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That's my thought too, Mumble's text chat is terribad, the UI looks like crap. #Creating mumble certificate passwordThe last time I used it, setup also suggested that instead of a self-signed cert, you got an email-verified mail signing certificate from an actual CA.įor comparison, Ventrilo and Teamspeak are heavily DRM encumbered, your servers go offline randomly when the licencing servers go down due to frequent attacks as they phone home and get no response, have utterly insane ToS that near totally shuts down community servers, forbid you from self hosting on your own infrastructure and tell you to buy from their 'hosting partners paying per slot', but you just get an admin password at first start of the daemon. The mumble wiki literally has the sentence "For more information about certificates, see the Wikipedia entries on Public key Certificates." PKI is barely well understood by many engineers. Setting up a client as a user and being told to set up client certificates for mTLS and export your certificates with a strong passphrase to not lose access to your server is an insanely high bar for casual gamers, though a lot more secure. This reads like the Show HN: Dropbox thread UI/UX for Mumble is typical of engineer-design. The welcome text people see.> Setting up a Mumble client as a user is not complicated, You can set how many users you want to be able to join your mumble! You probably won't use this option, but if you have to then just put the port you want mumble to use. Registered users will have their own or be identified by their certificate. ![]() This setting will only be used for non-registered users. To use a password just put a password in the password= configuration. Commenting these out(adding a '#' in front) will make mumble use the default settings(the ones you see now). To disable this, set autobanAttempts or autobanTimeframe to 0. These are pretty self-explanatory, but if a person does autobanAttempts 10 times in autobanTimeframe 'X' seconds then they will be autobanTime for 'X' seconds. When you have found it, it's time to configure mumble! Setting up Murmur on your linux server can be done via apt-get. No, seriously.that's it.(Kind of familiar huh?) #Creating mumble certificate downloadHead to the SourceForge downloads page, download the executable and run it. Head to the SourceForge downloads page, download, and run it. Not to be confused with the Mumble client. *Note: The actual mumble server itself is called Murmur, so whenever you see that referenced it is talking about the actual server itself. VPS, Dedicated Servers, etc.) or hosting it from a computer. This guide mainly focuses on those people who have their own server(i.e. OK, on to the fun part! Installing Murmur* onto your server. I want Mumble(the client)! Where do I get it? Here. Why should I use Mumble and not TeamSpeak or Ventrilo? Free = awesome. Basically, it's like TeamSpeak or Ventrilo, but free. What is mumble you ask? Mumble is a free, opensource VOIP program. #Creating mumble certificate how toI'm tired of seeing people pay to use Mumble when it's given out for free! Here's how to install it: ![]() ![]() Hello! Welcome to the guide to torture installing Mumble(the server) on your server! ![]()
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