunicaciones. Se recomienda ampliamente que minimice el nmero de programas que tienen permitido utilizar Java en su equipo. Mire cmo desactivar complementos asociados con Java en Firefox y consulte los pasos para deshabilitar Java en todos los navegadores del equipo. Sin embargo, como ver ms adelante en este captulo, a pesar del uso de Java, hay una serie de beneficios de seguridad al utilizar Jitsi.

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Jitsi – Quora

Posted: May 31, 2016 at 2:46 pm

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Jitsi - Quora

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Chocolatey Gallery | Jitsi 2.8.5426

Posted: May 28, 2016 at 4:44 am

Private CDN cached downloads available for licensed customers. Never experience 404 breakages again! Learn more...

This package was approved by moderator ferventcoder on 4/24/2015.

Jitsi (formerly SIP Communicator) is a free and open source multiplatform voice (VoIP), videoconferencing and instant messaging application for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X. It supports several popular instant messaging and telephony protocols, including open recognised encryption protocols for chat (OTR) and voice/video/streaming and voice/video conferencing (SIP/RTP/SRTP/ZRTP), as well as built-in IPv6, NAT traversal and DNSSEC. Jitsi and its source code are released under the terms of the LGPL.

To install Jitsi, run the following command from the command line or from PowerShell:

To upgrade Jitsi, run the following command from the command line or from PowerShell:

In cases where actual malware is found, the packages are subject to removal. Software sometimes has false positives. Moderators do not necessarily validate the safety of the underlying software, only that a package retrieves software from the official distribution point and/or validate embedded software against official distribution point (where distribution rights allow redistribution).

Chocolatey Pro provides runtime protection from possible malware.

This package has no dependencies.

20042012 Emil Ivov

https://jitsi.org/Main/News

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Chocolatey Gallery | Jitsi 2.8.5426

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Jitsi –

Posted: May 24, 2016 at 5:45 pm

^ "Index of /jitsi/windows". Download.jitsi.org. Retrieved 2015-02-01.

^ "Index of /jitsi/macosx". Download.jitsi.org. Retrieved 2015-02-01.

^ "Index of /jitsi/src". Download.jitsi.org. Retrieved 2015-02-01.

^ a b "Jitsi home page". Jitsi.org. April 30, 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ http://lists.jitsi.org/pipermail/dev/2015-June/024439.html

^ "SIP Communicator: Interview with Emil Ivov". Gulli.com. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "Original Jitsi release announcement". Java.net. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ Ivov, Emil; Nol, Thomas (2004). "Optimizing SIP Application Layer Mobility over IPv6 Using Layer 2 Triggers" (PDF). Emcho.com. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "NEMO Basic Support, Multi-Domiciliation et Dcouverte de Services" (in French). Lsiit-cnrs.unistra.fr. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "NLnet; SIP Comm Phone". Nlnet.nl. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "NLnet; SIP Comm Desktop". Nlnet.nl. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "La rgion rcompense un jeune informaticien". 20minutes.fr. May 3, 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "SIP Communicator GSoC'10 home page". Archived from the original on July 28, 2011.

^ "SIP Communicator GSoC'09 home page". Archived from the original on December 14, 2009.

^ "Jitsi Contributors - Ohloh". March 26, 2010. Archived from the original on March 26, 2010.

^ "Jitsi Team and Contributors". Jitsi.org. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "Main / Solutions". BlueJimp. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "About Jitsi". Jitsi.org. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "Renaming to Jitsi. Step 1: The Site". Java.net. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "(SIP Communicator) | Documentation / FAQ How do you spell Jitsi and what does it mean?". Jitsi. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "Secure Messaging Scorecard. Which apps and tools actually keep your messages safe?". Electronic Frontier Foundation. 2014-11-04.

^ "Jitsi 2.6 release notice on the Jitsi-users mailing list". Jitsi.org. Retrieved 2015-02-01.

^ "Jitsi build 5390 release notes". Jitsi.org. Retrieved 2015-02-01.

^ "Jitsi (SIP Communicator) Android - Nightly Builds Index". Jitsi.org. Retrieved 2014-11-15.

^ "Roadmap". Jitsi.org. Retrieved 2013-12-17.

^ Jitsi feature list with information on supported protocols

^ a b "Jitsi changelog". Jitsi.org.

^ "News". Jitsi. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "Jitsi: commits@jitsi.java.net: Archive Project Kenai". Java.net. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "opus-codec.org". opus-codec.org. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "Jitsi". Ohloh.net. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "Projects using Felix". Felix.apache.org. July 21, 2010. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ "Smack library". Igniterealtime.org. Retrieved 2013-06-08.

^ Jitsi team and contributors page with information on used libraries

^ "ice4j.org".

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Jitsi -

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Jitsi – FreeBSD Wiki

Posted: May 22, 2016 at 10:44 pm

UPDATE

Audio and video now works. I have also sent some patches to the Jitsi project in order to make the work of the port easier. I will update the port soon. As soon as everything is done, this page will be probably deleted.

Jitsi is an open source VoIP and IM application. It supports several popular protocols (most notable SIP and XMPP), and offers encrypted chat (OTR) and encrypted voice and video calls (ZRTP). It is mostly written in Java (Swing for the GUI also) with some parts written in C because it uses a plethora of third-party libraries in order to be multiplatform (when Java fails, the third-party libraries come to the rescue).

The purpose of this page is to serve as a starting and coordination point for anyone that wants to help in the process of integrating Jitsi into FreeBSD. Throughout the years, the Jitsi mailing lists have received emails from several people who were trying to port Jitsi on FreeBSD with working audio/video calls, but as far as I know, at the moment we don't have such a thing.

Jitsi 2.2 (latest stable version) exists in the Ports tree under net-im/jitsi.

Unfortunately, the new version (2.2) that exists in the Ports tree, does not solve any of the existing problems. The current problems are:

I think that this is the issue with the highest priority. If we fix the audio, probably we will be able to make encrypted voice calls - one of the most useful features.

Jitsi supports 3 audio systems:

On a Debian GNU/Linux system, Jitsi offers 2 audio systems: PortAudio and PulseAudio. On a Windows 7 system it also offers WASAPI (Windows only). In FreeBSD, I assume that it is possible to have both PortAudio and PulseAudio.

The reason that the number of features of Jitsi differs from one platform to another is that in the lib/native directory of the source of Jitsi, there are directories for every platform (i.e. freebsd, freebsd-64, linux, linux-64, mac, solaris, solaris-sparc, windows, windows-64). Every platform has a different number of libraries inside. For example, the freebsd directory has 5 libraries whereas the linux directory has 24 (including both the libjnportaudio.so and the libjnpulseaudio.so that are responsible for the available audio systems in Jitsi). If you are on a Debian GNU/Linux amd64 system running Jitsi from source, and you remove the libjnportaudio.so library from the linux-64 directory, you won't be able to have the PortAudio option in the available audio systems of Jitsi.

So there are 2 options (that I can see):

In order to build the libjnportaudio.so library, you have to download the source of libjitsi (https://jitsi.org/Projects/LibJitsi). Then, the procedure can be summarized in the following steps:

Download the hotplug branch of PortAudio (check src/native/portaudio/README), patch it with the src/native/portaudio/portaudio-hotplug-os.patch, configure and make.

If you follow the above procedure in an officially Jitsi supported platform (ex. Debian GNU/Linux i386), the chances are that you will end up with a libjnportaudio.so file under the lib/native/linux directory of libjitsi.

The procedure is a lot easier than in libjnportaudio.so. It basically needs three things:

Some minor changes to the target pulseaudio of the src/native/build.xml in order to compile under FreeBSD

Invoke the command ant pulseaudio inside the root directory of libjitsi

I have produced the libjnpulseaudio.so library but when I placed it under the directory lib/native/freebsd-64 of Jitsi I did not get PulseAudio in the drop down menu of Audio Systems. Probably it needs some changes in the Java files in order to detect it (TODO)?

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Jitsi - FreeBSD Wiki

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