By default, this playbook configures your server to store Synapse's content repository (`media_store`) files on the local filesystem. If that's okay, you can skip this document.
As an alternative to storing media files on the local filesystem, you can store them on [Amazon S3](https://aws.amazon.com/s3/) or another S3-compatible object store.
You can do this either by sticking to Synapse's media repository and making that use S3 (read below for this method), or by switching to an external media storage implementation like [matrix-media-repo](configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md).
Finally, [set up S3 storage for Synapse](#setting-up) (with [Goofys](configuring-playbook-s3-goofys.md), [synapse-s3-storage-provider](configuring-playbook-synapse-s3-storage-provider.md), or use s3 datastore with the [matrix-media-repo](https://docs.t2bot.io/matrix-media-repo/configuration/s3-datastore.html)).
You can create [Amazon S3](https://aws.amazon.com/s3/) or another S3-compatible object storage like [Backblaze B2](https://www.backblaze.com/b2/cloud-storage.html), [Storj](https://storj.io), [Wasabi](https://wasabi.com), [Digital Ocean Spaces](https://www.digitalocean.com/products/spaces), etc.
All these providers have different prices, with Storj appearing to be the cheapest (as of 2024-10, storage fee is $0.004 per GB/month, and egress fee is $0.007 per GB). Backblaze egress is free, but for only certain users for up to 3x the amount of data stored. Beyond that you will pay $0.01/GB of egress.
Wasabi has a minimum charge of 1TB if you're storing less than 1TB, which becomes expensive if you need to store less data than that. Likewise, Digital Ocean Spaces has also a minimum charge of 250GB ($5/month as of 2022-10).
- if a provider is a company you like and trust (or dislike less than the others)
- if a provider implements end-to-end encryption of your data
- if a provider has a data region close to your Matrix server (if it's farther away, high latency may cause slowdowns)
- if a provider's infrastructure such as data center is centralized or distributed
- if a provider's price model is transparent (whether it includes hidden costs like minimum charge, minimum storage term, etc.)
- if a provider has free or cheap egress fee (in case you need to get the data out often, for some reason) - likely not too important for the common use-case
Now that you've [chosen an Object Storage provider](#choosing-an-object-storage-provider), you need to create a storage bucket.
How you do this varies from provider to provider, with Amazon S3 being the most complicated due to its vast number of services and complicated security policies.
Below, we provider some guides for common providers. If you don't see yours, look at the others for inspiration or read some guides online about how to create a bucket. Feel free to contribute to this documentation with an update!
You'll need an Amazon S3 bucket and some IAM user credentials (access key + secret key) with full write access to the bucket. Example IAM security policy:
You [can't easily change which region (US, Europe) your Backblaze account stores files in](https://old.reddit.com/r/backblaze/comments/hi1v90/make_the_choice_for_the_b2_data_center_region/), so make sure to carefully choose the region when signing up (hint: it's a hard to see dropdown below the username/password fields in the signup form).
For configuring [Goofys](configuring-playbook-s3-goofys.md) or [s3-synapse-storage-provider](configuring-playbook-synapse-s3-storage-provider.md) you will need: