As of docker-jitsi-meet stable-6433 [1], `/config/interface_config.js`
is regenerated on every boot. The correct way to modify the interface
config is now via `/config/custom-interface_config.js`, which is
appended to a default copy of `interface_config.js` by
`/etc/cont-init.d/10-config` on every boot of the docker image.
Given that `interface_config.js` is considered deprecated by upstream
(all options will eventually be moved to `config.js`), we also deprecate
the `matrix_jitsi_web_interface_config_*` variables in favour of
`matrix_jitsi_web_custom_interface_config_extension`.
[1] https://github.com/jitsi/docker-jitsi-meet/blob/stable-6433/CHANGELOG.md#stable-6433
The check was checking for an empty string in `matrix_jitsi_prosody_auth_internal_accounts`,
which is unlikely to happen. We should check for an empty list instead.
The check was not validating username/password values, so telling the user that they need a non-empty
username/password is misleading. It was merely checking if there's at least one entry in the list.
This patch adjusts the check and message accordingly.
This supersedes/fixes-up this Pull Request:
https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/719
The Jitsi Web and JVB containers now (in build 5142) always
start by bulding their own default configuration
(`config.js` and `sip-communicator.properties`, respectively).
The fact that we were generating these files ourselves was no longer of use,
because our configuration was thrown away in favor of the one created
by the containers on startup.
With this commit, we're completely redoing things. We no longer
generate these configuration files. We try to pass the proper
environment variables, so that Jitsi services can generate the
configuration files themselves.
Besides that, we try to use the "custom configuration" mechanism
provided by Jitsi Web and Jitsi JVB (`custom-config.js` and
`custom-sip-communicator.properties`, respectively), so that
we and our users can inject additional configuration.
Some configuration options we had are gone now. Others are no longer
controllable via variables and need to be injected using
the `_config_extension` variables that we provide.
The validation logic that is part of the role should take care
to inform people about how to upgrade (if they're using some custom
configuration, which needs special care now). Most users should not
have to do anything special though.