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add notes on Redis requirement (this is ossguy editing without an account)
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Before you signup for Vonage, check to see if they support your country, and how much a number there will cost. You can do so [[https://www.vonage.com/communications-apis/sms/pricing/|on their site]] or with handy tables we've made to show you the [[https://soprani.ca/vonage/prices_by_country.html|price/features by country]] and the [[https://soprani.ca/vonage/prices_by_region.html|price/features by region]] - note that in some countries Vonage's numbers support only SMS, while in others they support both calling and SMS. |
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Alternately, you may received calls over XMPP Jingle instead of having them forwarded to a phone number. The steps are the same as above, but place of steps 4 and 5 you instead: | Alternately, you may receive calls over XMPP Jingle instead of having them forwarded to a phone number. The steps are the same as above, but in place of steps 4 and 5 you instead: |
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If you'd rather run your own instance of the Vonage SGX, start by cloning the SGX from https://gitlab.com/soprani.ca/sgx-vonagev0 . Then run "bundle install" in that directory (installing ruby-bundler if needed). After that you can start the SGX by running "bundle exec ./sgx-vonagev0.rb" - this will give you the usage string. | If you'd rather run your own instance of the Vonage SGX, start by cloning the SGX from https://gitlab.com/soprani.ca/sgx-vonagev0 . Next, download and compile https://ossguy.com/tai.c - the binary should be a "tai" file in the sgx-vonagev0 directory. Then run "bundle install" in that directory (installing ruby-bundler if needed). After that you can start the SGX by running "bundle exec ./sgx-vonagev0.rb" - this will give you the usage string. |
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Additionally, the Vonage SGX requires Redis. Most distributions have a Redis package, or you can install it from source. See the [[https://redis.io/topics/quickstart|Redis Quick Start]] guide for more details (note that the below assumes you're using the default port). |
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{{{$ bundle exec ./sgx-vonagev0.rb vonage.sgx.example.com my_password 127.0.0.1 5347 12345}}} | {{{$ REDIS_URL=redis://127.0.0.1:6379/ bundle exec ./sgx-vonagev0.rb vonage.sgx.example.com my_password 127.0.0.1 5347 12345}}} |
Contents
Setting up Vonage
These instructions are intended for technical and/or motivated individuals who need to text from a non-US/Canadian phone number. We recommend people who are fine with using a US or Canadian phone number signup for https://jmp.chat/ instead.
Before you signup for Vonage, check to see if they support your country, and how much a number there will cost. You can do so on their site or with handy tables we've made to show you the price/features by country and the price/features by region - note that in some countries Vonage's numbers support only SMS, while in others they support both calling and SMS.
Providing the below SGX services is not free; if you find them useful please consider supporting infrastructure costs on Liberapay, on Patreon, or by becoming a paying customer of JMP.
Get a Vonage account
You can signup at https://dashboard.nexmo.com/sign-up - they ask for name, email, and (in the next screen) phone number. We've confirmed that Vonage will accept a JMP number here.
The signup process appears to give you a test phone number in the country you signup from (and/or that your phone number is from), as well as €2 in your account for testing. You can text between that test phone number and the signup number, but you need to add extra funds to the account if you want to text with other numbers.
Note that with Vonage, very few countries support MMS. And we haven't implemented MMS in the SGX yet, so it won't yet work in any countries. Assume that any MMS sent to your Vonage number will be silently ignored for now.
Setup incoming call forwarding
We haven't written anything to specifically handle calls with Vonage. But you can just forward incoming calls on your Vonage number to another number through their dashboard. To do that, follow these steps:
Login to https://dashboard.nexmo.com/
- In the left panel, click Numbers then "Your numbers"
- Click the pencil icon under Manage next to the number you want to add forwarding to
- Under Voice, change "Forward to" from None to Phone
- Enter your phone number under Number
- Leave "Event Webhook URL" empty and click Save
Alternately, you may receive calls over XMPP Jingle instead of having them forwarded to a phone number. The steps are the same as above, but in place of steps 4 and 5 you instead:
- Under Voice, change "Forward to" from None to SIP
If your JabberID was user@domain.tld you would enter this as your SIP URI: user%5C40domain.tld%40cheogram.com@sip.cheogram.com
If you want to make outgoing calls, you can write a script to do that, or use https://callwithus.com/ and set your outgoing Caller ID to be your Vonage number.
Using the Vonage SGX run by Soprani.ca
If you don't want to run your own instance of our software to get SGX features on non-US/Canadian numbers, then you can use the one that we at Soprani.ca run. Here's how to do it:
Login to https://dashboard.nexmo.com/
- Copy down the "API key" and "API Secret" values (the "two box" icons will copy them)
- In the left panel, click Numbers then "Your numbers"
- Decide which number from this list you're going to use with Cheogram
- In the left panel, click your name (under Balance), then Settings
- Under "Default SMS Setting" on the right, enter the following:
Delivery receipts: https://vonage.webhooks.soprani.ca/messages
Inbound messages: https://vonage.webhooks.soprani.ca/messages
- HTTP Method: POST-JSON
- Create a new XMPP account if your existing XMPP account is already used for JMP
- Login to your XMPP account from a client that supports ad-hoc commands (Movim, Psi, Gajim)
- Add "cheogram.com" to your roster
- (Right-)click on cheogram.com and then click on Execute Command
- Select "Configure direct message route" and then click Forward or Execute
- Next to "Gateway JID:" enter "vonage.sgx.soprani.ca" (without the quotes) and click Next
- Enter the API Key, API Secret, and number (starting with '+') from steps 2 and 4, click Next
Registration should succeed if all your info is correct; if not, ask us from your chat client or on the web
Send and receive messages as you would with JMP; see here for details
Using your own instance of the Vonage SGX
If you'd rather run your own instance of the Vonage SGX, start by cloning the SGX from https://gitlab.com/soprani.ca/sgx-vonagev0 . Next, download and compile https://ossguy.com/tai.c - the binary should be a "tai" file in the sgx-vonagev0 directory. Then run "bundle install" in that directory (installing ruby-bundler if needed). After that you can start the SGX by running "bundle exec ./sgx-vonagev0.rb" - this will give you the usage string.
These are the expected parameters that it lists, and the values you need to use:
xmpp_component_jid - a JabberID for the SGX that your XMPP server is configured to host (e.g. vonage.sgx.example.com)
xmpp_component_password - the password used to login to your component JID on your XMPP server (see here for an example)
- xmpp_server_hostname - the hostname of your XMPP server (could be 127.0.0.1 if run on the same host as the SGX)
- xmpp_server_port - the port your XMPP server uses for components (e.g. 5347)
- http_listen_port - the port that the SGX will listen on for incoming messages and delivery receipts from Vonage (used below)
Configuring components on an XMPP server is beyond the scope of this documentation. An example of where to find such resources would be the Prosody components documentation.
Additionally, the Vonage SGX requires Redis. Most distributions have a Redis package, or you can install it from source. See the Redis Quick Start guide for more details (note that the below assumes you're using the default port).
Now you can run the SGX, using a command like this:
$ REDIS_URL=redis://127.0.0.1:6379/ bundle exec ./sgx-vonagev0.rb vonage.sgx.example.com my_password 127.0.0.1 5347 12345
Assuming that it works (which it should if your XMPP server is correctly configured to accept the SGX component), you now have a working SGX! You just need to wire it up to Vonage in order to send and receive SMS:
Login to https://dashboard.nexmo.com/
- Copy down the "API key" and "API Secret" values (the "two box" icons will copy them)
- In the left panel, click Numbers then "Your numbers"
- Decide which number from this list you're going to use with your SGX (via Cheogram)
- In the left panel, click your name (under Balance), then Settings
- Under "Default SMS Setting" on the right, enter the following (this is insecure - see below):
Delivery receipts: http://[your_hostname]:[http_listen_port]
Inbound messages: http://[your_hostname]:[http_listen_port]
- HTTP Method: POST-JSON
- Create a new XMPP account if your existing XMPP account is already used for JMP
- Login to your XMPP account from a client that supports ad-hoc commands (Movim, Psi, Gajim)
- Add "cheogram.com" to your roster
- (Right-)click on cheogram.com and then click on Execute Command
- Select "Configure direct message route" and then click Forward or Execute
- Next to "Gateway JID:" enter [xmpp_component_jid] and click Next
- Enter the API Key, API Secret, and number (starting with '+') from steps 2 and 4, click Next
Registration should succeed if all your info is correct; if not, ask us from your chat client or on the web
Send and receive messages as you would with JMP; see here for details
You're all set! If you're not receiving SMS or delivery receipts for some reason, make sure that http://[your_hostname]:[http_listen_port] is accessible from the Internet (you may need to configure the firewall on your server to allow the [http_listen_port] you picked). To ensure the messages coming from Vonage to your server are encrypted, we recommend you setup a proxy (e.g. using ProxyPass) to your SGX's HTTP port.
Why Vonage?
There are other API providers that we could have used for letting people use phone numbers from other countries through Cheogram, but Vonage was the only one we could find that let anyone signup. For example, Twilio requires a phone number to signup but doesn't let you use a JMP number. And Plivo requires you to use a "work email" address (they explicitly block @gmail.com addresses). If you find another API provider, feel free to write an SGX for it! Let us know from your chat client or on the web and we can promote it.