X-Git-Url: http://git.squeep.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Fconfiguration%2Fmrf.md;h=31c66e098a33e14f05455474936424232f252910;hb=0883a706dc376fdfb7de9df1366803e87c8e7c98;hp=9b2289e7c47af79e9772c20b4a11955c04c62748;hpb=815f659ed893d860c8ed1fbbd762e837147c214b;p=akkoma diff --git a/docs/configuration/mrf.md b/docs/configuration/mrf.md index 9b2289e7c..31c66e098 100644 --- a/docs/configuration/mrf.md +++ b/docs/configuration/mrf.md @@ -34,18 +34,22 @@ config :pleroma, :instance, To use `SimplePolicy`, you must enable it. Do so by adding the following to your `:instance` config object, so that it looks like this: ```elixir -config :pleroma, :instance, +config :pleroma, :mrf, [...] - rewrite_policy: Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.SimplePolicy + policies: Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.SimplePolicy ``` Once `SimplePolicy` is enabled, you can configure various groups in the `:mrf_simple` config object. These groups are: -* `media_removal`: Servers in this group will have media stripped from incoming messages. -* `media_nsfw`: Servers in this group will have the #nsfw tag and sensitive setting injected into incoming messages which contain media. * `reject`: Servers in this group will have their messages rejected. -* `federated_timeline_removal`: Servers in this group will have their messages unlisted from the public timelines by flipping the `to` and `cc` fields. +* `accept`: If not empty, only messages from these instances will be accepted (whitelist federation). +* `media_nsfw`: Servers in this group will have the #nsfw tag and sensitive setting injected into incoming messages which contain media. +* `media_removal`: Servers in this group will have media stripped from incoming messages. +* `avatar_removal`: Avatars from these servers will be stripped from incoming messages. +* `banner_removal`: Banner images from these servers will be stripped from incoming messages. * `report_removal`: Servers in this group will have their reports (flags) rejected. +* `federated_timeline_removal`: Servers in this group will have their messages unlisted from the public timelines by flipping the `to` and `cc` fields. +* `reject_deletes`: Deletion requests will be rejected from these servers. Servers should be configured as lists. @@ -54,8 +58,8 @@ Servers should be configured as lists. This example will enable `SimplePolicy`, block media from `illegalporn.biz`, mark media as NSFW from `porn.biz` and `porn.business`, reject messages from `spam.com`, remove messages from `spam.university` from the federated timeline and block reports (flags) from `whiny.whiner`: ```elixir -config :pleroma, :instance, - rewrite_policy: [Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.SimplePolicy] +config :pleroma, :mrf, + policies: [Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.SimplePolicy] config :pleroma, :mrf_simple, media_removal: ["illegalporn.biz"], @@ -71,21 +75,23 @@ The effects of MRF policies can be very drastic. It is important to use this fun ## Writing your own MRF Policy -As discussed above, the MRF system is a modular system that supports pluggable policies. This means that an admin may write a custom MRF policy in Elixir or any other language that runs on the Erlang VM, by specifying the module name in the `rewrite_policy` config setting. +As discussed above, the MRF system is a modular system that supports pluggable policies. This means that an admin may write a custom MRF policy in Elixir or any other language that runs on the Erlang VM, by specifying the module name in the `policies` config setting. For example, here is a sample policy module which rewrites all messages to "new message content": ```elixir -# This is a sample MRF policy which rewrites all Notes to have "new message -# content." -defmodule Site.RewritePolicy do - @behavior Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF +defmodule Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.RewritePolicy do + @moduledoc "MRF policy which rewrites all Notes to have 'new message content'." + @behaviour Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF # Catch messages which contain Note objects with actual data to filter. # Capture the object as `object`, the message content as `content` and the # message itself as `message`. @impl true - def filter(%{"type" => "Create", "object" => {"type" => "Note", "content" => content} = object} = message) + def filter( + %{"type" => "Create", "object" => %{"type" => "Note", "content" => content} = object} = + message + ) when is_binary(content) do # Subject / CW is stored as summary instead of `name` like other AS2 objects # because of Mastodon doing it that way. @@ -108,16 +114,21 @@ defmodule Site.RewritePolicy do # Let all other messages through without modifying them. @impl true def filter(message), do: {:ok, message} + + @impl true + def describe do + {:ok, %{mrf_sample: %{content: "new message content"}}} + end end ``` -If you save this file as `lib/site/mrf/rewrite_policy.ex`, it will be included when you next rebuild Pleroma. You can enable it in the configuration like so: +If you save this file as `lib/pleroma/web/activity_pub/mrf/rewrite_policy.ex`, it will be included when you next rebuild Pleroma. You can enable it in the configuration like so: ```elixir -config :pleroma, :instance, - rewrite_policy: [ +config :pleroma, :mrf, + policies: [ Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.SimplePolicy, - Site.RewritePolicy + Pleroma.Web.ActivityPub.MRF.RewritePolicy ] ```