The playbook now supports installing and configuring [Matrix Authentication Service](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-authentication-service.md) (MAS).
Huge thanks to [Quentin Gliech](https://github.com/sandhose) from the [Element](https://element.io/) / [Matrix Authentication Service](https://github.com/element-hq/matrix-authentication-service) team for answering our numerous questions about MAS.
This is an **experimental service** and there are **still certain issues with it** (see [Expectations](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-authentication-service.md#expectations)). Matrix server administrators should only consider switching if they identify with one or more [reasons to use Matrix Authentication Service](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-authentication-service.md#reasons-to-use-matrix-authentication-service). As MAS adoption improves and more services are adjusted to support it, we expect that using MAS will become the norm.
Our [Setting up Matrix Authentication Service](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-authentication-service.md) documentation page has more details about this new service, what you might expect from the switch and how you can migrate your existing (Synapse) homeserver setup to MAS.
## (BC Break) Postgres & Traefik roles have been relocated and variable names need adjustments
Various roles have been relocated from the [devture](https://github.com/devture) organization to the [mother-of-all-self-hosting](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting) organization.
Along with the relocation, the `devture_` prefix was dropped from their variable names, so you need to adjust your `vars.yml` configuration.
You need to do the following replacements:
-`devture_postgres_` -> `postgres_`
-`devture_traefik_` -> `traefik_`
As always, the playbook would let you know about this and point out any variables you may have missed.
The playbook now supports installing [baibot](./docs/configuring-playbook-bot-baibot.md) (pronounced bye-bot) - a [Matrix](https://matrix.org/) bot developed by [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/) that exposes the power of [AI](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_intelligence) / [Large Language Models](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_language_model) to you. 🤖
It supports [OpenAI](https://openai.com/)'s [ChatGPT](https://openai.com/blog/chatgpt/) models, as well as many other [☁️ providers](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/blob/main/docs/providers.md).
It's designed as a more private and [✨ featureful](https://github.com/etkecc/baibot/?tab=readme-ov-file#-features) alternative to the now-unmaintained [matrix-chatgpt-bot](./docs/configuring-playbook-bot-chatgpt.md).
The playbook now installs [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/)'s [fork](https://github.com/etkecc/synapse-admin) of [synapse-admin](https://github.com/Awesome-Technologies/synapse-admin) (originally developed by [Awesome-Technologies](https://github.com/Awesome-Technologies)). This fork is a drop-in replacement for the original software.
The creation of the fork has been provoked by users frequently encountering issues with the original synapse-admin software, such as unintentionally deleting their one-and-only admin user account (fixed [here](https://github.com/etkecc/synapse-admin/pull/1) and also contributed upstream [here](https://github.com/Awesome-Technologies/synapse-admin/pull/608) - to no avail for now). Since its inception, [a bunch of other quality-of-life improvements](https://github.com/etkecc/synapse-admin?tab=readme-ov-file#changes) have been made to the fork.
If upstream synapse-admin picks up the pace and improves, the etke.cc fork may disappear and the playbook may switch to the original software again. Until that time comes, we believe that etke.cc's fork is the better software to use right now.
If you'd like to switch back to the original synapse-admin software, you can do so by adding the following configuration to your `vars.yml` file:
## New appservice-double-puppet service for better double-puppeting
Mautrix bridges are undergoing large changes as announced in the [August 2024 releases & progress](https://mau.fi/blog/2024-08-mautrix-release/) blog post.
The playbook has already upgraded to the rewritten mautrix-slack ([v0.1.0](https://github.com/mautrix/slack/releases/tag/v0.1.0)) and mautrix-signal ([v0.7.0](https://github.com/mautrix/signal/releases/tag/v0.7.0)) bridges.
The newly rewritten bridges do not support double-puppeting via [Shared Secret Auth](./docs/configuring-playbook-shared-secret-auth.md) anymore, which has prompted us to switch to the new & better [appservice method](https://docs.mau.fi/bridges/general/double-puppeting.html#appservice-method-new) for double-puppeting. The playbook automates this double-puppeting setup for you if you enable the new [Appservice Double Puppet](./docs/configuring-playbook-appservice-double-puppet.md) service.
All non-deprecated mautrix bridges in the playbook have been reworked to support double-puppeting via an Appservice. Most bridges still support double-puppeting via [Shared Secret Auth](./docs/configuring-playbook-shared-secret-auth.md), so the playbook supports it too. If only Shared Secret Auth is enabled, double-puppeting will be configured using that method (for the bridges that support it). That said, **Shared Secret Auth double-puppeting is being phased out and we recommend replacing it with the new Appservice method**.
We recommend **enabling double-puppeting via the new Appservice method** by adding the following configuration to your `vars.yml` file:
```yml
matrix_appservice_double_puppet_enabled: true
```
You can still **keep** [Shared Secret Auth](./docs/configuring-playbook-shared-secret-auth.md) enabled. Non-mautrix bridges and other services (e.g. [matrix-corporal](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-corporal.md)) may still require it.
When both double-puppeting methods are enabled, the playbook will automatically choose the new and better Appservice method for bridges that support it.
## matrix-media-repo now configured for Authenticated Media
Thanks to [Michael Hollister](https://github.com/Michael-Hollister) from [FUTO](https://www.futo.org/), our matrix-media-repo implementation now automatically [sets up signing keys](https://docs.t2bot.io/matrix-media-repo/v1.3.5/installation/signing-key/) for Authenticated Media (as per [MSC3916](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-spec-proposals/pull/3916)).
If you had never heard of Authenticated Media before, the [Sunsetting unauthenticated media](https://matrix.org/blog/2024/06/26/sunsetting-unauthenticated-media/) article on [matrix.org](https://matrix.org/) is a good introduction.
This feature is enabled for matrix-media-repo installations by default and will append an additional (matrix-media-repo-generated signing key) to your homeserver's (Synapse or Dendrite) signing key. See the [Signing keys](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md#signing-keys) and [Key backup and revoking](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md#key-backup-and-revoking) sections of the matrix-media-repo documentation for more details.
If you'd like to avoid this new feature, you can disable it by setting `matrix_media_repo_generate_signing_key: false` in your `vars.yml` configuration file.
## (Backward Compatibility Break) matrix-corporal has been upgraded to v3
The playbook now installs [matrix-corporal](https://github.com/devture/matrix-corporal) v3.0.0, which brings support for **power-level management** (thanks to [this PR](https://github.com/devture/matrix-corporal/pull/32)).
This upgrade necessitates configuration policy changes as described in [matrix-corporal's changelog entry](https://github.com/devture/matrix-corporal/blob/5287cb81c82cd3b951c2a099b4697c3e0b384559/CHANGELOG.md#version-300-2024-08-08).
If you'd like to remain on the old (v2) version of matrix-corporal, you can do so by adding the following configuration to your `vars.yml` file:
Thanks to [Michael Hollister](https://github.com/Michael-Hollister) from [FUTO](https://www.futo.org/), the creators of the [Circles app](https://circu.li/), the playbook can now set up [synapse-usage-exporter](https://github.com/loelkes/synapse-usage-exporter) - a small [Flask](https://flask.palletsprojects.com)-based webservice which can capture usage statistics from Synapse (via HTTP `PUT`) and then make them available for Prometheus to scrape.
To learn more see our [Enabling synapse-usage-exporter for Synapse usage statistics](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse-usage-exporter.md) documentation page.
For those wishing to more easily integrate [Prometheus](https://prometheus.io/)' alerting service ([Alertmanager](https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/latest/alertmanager/)) with Matrix, the playbook can now set up [matrix-alertmanager-receiver](https://github.com/metio/matrix-alertmanager-receiver).
See [Setting up Prometheus Alertmanager integration via matrix-alertmanager-receiver](./docs/configuring-playbook-alertmanager-receiver.md) for more details.
**TLDR**: Traefik was migrated from v2 to v3. Minor changes were done to the playbook. Mostly everything else worked out of the box. Most people will not have to do any tweaks to their configuration. In addition, [HTTP/3](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP/3) support is now auto-enabled for the `web-secure` (port 443) and `matrix-federation` (port `8448`) entrypoints. If you have a firewall in front of your server and you wish to benefit from `HTTP3`, you will need to open the `443` and `8448` UDP ports in it.
### Traefik v3
The reverse-proxy that the playbook uses by default (Traefik) has recently been upgraded to v3 (see [this blog post](https://traefik.io/blog/announcing-traefik-proxy-v3-rc/) to learn about its new features). Version 3 includes some small breaking configuration changes requiring a [migration](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/migration/v2-to-v3/).
We have **updated the playbook to Traefik v3** (make sure to run `just roles` / `make roles` to get it).
There were **only minor playbook changes required** to adapt to Traefik v3, and only to the Ansible role for [matrix-media-repo](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md) where we changed a few [`PathPrefix` instances to `PathRegexp`](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/routing/routers/#path-pathprefix-and-pathregexp), because these instances were using a regular expression instead of a fixed path. For fixed-path values, `PathPrefix` is still the preferred matcher function to use.
**Most people using the playbook should not have to do any changes**.
If you're using the playbook's Traefik instance to reverse-proxy to some other services of your own (not managed by the playbook), you may wish to review their Traefik labels and make sure they're in line with the [Traefik v2 to v3 migration guide](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/migration/v2-to-v3/).
If you've tweaked any of this playbook's `_path_prefix` variables and made them use a regular expression, you will now need to make additional adjustments. The playbook makes extensive use of `PathPrefix()` matchers in Traefik rules and `PathPrefix` does not support regular expressions anymore. To work around it, you may now need to override a whole `_traefik_rule` variable and switch it from [`PathPrefix` to `PathRegexp`](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/routing/routers/#path-pathprefix-and-pathregexp).
If you're not using [matrix-media-repo](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md) (the only role we had to tweak to adapt it to Traefik v3), you **may potentially downgrade to Traefik v2** (if necessary) by adding `traefik_verison: v2.11.4` to your configuration. People using `matrix-media-repo` cannot downgrade this way, because `matrix-media-repo` has been adjusted to use `PathRegexp` - a [routing matcher](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/v2.11/routing/routers/#rule) that Traefik v2 does not understand.
In Traefik v3, [HTTP/3](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP/3) support is no longer considered experimental now.
Due to this, **the playbook auto-enables HTTP3** for the `web-secure` (port 443) and `matrix-federation` (port `8448`) entrypoints.
HTTP3 uses the UDP protocol and **the playbook (together with Docker) will make sure that the appropriate ports** (`443` over UDP &`8448` over UDP) **are exposed and whitelisted in your server's firewall**. However, **if you have another firewall in front of your server** (as is the case for many cloud providers), **you will need to manually open these UDP ports**.
If you do not open the UDP ports correctly or there is some other issue, clients (browsers, mostly) will fall-back to [HTTP/2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP/2) or even [HTTP/1.1](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP).
Still, if HTTP/3 cannot function correctly in your setup, it's best to disable advertising support for it (and misleading clients into trying to use HTTP/3).
To **disable HTTP/3**, you can use the following configuration:
If you are using [your own webserver](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md) (in front of Traefik), port binding on UDP port `8448` by default due to HTTP/3 is either unnecessary or [may get in the way](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/3402). If it does, you can disable it:
```yml
# Disable HTTP/3 for the federation entrypoint.
# If you'd like HTTP/3, consider configuring it for your other reverse-proxy.
#
# Disabling this also sets `matrix_playbook_public_matrix_federation_api_traefik_entrypoint_host_bind_port_udp` to an empty value.
# If you'd like to keep HTTP/3 enabled here (for whatever reason), you may wish to explicitly
# set `matrix_playbook_public_matrix_federation_api_traefik_entrypoint_host_bind_port_udp` to something like '127.0.0.1:8449'.
## synapse-admin is now restricted to your homeserver's URL by default
A new feature introduced in synapse-admin [v0.10.0](https://github.com/Awesome-Technologies/synapse-admin/releases/tag/0.10.0) (released and supported by the playbook since a a few months ago) provides the ability to [restrict its usage to a specific homeserver](https://github.com/Awesome-Technologies/synapse-admin/blob/e21e44362c879ac41f47c580b04210842b6ff3d7/README.md#restricting-available-homeserver) (or multiple homeservers).
The playbook has just started making use of this feature. **From now on, your synapse-admin instance will be restricted to the homeserver you're managing via the playbook**. When configured like this, the *Homeserver URL* field in synapse-admin's web UI changes from a text field to a dropdown having a single value (the URL of your homeserver). This makes usage simpler for most people, as they won't need to manually enter a *Homeserver URL* anymore.
If you'd like **to go back to the old unrestricted behavior**, use the following configuration:
```yml
# Use this configuration to allow synapse-admin to manage any homeserver instance.
The `/hookshot/webhooks` common prefix gets stripped by Traefik automatically, so Hookshot only sees the part that comes after (`/:hookId`).
[A few years ago](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/1681), Hookshot started to prefer to handle webhooks at a `/webhook/:hookId` path (instead of directly at `/:hookId`).
To avoid future problems, we've [reconfigured](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/commit/4704a60718946fd469aeee7fc3ae8127c633bb6b) our Hookshot configuration to use webhook URLs that include `/webhook` in the URL suffix (e.g. `/hookshot/webhooks/webhook/:hookId`, instead of `/hookshot/webhooks/:hookId`). This means that when we strip the common prefi (`/hookshot/webhooks`), we'll end up sending `/webhook/:hookId` to Hookshot, just like recommended.
When generating new webhooks, you should start seeing the new URLs being used.
**For now**, **both** old URLs (`/hookshot/webhooks/:hookId`) and new URLs (`/hookshot/webhooks/webhook/:hookId`) **continue to work***, so your webhooks will not break just yet.
However, **we recommend that you update all your old webhook URLs** (configured in other systems) to include the new `/webhook` path component, so that future Hookshot changes (whenever they come) will not break your webhooks. You don't need to do anything on the Hookshot side - you merely need to reconfigure the remote systems that use your webhook URLs.
To make things easier and to be consistent with other roles, the [maubot](./docs/configuring-playbook-bot-maubot.md) user (`bot.maubot` by default) is [now](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/3376) automatically created be the playbook.
If you have an existing maubot installation, you will need to specify `matrix_bot_maubot_initial_password` in your `vars.yml` file to make the playbook not complain about it being undefined.
Since the bot is already registered in your installation, there's nothing for the playbook to do anyway. In case you don't remember the password you've registered your maubot user account with, you can specify any value for this variable.
If you've registered another username for the bot (other than the recommended default of `bot.maubot`), consider adjusting the `matrix_bot_maubot_login` variable (e.g. `matrix_bot_maubot_login: my.maubot.username`).
Thanks to [Tobias Diez](https://github.com/tobiasdiez)'s [efforts](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/3241), the playbook now supports bridging to [WeChat](https://www.wechat.com/) via the [matrix-wechat](https://github.com/duo/matrix-wechat) bridge.
See our [Setting up WeChat bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-wechat.md) documentation page for getting started.
## (Backward Compatibility Break) The playbook now defaults to KeyDB, instead of Redis
**TLDR**: if the playbook used installed Redis as a dependency for you before, it will now replace it with [KeyDB](https://docs.keydb.dev/) (a drop-in alternative) due to [Redis having changed its license](https://redis.com/blog/redis-adopts-dual-source-available-licensing/).
Thanks to [Aine](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc) of [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/), the playbook now uses [KeyDB](https://docs.keydb.dev/) (a drop-in alternative for Redis), instead of [Redis](https://redis.io/).
The playbook used to install Redis (and now installs KeyDB in its place) if services have a need for it ([enabling worker support for Synapse](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#load-balancing-with-workers), [enabling Hookshot encryption](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-hookshot.md#end-to-bridge-encryption), etc.) or if you explicitly enabled the service (`redis_enabled: true` or `keydb_enabled: true`).
This change is provoked by the fact that [Redis is now "source available"](https://redis.com/blog/redis-adopts-dual-source-available-licensing/). According to the Limitations of [the new license](https://redis.com/legal/rsalv2-agreement/) (as best as we understand them, given that we're not lawyers), using Redis in the playbook (even in a commercial FOSS service like [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/)) does not violate the new Redis license. That said, we'd rather neither risk it, nor endorse shady licenses and products that pretend to be free-software. Another high-quality alternative to Redis seems to be [Dragonfly](https://www.dragonflydb.io/), but the [Dragonfly license](https://github.com/dragonflydb/dragonfly?tab=License-1-ov-file#readme) is no better than Redis's.
Next time your run the playbook (via the `setup-all` tag), **Redis will be automatically uninstalled and replaced with KeyDB**. Some Synapse downtime may occur while the switch happens.
Users on `arm32` should be aware that there's **neither a prebuilt `arm32` container image for KeyDB**, nor the KeyDB role supports self-building yet. Users on this architecture likely don't run Synapse with workers, etc., so they're likely in no need of KeyDB (or Redis). If Redis is necessary in an `arm32` deployment, disabling KeyDB and making the playbook fall back to Redis is possible (see below).
**The playbook still supports Redis** and you can keep using Redis (for now) if you'd like, by adding this additional configuration to your `vars.yml` file:
```yml
# Explicitly disable KeyDB, which will auto-enable Redis
# if the playbook requires it as a dependency for its operation.
Thanks to [Tilo Spannagel](https://github.com/tilosp), the playbook can now enable IPv6 for container networks for various components (roles) via [the `devture_systemd_docker_base_ipv6_enabled` variable](https://github.com/devture/com.devture.ansible.role.systemd_docker_base/blob/c11a526bb8e318b42eb52055056377bb31154f13/defaults/main.yml#L14-L31).
It should be noted that:
- Matrix roles (`roles/custom/matrix-*`) respect this variable, but external roles (those defined in `requirements.yml` and installed via `just roles`) do not respect it yet. Additional work is necessary
- changing the variable subsequently may not change existing container networks. Refer to [these instructions](https://github.com/devture/com.devture.ansible.role.systemd_docker_base/blob/c11a526bb8e318b42eb52055056377bb31154f13/defaults/main.yml#L26-L30)
Thanks to [Julian Foad](https://matrix.to/#/@julian:foad.me.uk), the playbook can now install the [Pantalaimon](https://github.com/matrix-org/pantalaimon) E2EE aware proxy daemon for you. It's already possible to integrate it with [Draupnir](docs/configuring-playbook-bot-draupnir.md) to allow it to work in E2EE rooms - see our Draupnir docs for details.
See our [Setting up Pantalaimon](docs/configuring-playbook-pantalaimon.md) documentation to get started.
Thanks to [FSG-Cat](https://github.com/FSG-Cat), the playbook can now install [Draupnir for all](./docs/configuring-playbook-appservice-draupnir-for-all.md) (aka multi-instance Draupnir running in appservice mode).
This is an alternative to [running Draupnir in bot mode](./docs/configuring-playbook-bot-draupnir.md), which is still supported by the playbook.
The documentation page for [Draupnir for all](./docs/configuring-playbook-appservice-draupnir-for-all.md) contains more information on how to install it.
## Support for bridging to Facebook/Messenger via the new mautrix-meta bridge
The [mautrix-facebook](./docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-facebook.md) and [mautrix-instagram](./docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-instagram.md) bridges are being [superseded by a new bridge](https://github.com/mautrix/facebook/issues/332) - the [mautrix-meta](https://github.com/mautrix/meta) bridge.
The playbook now supports the new mautrix-meta bridge - a single bridge, which can run in different modes and bridge to Messenger (via [Facebook](https://facebook.com/), Facebook over [Tor](https://www.torproject.org/) or via [Messenger](https://messenger.com/)) and [Instagram](https://instagram.com/). The playbook makes this bridge available via 2 separate Ansible roles, allowing you to easily run 2 instances of mautrix-meta, for bridging to both services at the same time.
If you're using mautrix-facebook or mautrix-instagram right now, **you can still continue using the old bridges, but may wish to change to the new bridge implementations**. See:
- [Setting up Instagram bridging via Mautrix Meta](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-meta-instagram.md)
- [Setting up Messenger bridging via Mautrix Meta](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-meta-messenger.md)
The documentation pages contain more information on how to migrate.
## Much larger Synapse caches and cache auto-tuning enabled by default
Thanks to [FSG-Cat](https://github.com/FSG-Cat), the playbook now uses much larger caches and enables Synapse's [cache auto-tuning functionality](https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/latest/usage/configuration/config_documentation.html#caches-and-associated-values).
This work and the default values used by the playbook are inspired by [Tom Foster](https://github.com/tcpipuk)'s [Synapse homeserver guide](https://tcpipuk.github.io/synapse/deployment/synapse.html).
The playbook has always used a very conservative cache factor (`matrix_synapse_caches_global_factor`) value of `0.5`, which may be OK for small and underactive deployments, but is not ideal for larger servers. Paradoxically, a small global cache factor value [does not necessarily decrease RAM usage as a whole](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/3939).
The playbook now uses **a 20x larger cache factor** (currently `10`), adjusts a few other cache-related variables, and **enables cache auto-tuning** via the following variables:
-`matrix_synapse_cache_autotuning_min_cache_ttl` - defaults to `30s`
These values should be good defaults for most servers, but may change over time as we experiment further.
Refer to our new [Tuning caches and cache autotuning](docs/maintenance-synapse.md#tuning-caches-and-cache-autotuning) documentation section for more details.
## (Backward-compatibility break) Minor changes necessary for some people serving a static website at the base domain
This only affects people who are [Serving a static website at the base domain](./docs/configuring-playbook-base-domain-serving.md#serving-a-static-website-at-the-base-domain), but not managing its `index.html` through the playbook.
That is, for people who have `matrix_static_files_file_index_html_enabled: false` in their `vars.yml` configuration, the playbook has a new default behavior. Since the playbook is not managing the `index.html` file, it will default to a more sensible way of handling the base domain - redirecting `https://example.com/` to `https://matrix.example.com/`, instead of serving a 404 page.
If you are managing your static website by yourself (by dropping files into `/matrix/static-files/public` somehow), then you probably don't wish for such redirection to happen. You can disable it by adding `matrix_static_files_container_labels_base_domain_root_path_redirection_enabled: false` to your `vars.yml` configuration file.
Thanks to [Charles Wright](https://github.com/cvwright) from [FUTO](https://www.futo.org/), the creators of the [Circles app](https://circu.li/), the playbook has [received support](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/3100) for load-balancing the Synapse workload via [specialized workers](./docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#specialized-workers) which are supposed to work better than our old [generic workers](./docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#generic-workers) implementation.
For now, playbook defaults remain unchanged and the `one-of-each` [workers preset](./docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#worker-presets) continues being the default. However, the default may change in the future. If you'd like to remain on this preset even if/when the defaults change, consider explicitly adding `matrix_synapse_workers_preset: one-of-each` to your `vars.yml` configuration.
Our specialized workers setup is based on recommendations found in [Tom Foster](https://github.com/tcpipuk)'s [Synapse homeserver guide](https://tcpipuk.github.io/synapse/index.html). What's special about our new setup is that we try to parse information out of the request (who the user is; which room is being operated on) and try to forward similar requests to the same worker. As an example, this means that once a worker caches some room information, subsequent requests for the same room will be routed to the same worker (which supposedly still has the room's state cached).
To get started, refer to our [Specialized workers](./docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#specialized-workers) documentation section.
## Switching to Element's AGPLv3-licensed Synapse release
A few months ago, the [Element](https://element.io/) company has [announced](https://element.io/blog/element-to-adopt-agplv3/) that their work on the Synapse homeserver would no longer be available under the permissive [Apache-2.0 license](https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0), but only under:
- the [AGPLv3](https://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0.en.html) free-software license - the same license that this Ansible playbook has always used
- a proprietary license, for those wishing for Element to [sell them an exception](https://gnu.org/philosophy/selling-exceptions.html) to the AGPLv3 license
You can also learn more in [this post](https://matrix.org/blog/2023/11/06/future-of-synapse-dendrite/) by the Matrix Foundation.
The change has [already happened](https://element.io/blog/synapse-now-lives-at-github-com-element-hq-synapse/) and the first Synapse release under the new license is here: [v1.99.0](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/releases/tag/v1.99.0).
There is no up-to-date alternative Synapse fork right now and this free-software (AGPLv3-licensed) playbook is definitely not against free-software licenses, so we are now switching to the Element-maintained Synapse release.
**What does this mean to you?**
For most home users, it doesn't mean anything. Your installation will continue working as it should and you don't need to do anything.
For people building commercial products on top of Synapse, they may have to either buy a license exception from Element (from what we hear, the fee depends on the number of monthly-active users on your instance) or they may need to release all related code as free-software (which is what we've been doing at [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/) ([here](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc)) all along).
We're no lawyers and this changelog entry does not aim to give you the best legal advice, so please research on your own!
If you'd like to continue using the old Apache-2.0-licensed Synapse (for a while longer anyway), the playbook makes it possible by intruducing a new Ansible variable. You can do it like this:
```yaml
# Switch the organization that Synapse container images (or source code for self-building) are pulled from.
# Note: the new default value is `element-hq/synapse`.
# Pin the Synapse version to the last one (v1.98.0) released by the Matrix Foundation
# under the old permissive Apache-2.0 license.
matrix_synapse_version: v1.98.0
```
Notes:
- if you had already upgraded Synapse to `v1.99.0` by running this playbook, you will still be able to downgrade to `v1.98.0`, because both releases use the same database schema version (`SCHEMA_COMPAT_VERSION = 83` - see [here for v1.98.0](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/blob/v1.98.0/synapse/storage/schema/__init__.py#L131-L134) and [here for v1.99.0](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/blob/v1.99.0/synapse/storage/schema/__init__.py#L137-L140)). More details on Synapse's database schema are available [here](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/develop/development/database_schema.html). It appears that there are no new database migrations introduced in `v1.99.0`, so going back to the older release is possible. This is not guaranteed to hold true for future Synapse releases, so if you're seeing this early-enough, consider pinning the version and organization before re-running the playbook and getting upgraded to the latest version
- running an outdated homeserver exposes you to security issues and incompatibilities. Only consider doing this as a short-term solution.
As of [#204](https://github.com/the-draupnir-project/Draupnir/pull/204) Draupnir changed its licence to AFL-3.0 from the CSL licence. This change affects playbook users who could not run Draupnir under the old license restrictions. The new license is considerably less restrictive and is OSI approved. Draupnir version v1.86.0 and later are covered by this license change.
**TLDR**: All traces of the `matrix-nginx-proxy` reverse-proxy component are now gone. This brought about many other internal changes (and security improvements), so setups may need minor adjustments or suffer some (temporary) breakage. People who have been on the Traefik-native setup may upgrade without much issues. Those running their own Traefik instance may need minor changes. People who have been postponing the migration away from `matrix-nginx-proxy` (for more than a year already!) will now finally need to do something about it.
### Backstory on `matrix-nginx-proxy`
We gather here today to celebrate the loss of a once-beloved component in our stack - `matrix-nginx-proxy`. It's been our [nginx](https://nginx.org/)-based reverse-proxy of choice since the [first commit](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/tree/87f5883f2455fb115457b65f267f17de305c053c) of this playbook, 7 years ago.
For 6 years, `matrix-nginx-proxy` has been the front-most reverse-proxy in our setup (doing SSL termination, etc.). After [transitioning to Traefik last year](#traefik-is-the-default-reverse-proxy-now), `matrix-nginx-proxy` took a step back. Nevertheless, since it was so ingrained into the playbook, it still remained in use - even if only internally. Despite our warnings of its imminent death, many of you have indubitably continued to use it instead of Traefik. Its suffering continued for too long, because it served many different purposes and massive effort was required to transition them to others.
To us, `matrix-nginx-proxy` was:
- an [nginx](https://nginx.org/)-based reverse-proxy
- an Ansible role organizing the work of [certbot](https://certbot.eff.org/) - retrieving free [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/) SSL certificates for `matrix-nginx-proxy` and for the [Coturn TURN server](./docs/configuring-playbook-turn.md)
- a central component for reverse-proxying to the [long list of services](./docs/configuring-playbook.md) supported by the playbook. As such, it became a dependency that all these services had to inject themselves into during runtime
- an intermediary through which addons (bridges, bots) communicated with the homeserver. Going through an intermediary (instead of directly talking to the homeserver) is useful when certain components (like [matrix-media-repo](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md) or [matrix-corporal](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-corporal.md)) are enabled, because it lets these services "steal routes" from the homeserver
- a webserver for serving the `/.well-known/matrix` static files (generated by the `matrix-base` role until now)
- a webserver [serving your base domain](./docs/configuring-playbook-base-domain-serving.md) (and also generating the `index.html` page for it)
- a central component providing global [HTTP Basic Auth](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Authentication) password-protection for all `/metrics` endpoints when metrics were exposed publicly for consumption from a remote Prometheus server
Talk about a jack of all trades! The [UNIX philosophy](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_philosophy) (and Docker container philosophy) of "do one thing and do it well" had been severely violated for too long.
On a related note, we also had a large chain of reverse-proxies in the mix.
In the worst case, it was something like this: (Traefik -> `matrix-nginx-proxy:8080` -> `matrix-nginx-proxy:12080` -> `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion:8008` -> `matrix-synapse:8008`).
Due to complexity and the playbook's flexibility (trying to accommodate a mix of tens of components), many layers of indirection were necessary. We do like reverse-proxies, but.. not quite enough to enjoy going through a chain of ~4 of them before reaching the target service.
After **a ton of work** in the last weeks (200+ commits, which changed 467 files - 8684 insertions and 8913 deletions), **we're finally saying goodbye** to `matrix-nginx-proxy`.
### Going Traefik-native and cutting out all middlemen
In our new setup, you'll see the bare minimum number of reverse-proxies.
In most cases, there's only Traefik and all services being registered directly with it. When [Synapse workers](./docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#load-balancing-with-workers) are enabled, `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` remains as an extra reverse-proxy that requests go through (for load-balancing to the correct Synapse worker), but in all other cases services are exposed directly.
This reduces "network" hops (improving performance) and also decreases the number of components (containers).
Each Ansible role in our setup is now independent and doesn't need to interact with other roles during runtime.
### Traefik now has an extra job
Previously, **Traefik had a single purpose** - being the main reverse-proxy. It was either front-most (terminating SSL, etc.) or you were [fronting Traefik with your own other reverse-proxy](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#fronting-the-integrated-reverse-proxy-webserver-with-another-reverse-proxy). In any case - it had this central (yet decentralized) job.
Now, **Traefik has one more role** - it serves as an intermediary which allows addon services (bridges, bots, etc.) to communicate with the homeserver. As mentioned above, such an intermediary service is not strictly necessary in all kinds of setups, but more complex setups (including [matrix-media-repo](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md) or [matrix-corporal](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-corporal.md)) benefit from it.
To perform this new role, Traefik now has a new internal [entrypoint](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/routing/entrypoints/) called `matrix-internal-matrix-client-api`. All homeservers (Conduit, Dendrite, Synapse and even `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion`) and homeserver-related core services ([matrix-media-repo](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md), [matrix-corporal](./docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-corporal.md) and potentially others) register their routes (using [container labels](https://docs.docker.com/config/labels-custom-metadata/)) not only on the public entrypoints (`web-secure`, `matrix-federation`), but also on this new internal entrypoint.
Doing so, services can contact Traefik on this entrypoint's dedicated port (the URL defaults to `http://matrix-traefik:8008`) and reach the homeserver Client-Server API as they expect. Internally, Traefik takes care of the routing to the correct service.
We've also considered keeping it simple and having services talk to the homeserver over the public internet (e.g. `https://matrix.example.com`) thus reusing all existing Traefik routing labels. In this scenario, performance was incredibly poor (e.g. 70 rps, instead of 1400 rps) due to TLS and networking overhead. The need for fast internal communication (via the new internal non-TLS-enabled Traefik entrypoint) is definitely there. In our benchmarks, Traefik even proved more efficient than nginx at doing this: ~1200 rps for Traefik compared to ~900 rps for nginx (out of ~1400 rps when talking to the Synapse homeserver directly).
Traefik serving this second purpose has a few downsides:
- Traefik becomes a runtime dependency for all homeserver-dependant container services
- all homeserver-dependant services now need to be connected to the `traefik` container network, even if they don't need public internet exposure
Despite these downsides (which the playbook manages automatically), we believe it's still a good compromise given the amount of complexity it eliminates and the performance benefits it yields. One alternative we've [considered](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/3045#issuecomment-1867327001) was adding a new intermediary service (e.g. `matrix-homeserver-proxy` powered by nginx), but this both had much higher complexity (one more component in the mix; duplication of effort to produce nginx-compatible route definitions for it) and slightly worse performance (see above).
People running the default Traefik setup do not need to do anything to make Traefik take on this extra job. Your Traefik configuration will be updated automatically.
**People runnning their own Traefik reverse-proxy need to do [minor adjustments](#people-managing-their-own-traefik-instance-need-to-do-minor-changes)**, as described in the section below.
You may disable Traefik acting as an intermediary by explicitly setting `matrix_playbook_public_matrix_federation_api_traefik_entrypoint_enabled` to `false`. Services would then be configured to talk to the homeserver directly, giving you a slight performance boost and a "simpler" Traefik setup. However, such a configuration is less tested and will cause troubles, especially if you enable more services (like `matrix-media-repo`, etc.) in the future. As such, it's not recommended.
### People managing their own Traefik instance need to do minor changes
This section is for people [managing their own Traefik instance on the Matrix server](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#traefik-managed-by-you). Those [using Traefik managed by the playbook](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#traefik-managed-by-the-playbook) don't need to do any changes.
Because [Traefik has an extra job now](#traefik-now-has-an-extra-job), you need to adapt your configuration to add the additional `matrix-internal-matrix-client-api` entrypoint and potentially configure the `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_container_network` variable. See the [Traefik managed by you](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#traefik-managed-by-you) documentation section for more details.
### People fronting Traefik with another reverse proxy need to do minor changes
We've already previously mentioned that you need to do some minor [configuration changes related to `traefik_additional_entrypoints_auto`](#backward-compatibility-configuration-changes-required-for-people-fronting-the-integrated-reverse-proxy-webserver-with-another-reverse-proxy).
If you don't do these changes (switching from `traefik_additional_entrypoints_auto` to multiple other variables), your Traefik setup will not automatically receive the new `matrix-internal-matrix-client-api` Traefik entrypoint and Traefik would not be able to perform [its new duty of connecting addons with the homeserver](#traefik-now-has-an-extra-job).
This section is for people using a more custom reverse-proxy setup - those having `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type` set to a value different than the default (`playbook-managed-traefik`).
Previously, we allowed you to set `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type` to 7 different values to accommodate various reverse-proxy setups.
The complexity of this is too high, so we only support 3 values right now:
- (the default) `playbook-managed-traefik`, when you're [using Traefik managed by the playbook](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#traefik-managed-by-the-playbook)
-`other-traefik-container`, when you're [managing your own Traefik instance on the Matrix server](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#traefik-managed-by-you)
-`none`, when you wish for [no reverse-proxy integration to be done at all](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#using-no-reverse-proxy-on-the-matrix-side-at-all)
The `none` value is not recommended and may not work adequately, due to lack of testing and [Traefik's new responsibilities](#traefik-now-has-an-extra-job) in our setup.
**Previous values that are now gone** (and the playbook would report them as such) are: `playbook-managed-nginx`, `other-nginx-non-container`, `other-on-same-host` and `other-on-another-host`.
If you were using these values as a way to stay away from Traefik, you now have 2 options:
- (recommended) [Fronting Traefik with another reverse-proxy](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#fronting-the-integrated-reverse-proxy-webserver-with-another-reverse-proxy)
- (not recommended) [Using no reverse-proxy on the Matrix side at all](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#using-no-reverse-proxy-on-the-matrix-side-at-all) and reverse-proxying to each and every service manually
### Container networking changes
Now that `matrix-nginx-proxy` is not in the mix, it became easier to clear out some other long-overdue technical debt.
Since the very beginning of this playbook, all playbook services were connected to a single (shared) `matrix` container network. Later on, some additional container networks appeared, but most services (database, etc.) still remained in the `matrix` container network. This meant that any random container in this network could try to talk (or attack) the Postgres database operating in the same `matrix` network.
Moving components (especially the database) into other container networks was difficult - it required changes to many other components to ensure correct connectivity.
All the hard work has been done now. We've added much more isolation between services by splitting them up into separate networks (`matrix-homeserver`, `matrix-addons`, `matrix-monitoring`, `matrix-exim-relay`, etc). Components are only joined to the networks they need and should (for the most part) not be able to access unrelated things.
Carrying out these container networking changes necessitated modifying many components, so **we're hoping not too many bugs were introduced in the process**.
We've refrained from creating too many container networks (e.g. one for each component), to avoid exhausting Docker's default network pool and contaminating the container networks list too much.
### Metrics exposure changes
This section is for people who are exposing monitoring metrics publicly, to be consumed by an external Prometheus server.
Previously, `matrix-nginx-proxy` was potentially password-protecting all `/metrics/*` endpoints with the same username and password (specified as plain-text in your `vars.yml` configuration file).
From now on, there are new variables for doing roughly the same - `matrix_metrics_exposure_enabled`, `matrix_metrics_exposure_http_basic_auth_enabled` and `matrix_metrics_exposure_http_basic_auth_users`. See the [Prometheus & Grafana](./docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md) docs page for details.
`matrix-nginx-proxy` is not acting as a "global guardian" anymore. Now, each role provides its own metrics exposure and protection by registering with Traefik. Nevertheless, all roles are wired (via playbook configuration in `group_vars/matrix_servers`) to obey these new `matrix_metrics_exposure_*` variables. We've eliminated the centralization, but have kept the ease of use. Now, you can also do per-service password-protection (with different credentials), should you need to do that for some reason.
The playbook will tell you about all variables that you need to migrate during runtime, so rest assured - you shouldn't be able to miss anything!
### Matrix static files
As mentioned above, static files like `/.well-known/matrix/*` or your base domain's `index.html` file (when [serving the base domain via the Matrix server](./docs/configuring-playbook-base-domain-serving.md) was enabled) were generated by the `matrix-base` or `matrix-nginx-proxy` roles and put into a `/matrix/static-files` directory on the server. Then `matrix-nginx-proxy` was serving all these static files.
All of this has been extracted into a new `matrix-static-files` Ansible role that's part of the playbook. The static files generated by this new role still live at roughly the same place (`/matrix/static-files/public` directory, instead of `/matrix/static-files`).
The playbook will migrate and update the `/.well-known/matrix/*` files automatically but not your own files in `nginx-proxy/data/matrix-domain/` you will need to back these up yourself otherwise they will be lost. It will also warn you about usage of old variable names, so you can adapt to the new names.
Some of you have been voicing their concerns (for a long time) about Traefik being too slow and nginx being better.
Some online benchmarks support this by demonstrating slightly higher SSL-termination performance in favor of nginx. The upcoming Traefik v3 release is [said to](https://medium.com/beyn-technology/is-nginx-dead-is-traefik-v3-20-faster-than-traefik-v2-f28ffb7eed3e) improve Traefik's SSL performance by some 20%, but that still ends up being somewhat slower than nginx.
We believe that using Traefik provides way too many benefits to worry about this minor performance impairment.
The heaviest part of running a Matrix homeserver is all the slow and potentially inefficient things the homeserver (e.g. Synapse) is doing. These things affect performance much more than whatever reverse-proxy is in front. Your server will die the same way by joining the famously large **Matrix HQ** room, no matter which reverse-proxy you put in front.
Even our previously mentioned benchmarks (yielding ~1300 rps) are synthetic - hitting a useless `/_matrix/client/versions` endpoint. Real-use does much more than this.
If this is still not convincing enough for you and you want the best possible performance, consider [Fronting Traefik with another reverse-proxy](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#fronting-the-integrated-reverse-proxy-webserver-with-another-reverse-proxy) (thus having the slowest part - SSL termination - happen elsewhere) or [Using no reverse-proxy on the Matrix side at all](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#using-no-reverse-proxy-on-the-matrix-side-at-all). The playbook will not get in your way of doing that, but these options may make your life much harder. Performance comes at a cost, after all.
### Migration procedure
The updated playbook will automatically perform some migration tasks for you:
1. It will stop and remove the `matrix-nginx-proxy` systemd service and container for you. This behavior cannot be disabled. It's essential that this service gets stopped, because it remaining running (and having container labels) may confuse Traefik as to where to route HTTP requests.
2. It will delete the `/matrix/nginx-proxy` directory and all files within it. You can disable this behavior by adding `matrix_playbook_migration_matrix_nginx_proxy_uninstallation_enabled: false` to your `vars.yml` configuration file. Doing so will leave its data around.
3. It will delete the `/matrix/ssl` directory and all files within it. You can disable this behavior by adding `matrix_playbook_migration_matrix_ssl_uninstallation_enabled: false` to your `vars.yml` configuration file. If you have some important certificates there for some reason, take them out or temporarily disable removal of these files until you do.
4. It will tell you about all variables (`matrix_nginx_proxy_*` and many others - even from other roles) that have changed during this large nginx-elimination upgrade. You can disable this behavior by adding `matrix_playbook_migration_matrix_nginx_proxy_elimination_variable_transition_checks_enabled: false` to your `vars.yml` configuration file.
5. It will tell you about any leftover `matrix_nginx_proxy_*` variables in your `vars.yml` file. You can disable this behavior by adding `matrix_playbook_migration_matrix_nginx_proxy_leftover_variable_validation_checks_enabled: false` to your `vars.yml` configuration file.
6. It will tell you about any leftover `matrix_ssl_*` variables in your `vars.yml` file. You can disable this behavior by adding `matrix_playbook_migration_matrix_ssl_leftover_variable_checks_enabled: false` to your `vars.yml` configuration file.
We don't recommend changing these variables and suppressing warnings, unless you know what you're doing.
**Most people should just upgrade as per-normal**, bearing in mind that a lot has changed and some issues may arise.
The playbook would guide you through renamed variables automatically.
### Conclusion
Thousands of lines of code were changed across hundreds of files.
All addons (bridges, bots) were rewired in terms of container networking and in terms of how they reach the homeserver.
I don't actively use all the ~100 components offered by the playbook (no one does), nor do I operate servers exercising all edge-cases. As such, issues may arise. Please have patience and report (or try to fix) these issues!
People who are [Fronting the integrated Traefik reverse-proxy webserver with another reverse-proxy](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#fronting-the-integrated-reverse-proxy-webserver-with-another-reverse-proxy), as per our previous instructions are redefining `traefik_additional_entrypoints_auto` in their `vars.yml` configuration.
Such a full variable redefinion is intrustive, because it prevents the playbook from injecting additional entrypoints into the Traefik webserver. In the future, the playbook may have a need to do so.
For this reason, we no longer recommend completely redefining `traefik_additional_entrypoints_auto`.
The playbook now defines [various `matrix_playbook_public_matrix_federation_api_traefik_entrypoint_*` variables in the `defaults/main.yml` file](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/blob/master/roles/custom/matrix-base/defaults/main.yml) of the `matrix-base` role which can be used as a safer alternative to `traefik_additional_entrypoints_auto`.
Also, feel free to read the [Fronting the integrated Traefik reverse-proxy webserver with another reverse-proxy](./docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#fronting-the-integrated-reverse-proxy-webserver-with-another-reverse-proxy) documentation section again for additional details.
## matrix-reminder-bot update with more secure (backward-incompatible) default settings
**TLDR**: your updated (to [v0.3.0](https://github.com/anoadragon453/matrix-reminder-bot/releases/tag/v0.3.0)) [matrix-reminder-bot](./docs/configuring-playbook-bot-matrix-reminder-bot.md) is now more secure. By default, like other bridges/bots managed by the playbook, it will only provide its services to users of your own server (not to anyone, even across the Matrix Federation). If that's fine, there's nothing you need to do.
Maintenance of [matrix-reminder-bot](./docs/configuring-playbook-bot-matrix-reminder-bot.md) has been picked up by [Kim Brose](https://github.com/HarHarLinks) and [@svierne](https://github.com/svierne).
Thanks to them, a new [v0.3.0](https://github.com/anoadragon453/matrix-reminder-bot/releases/tag/v0.3.0) release is out. The new version is now available for the ARM64 architecture, so playbook users on this architecture will no longer need to wait for [self-building](./docs/self-building.md) to happen.
The new version also comes with new `allowlist` and `blocklist` settings, which make it possible to restrict who can use the bot. Previously anyone, even across the Matrix Federation could talk to it and schedule reminders.
The playbook defaults all bridges and bots (where possible) to only be exposed to users of the current homeserver, not users across federation.
Thanks to the new version of this bot making such a restriction possible, we're now making use of it. The playbook (via its `group_vars/matrix_servers` file) automatically enables the `allowlist` (`matrix_bot_matrix_reminder_bot_allowlist_enabled: true`) and configures it in such a way (`matrix_bot_matrix_reminder_bot_allowlist_regexes_auto`) so as to restrict the bot to your homeserver's users.
If you need **to undo or tweak these security improvements**, you can change your `vars.yml` file to:
- disable the allowlist (`matrix_bot_matrix_reminder_bot_allowlist_enabled: false`), making the bot allow usage by anyone, anywhere
- inject additional allowed servers or users by adding **additional** (on top of the default allowlist in `matrix_bot_matrix_reminder_bot_allowlist_regexes_auto`) custom regexes in the `matrix_bot_matrix_reminder_bot_allowlist_regexes_custom` list variable (see the [syntax reference](https://github.com/anoadragon453/matrix-reminder-bot/blob/1e910c0aa3469d280d93ee7e6c6d577227a3460c/sample.config.yaml#L43-L49))
- override the default allowlist (in the `group_vars/matrix_servers` file) by redefining `matrix_bot_matrix_reminder_bot_allowlist_regexes_auto`
## matrix-mailer has been replaced by the exim-relay external role
We're continuing our effort to make [the playbook use external roles for some things](#the-playbook-now-uses-external-roles-for-some-things), so as to avoid doing everything ourselves and to facilitate code re-use.
The `matrix-mailer` role has been moved to its own repository ([ansible-role-exim-relay](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-exim-relay)) that this playbook now includes.
To migrate:
- pull the playbook changes, as usual
- update your roles (run `just roles` or `make roles`)
- update your `vars.yml`, renaming `matrix_mailer`-prefixed variables to `exim_relay`-prefixed ones (e.g. `matrix_mailer_sender_address` -> `exim_relay_sender_address`). If you find none, it means you're using the default configuration and your migraiton job is even simpler.
- re-run the playbook (`install-all` or `setup-all`)
The playbook will take care of stopping the old `matrix-mailer` systemd service, relocating its directory and restarting it under the new name (`matrix-exim-relay.service`).
## mautrix-signal now powered by the new Go-based bridge
The old Python-based [mautrix-signal](https://github.com/mautrix/signal) bridge is no longer maintained upstream. It's also known to have issues linking new devices.
It seems like the path forward is to switch to the new mautrix-signal bridge written in Golang, which we did thanks to [PR #3031](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/3041) by [Pierre 'McFly' Marty](https://github.com/pm-McFly).
The playbook should **automatically migrate your mautrix-signal installation to the new bridge code**.
You will **need to relink all your devices** to continue your bridged conversations.
**TDLR**: if your Matrix server is federating (which it mostly likely is, unless you've [disabled federation](docs/configuring-playbook-federation.md#disabling-federation)), your public rooms will not only be joinable across federation (as they've always been), but from now on will be discoverable (made available as a list across federation). We're changing this by flipping the value for Synapse's `allow_public_rooms_over_federation` setting to `true`, going against the upstream default. Servers that disable federation are not affected. Servers that have public rooms which are not published to the room directory are also not affected.
We generally try to stick to the default configuration for Synapse (and all other components), unless these defaults seem wrong or harmful. One such previous case from a few months ago was us [Enabling `forget_rooms_on_leave` by default for Synapse](#enabling-forget_rooms_on_leave-by-default-for-synapse) - the default value was making Synapse more wasteful of resources by default.
Today, we're going against upstream defaults again and flipping the `allow_public_rooms_over_federation` configuration option to `true`.
This way, public rooms on your server will be made discoverable by others via federation, using the [`GET /_matrix/federation/v1/publicRooms` of the Server-Server API](https://spec.matrix.org/v1.8/server-server-api/#get_matrixfederationv1publicrooms).
The upstream Synapse default is `false` (disabled), so that public rooms are not exposed for other servers to discover (learn about their existence). Nevertheless, even if these rooms are not exposed (listed) for discovery, they are **still joinable** by anyone who knows their address or is invited to the room by an existing member.
**We go against the upstream default** in an effort to make Matrix federation more useful - a public room should be globally public - not only joinable, but also discoverable across federation.
The **historical reasoning** behind this change is as follows:
-`allow_public_rooms_over_federation` seems to have been enabled by default for Synapse until v1.7.0 (~2019), just like we believe it should be for a globally-federating network - rooms should be joinable and discoverable across federation.
- In Synapse v1.7.0 (~2019), `allow_public_rooms_over_federation` [got disabled](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/blob/e9069c9f919685606506f04527332e83fbfa44d9/docs/upgrade.md?plain=1#L1877-L1891) by default in a [security-by-obscurity](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_through_obscurity) workaround for misconfigured servers. See the [Avoiding unwelcome visitors on private Matrix servers](https://matrix.org/blog/2019/11/09/avoiding-unwelcome-visitors-on-private-matrix-servers/) `matrix.org` blog article. We believe that people wishing for a truly private server, should [disable federation](docs/configuring-playbook-federation.md#disabling-federation), instead of having a fully-federating server and trying to hide its public rooms. We also provide other workarounds below. We (and the Synapse team, obviously) believe that Matrix should federate by default, so federating the public room list seems to make sense.
- [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/) has been developing the free-software [Matrix Rooms Search](https://github.com/etkecc/mrs) project for a while now. One public (demo) instance of it is hosted at [matrixrooms.info](https://matrixrooms.info/). This search engine tries to go through the Matrix federation and discover & index public rooms to allow people to find them. We believe it's vital for Matrix (and any chat or social network for that matter) to be more discoverable, so that people can find communities and others to talk to. Today (on 23rd of October 2023), `matrixrooms.info` is indexing `23066` Matrix servers. Of these, only `1567` servers (7%) are making their public rooms discoverable. Who knows what wonderful communities and rooms are available on these 93% other Matrix servers that are supposedly federating, but are still gate-keeping their public room list. Indubitably, many of these servers are hosted via matrix-docker-ansible-deploy, so we feel partially responsible for making Matrix federation less useful.
Here are **actions you may wish to take** as a result of this change:
- (recommended) embrace the new default. If your Matrix server is federating, your public rooms have always been joinable across federation anyway. Exposing the list of public rooms does no harm and more-so does good by contributing to the usefulness of the Matrix network by facilitating room discovery.
- (switch to a better way of doings things on your semi-private server) The problem that the Synapse team appears to have solved by flipping the `allow_public_rooms_over_federation` default in Synapse v1.7.0 seems to for "mostly private" servers, which federate and have a bunch of rooms made public (and published in their room directory) in an effort to allow people on the same homeserver to easily find and join them (self-onboarding). With the introduction of Matrix Spaces, you can reorganize your flow around spaces - you can auto-join your users to a Matrix Space (via Synapse's `auto_join_rooms` setting - controlled by our `matrix_synapse_auto_join_rooms` variable), then add a bunch of rooms to the space and make them joinable by people belonging to the space. That is to say, do not make rooms public and do not publish them to the room directory unless they are really public. Instead, use other mechanisms for semi-public rooms or private rooms. One alternative is to stick to what you're doing (public rooms published to your rooms directory) but having a `m.federate: true` flag set during creation (clients like Element have a nice UI checkbox for this) to explicitly disable federation for them.
- (keeping the old behavior) if you wish to keep doing what you're doing (keeping your Matrix server federating, but hiding its public rooms list), add `matrix_synapse_allow_public_rooms_over_federation: false` to your `vars.yml` configuration. This restores the old behavior. You may also consider [disabling federation](docs/configuring-playbook-federation.md#disabling-federation) completely instead of relying on security-by-obscurity measures.
From now on, the [Postgres Ansible role](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-postgres) automatically tunes your Postgres configuration with the same [calculation logic](https://github.com/le0pard/pgtune/blob/master/src/features/configuration/configurationSlice.js) that powers https://pgtune.leopard.in.ua/.
Our [Tuning PostgreSQL](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#tuning-postgresql) documentation page has details about how you can turn auto-tuning off or adjust the automatically-determined Postgres configuration parameters manually.
People who [enable load-balancing with Synapse workers](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#load-balancing-with-workers) no longer need to increase the maximum number of Postgres connections manually (previously done via `postgres_process_extra_arguments`). There's a new variable (`postgres_max_connections`) for controlling this number and the playbook automatically raises its value from `200` to `500` for setups which enable workers.
Thanks to [Aine](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc) of [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/), the playbook can now set up the [SchildiChat](https://github.com/SchildiChat/schildichat-desktop) client.
See our [Configuring SchildiChat](docs/configuring-playbook-client-schildichat.md) documentation to get started.
Thanks to [Johan Swetzén](https://github.com/jswetzen)'s efforts (who finished what was started by [James Reilly](https://github.com/hanthor) and [Shreyas Ajjarapu](https://github.com/shreyasajj)), the playbook now supports bridging to Android SMS and Apple iMessage via the [mautrix-wsproxy](https://github.com/mautrix/wsproxy) service (in combination with a [mautrix-imessage](https://github.com/mautrix/imessage) bridge running on your Mac or Android phone).
See our [Setting up Mautrix wsproxy for bridging Android SMS or Apple iMessage](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-wsproxy.md) documentation page for getting started.
[matrix-registration-bot](docs/configuring-playbook-bot-matrix-registration-bot.md) got some updates and now supports password-only-based login. Therefore the bot now doesn't need any manual configuration except setting a password in your `vars.yml`. The bot will be registered as admin and access tokens will be obtained automatically by the bot.
**For existing users** You need to set `matrix_bot_matrix_registration_bot_bot_password` if you previously only used `matrix_bot_matrix_registration_bot_bot_access_token`. Please also remove the following deprecated settings
Thanks to [Shreyas Ajjarapu](https://github.com/shreyasajj)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Google Messages](https://messages.google.com/) via the [mautrix-gmessages](https://github.com/mautrix/gmessages) bridge. See our [Setting up Mautrix Google Messages bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-gmessages.md) documentation page for getting started.
Thanks to [Michael Hollister](https://github.com/Michael-Hollister) from [FUTO](https://www.futo.org/), the creators of the [Circles app](https://circu.li/), the playbook can now set up [matrix-media-repo](https://github.com/turt2live/matrix-media-repo) - an alternative way to store homeserver media files, powered by a homeserver-independent implementation which supports S3 storage, IPFS, deduplication and other advanced features.
To learn more see our [Storing Matrix media files using matrix-media-repo](docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-media-repo.md) documentation page.
## Enabling `forget_rooms_on_leave` by default for Synapse
With the [Synapse v1.84.0 update](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/2698), we've also **changed the default value** of the `forget_rooms_on_leave` setting of Synapse to a value of `true`.
This way, **when you leave a room, Synapse will now forget it automatically**.
The upstream Synapse default is `false` (disabled), so that you must forget rooms manually after leaving.
**We go against the upstream default** ([somewhat controversially](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/2700)) in an effort to make Synapse leaner and potentially do what we believe most users would expect their homeserver to be doing.
If you'd like to go back to the old behavior, add the following to your configuration: `matrix_synapse_forget_rooms_on_leave: false`
**TLDR**: the `matrix-jitsi` role is now included from the [ansible-role-jitsi](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-jitsi) repository, part of the [MASH playbook](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/mash-playbook). Some variables have been renamed. All functionality remains intact.
The `matrix-jitsi` role has been relocated in its own repository, part of the [MASH playbook](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/mash-playbook) project - an Ansible playbook for self-hosting [a growing list of FOSS software](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/mash-playbook/blob/main/docs/supported-services.md). If hosting a Jitsi stack on the Matrix server itself did not stand right with you or you always wanted to host most stuff, you can now use this new playbook to do so.
As part of the extraction process of this role out of the Matrix playbook, a few other things improved:
- **native Traefik support** has been added
- **support for hosting under a subpath** has been added, although it suffers from a few minor issues listed [here](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/mash-playbook/blob/main/docs/services/jitsi.md#url)
ntfy provides a web app, which is now disabled by default, because it may be unknown to and unused by most users of this playbook. You can enable it by setting `ntfy_web_root: "app"` (see [ntfy documentation](docs/configuring-playbook-ntfy.md)).
This change was already applied a while before this entry, but as some users were reporting the missing web app, this entry was added (see [#2529](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/2529)).
## The matrix-prometheus role lives independently now
**TLDR**: the `matrix-prometheus` role is now included from the [ansible-role-prometheus](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-prometheus) repository, part of the [MASH playbook](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/mash-playbook). Some variables have been renamed. All functionality remains intact.
The `matrix-prometheus` role has been relocated in its own repository, part of the [MASH playbook](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/mash-playbook) project - an Ansible playbook for self-hosting [a growing list of FOSS software](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/mash-playbook/blob/main/docs/supported-services.md). If hosting a Prometheus stack on the Matrix server itself did not stand right with you or you always wanted to host most stuff, you can now use this new playbook to do so.
Extracting the Prometheus role out of this Matrix playbook required huge internal refactoring to the way the Prometheus configuration (scraping jobs) is generated. If you notice any breakage after upgrading, let us know.
Thanks to [Aine](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc) of [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/), the playbook can now set up [rust-synapse-compress-state](https://github.com/matrix-org/rust-synapse-compress-state)'s `synapse_auto_compressor` tool to run periodically.
If enabled, `synapse_auto_compressor` runs on a schedule and compresses your Synapse database's `state_groups` table. It was possible to run `rust-synapse-compress-state` manually via the playbook even before - see [Compressing state with rust-synapse-compress-state](docs/maintenance-synapse.md#compressing-state-with-rust-synapse-compress-state). However, using `synapse_auto_compressor` is better, because:
- it runs on a more up-to-date version of `rust-synapse-compress-state`
- it's a set-it-and-forget-it tool that you can enable and never have to deal with manual compression anymore
This tool needs to be enabled manually, for now. In the future, we're considering enabling it by default for all Synapse installations.
See our [Setting up synapse-auto-compressor](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse-auto-compressor.md) documentation to get started.
Thanks to [Benjamin Kampmann](https://github.com/gnunicorn) for [getting it started](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/2515), [FSG-Cat](https://github.com/FSG-Cat) for fixing it up and me ([Slavi](https://github.com/spantaleev)) for polishing it up, the playbook can now install and configure the [sliding-sync proxy](https://github.com/matrix-org/sliding-sync).
The upcoming Element X clients ([Element X iOS](https://github.com/vector-im/element-x-ios) and [Element X Android](https://github.com/vector-im/element-x-android)) require the `sliding-sync` proxy to do their job. **These clients are still in beta** (especially Element X Android, which requires manual compilation to get it working with a non-`matrix.org` homeseserver). Playbook users can now easily give these clients a try and help test them thanks to us having `sliding-sync` support.
**TLDR**: the `matrix-etherpad` role is now included from [another repository](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-etherpad). Some variables have been renamed. All functionality remains intact.
**TLDR**: new installations will now default to Traefik as their reverse-proxy. Existing users need to explicitly choose their reverse-proxy type. [Switching to Traefik](#how-do-i-switch-my-existing-setup-to-traefik) is strongly encouraged. `matrix-nginx-proxy` may break over time and will ultimately be removed.
As mentioned 2 weeks ago in [(Backward Compatibility) Reverse-proxy configuration changes and initial Traefik support](#backward-compatibility-reverse-proxy-configuration-changes-and-initial-traefik-support), the playbook is moving to Traefik as its default SSL-terminating reverse-proxy.
Until now, we've been doing the migration gradually and keeping full backward compatibility. New installations were defaulting to `matrix-nginx-proxy` (just like before), while existing installations were allowed to remain on `matrix-nginx-proxy` as well. This makes things very difficult for us, because we need to maintain and think about lots of different setups:
- Traefik managed by the playbook
- Traefik managed by the user in another way
- another reverse-proxy on the same host (`127.0.0.1` port exposure)
- another reverse-proxy on another host (`0.0.0.0` port exposure)
-`matrix-nginx-proxy` - an `nginx` container managed by the playbook
-`nginx` webserver operated by the user, running without a container on the same server
Each change we do and each new feature that comes in needs to support all these different ways of reverse-proxying. Because `matrix-nginx-proxy` was the default and pretty much everyone was (and still is) using it, means that new PRs also come with `matrix-nginx-proxy` as their main focus and Traefik as an afterthought, which means we need to spend hours fixing up Traefik support.
We can't spend all this time maintaining so many different configurations anymore. Traefik support has been an option for 2 weeks and lots of people have already migrated their server and have tested things out. Traefik is what we use and preferentially test for.
It's time for the **next step in our migration process** to Traefik and elimination of `matrix-nginx-proxy`:
- Traefik is now the default reverse-proxy for new installations
- All existing users need to explicitly choose their reverse-proxy type by defining the `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type` variable in their `vars.yml` configuration file. We strongly encourage existing users to [switch the Traefik](#how-to-switch-an-existing-setup-to-traefik), as the nginx setup is bound to become more and more broken over time until it's ultimately removed
### How do I switch my existing setup to Traefik?
**For users who are on `matrix-nginx-proxy`** (the default reverse-proxy provided by the playbook), switching to Traefik can happen with a simple configuration change. Follow this section from 2 weeks ago: [How do I explicitly switch to Traefik right now?](#how-do-i-explicitly-switch-to-traefik-right-now).
If you experience trouble:
1. Follow [How do I remain on matrix-nginx-proxy?](#how-do-i-remain-on-matrix-nginx-proxy) to bring your server back online using the old reverse-proxy
2. Ask for help in our [support channels](README.md#support)
3. Try switching to Traefik again later
**For users with a more special reverse-proxying setup** (another nginx server, Apache, Caddy, etc.), the migration may not be so smooth. Follow the [Using your own webserver](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md) guide. Ideally, your custom reverse-proxy will be configured in such a way that it **fronts the Traefik reverse-proxy** provided by the playbook. Other means of reverse-proxying are more fragile and may be deprecated in the future.
### I already use my own Traefik server. How do I plug that in?
See the [Traefik managed by the playbook](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#traefik-managed-by-the-playbook) section.
### Why is matrix-nginx-proxy used even after switching to Traefik?
This playbook manages many different services. All these services were initially integrated with `matrix-nginx-proxy`.
While we migrate all these components to have native Traefik support, some still go through nginx internally (Traefik -> local `matrix-nginx-proxy` -> component).
As time goes on, internal reliance on `matrix-nginx-proxy` will gradually decrease until it's completely removed.
### How do I remain on matrix-nginx-proxy?
Most new work and testing targets Traefik, so remaining on nginx is **not** "the good old stable" option, but rather the "still available, but largely untested and likely to be broken very soon" option.
To proceed regardless of this warning, add `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type: playbook-managed-nginx` to your configuration.
At some point in the **near** future (days, or even weeks at most), we hope to completely get rid of `matrix-nginx-proxy` (or break it enough to make it unusable), so you **will soon be forced to migrate** anyway. Plan your migration accordingly.
### How do I keep using my own other reverse-proxy?
We recommend that you follow the guide for [Fronting the integrated reverse-proxy webserver with another reverse-proxy](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#fronting-the-integrated-reverse-proxy-webserver-with-another-reverse-proxy).
Thanks to [Benjamin Kampmann](https://github.com/gnunicorn), the playbook can now install and configure the [rageshake](https://github.com/matrix-org/rageshake) bug report server.
The playbook can now help you customize Synapse's templates.
Additional details are available in the [Customizing templates](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#customizing-templates) section of our Synapse documentation.
The `matrix-redis` role (which configures [Redis](https://redis.io/)) has been extracted from the playbook and now lives in its [own repository](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-redis). This makes it possible to easily use it in other Ansible playbooks.
You need to **update your roles** (`just roles` or `make roles`) regardless of whether you're enabling Ntfy or not. If you're making use of Ntfy via this playbook, you will need to update variable references in your `vars.yml` file (`matrix_redis_` -> `redis_`).
The `matrix-ntfy` role (which configures [Ntfy](https://ntfy.sh/)) has been extracted from the playbook and now lives in its [own repository](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-ntfy). This makes it possible to easily use it in other Ansible playbooks.
You need to **update your roles** (`just roles` or `make roles`) regardless of whether you're enabling Ntfy or not. If you're making use of Ntfy via this playbook, you will need to update variable references in your `vars.yml` file (`matrix_ntfy_` -> `ntfy_`).
The `matrix-grafana` role (which configures [Grafana](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md)) has been extracted from the playbook and now lives in its [own repository](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-grafana). This makes it possible to easily use it in other Ansible playbooks.
You need to **update your roles** (`just roles` or `make roles`) regardless of whether you're enabling Grafana or not. If you're making use of Grafana via this playbook, you will need to update variable references in your `vars.yml` file (`matrix_grafana_` -> `grafana_`).
Thanks to [moan0s](https://github.com/moan0s), the `matrix-backup-borg` role (which configures [BorgBackup](docs/configuring-playbook-backup-borg.md)) has been extracted from the playbook and now lives in its [own repository](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-backup_borg). This makes it possible to easily use it in other Ansible playbooks and will become part of [nextcloud-docker-ansible-deploy](https://github.com/spantaleev/nextcloud-docker-ansible-deploy) soon.
You need to **update your roles** (`just roles` or `make roles`) regardless of whether you're enabling Borg's backup functionality or not. If you're making use of BorgBackup via this playbook, you will need to update variable references in your `vars.yml` file (`matrix_backup_borg_` -> `backup_borg_`).
- there's a new `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type` variable (see [roles/custom/matrix-base/defaults/main.yml](roles/custom/matrix-base/defaults/main.yml)), which lets you tell the playbook what reverse-proxy setup you'd like to have. This makes it easier for people who want to do reverse-proxying in other ways.
- the default reverse-proxy (`matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type`) is still `playbook-managed-nginx` (via `matrix-nginx-proxy`), for now. **Existing `matrix-nginx-proxy` users should not observe any changes** and can stay on this for now.
- **Users who use their [own other webserver](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md) (e.g. Apache, etc.) need to change** `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type` to something like `other-on-same-host`, `other-on-another-host` or `other-nginx-non-container`
- we now have **optional [Traefik](https://traefik.io/) support**, so you could easily host Matrix and other Traefik-native services in containers on the same server. Traefik support is still experimental (albeit, good enough) and will improve over time. It does work, but certain esoteric features may not be there yet.
- **Traefik will become the default reverse-proxy in the near future**. `matrix-nginx-proxy` will either remain as an option, or be completely removed to simplify the playbook
### Motivation for redoing our reverse-proxy setup
The playbook has supported various reverse-proxy setups for a long time.
We have various configuration variables (`matrix_nginx_proxy_enabled`, various `_host_bind_port` variables, etc.) which allow the playbook to adapt to these different setups. The whole situation was messy though - hard to figure out and with lots of variables to toggle to make things work as you'd expect - huge **operational complexity**.
We love containers, proven by the fact that **everything** that this playbook manages runs in a container. Yet, we weren't allowing people to easily host other web-exposed containers alongside Matrix services on the same server. We were using `matrix-nginx-proxy` (our integrated [nginx](https://nginx.org/) server), which was handling web-exposure and SSL termination for our own services, but we **weren't helping you with all your other containers**.
People who were **using `matrix-nginx-proxy`** were on the happy path on which everything worked well by default (Matrix-wise), **but** could not easily run other web-exposed services on their Matrix server because `matrix-nginx-proxy` was occupying ports `80` and `443`. Other services which wanted to get web exposure either had to be plugged into `matrix-nginx-proxy` (somewhat difficult) or people had to forgo using `matrix-nginx-proxy` in favor of something else.
Of those that decided to forgo `matrix-nginx-proxy`, many were **using nginx** on the same server without a container. This was likely some ancient nginx version, depending on your choice of distro. The Matrix playbook was trying to be helpful and even with `matrix_nginx_proxy_enabled: false` was still generating nginx configuration in `/matrix/nginx-proxy/conf.d`. Those configuration files were adapted for inclusion into an nginx server running locally. Disabling the `matrix-nginx-proxy` role like this, yet still having it produce files is a bit disgusting, but it's what we've had since the early beginnings of this playbook.
Others still, wanted to run Matrix locally (no SSL certificates), regardless of which web server technology this relied on, and then **reverse-proxy from another machine on the network** which was doing SSL termination. These people were:
- *either* relying on `matrix_nginx_proxy_enabled: false` as well, combined with exposing services manually (setting `_bind_port` variables)
- *or* better yet, they were keeping `matrix-nginx-proxy` enabled, but in `http`-only mode (no SSL certificate retrieval).
Despite this operational complexity, things worked and were reasonably flexible to adapt to all these situations.
When using `matrix-nginx-proxy` as is, we still had another problem - one of **internal playbook complexity**. Too many services need to be web-exposed (port 80/443, SSL certificates). Because of this, they all had to integrate with the `matrix-nginx-proxy` role. Tens of different roles explicitly integrating with `matrix-nginx-proxy` is not what we call clean. The `matrix-nginx-proxy` role contains variables for many of these roles (yikes). Other roles were more decoupled from it and were injecting configuration into `matrix-nginx-proxy` at runtime - see all the `inject_into_nginx_proxy.yml` task files in this playbook (more decoupled, but still.. yikes).
The next problem is one of **efficiency, interoperability and cost-saving**. We're working on other playbooks:
- [vaultwarden-docker-ansible-deploy](https://github.com/spantaleev/vaultwarden-docker-ansible-deploy) for hosting the [Vaultwarden](https://github.com/dani-garcia/vaultwarden) server - an alternative implementation of the [Bitwarden](https://bitwarden.com/) password manager
- [gitea-docker-ansible-deploy](https://github.com/spantaleev/gitea-docker-ansible-deploy) - for hosting the [Gitea](https://gitea.io/) git source code hosting service
- [nextcloud-docker-ansible-deploy](https://github.com/spantaleev/nextcloud-docker-ansible-deploy) - for hosting the [Nextcloud](https://nextcloud.com/) groupware platform
We'd love for users to be able to **seamlessly use all these playbooks (and others, even) against a single server**. We don't want `matrix-nginx-proxy` to have a monopoly on port `80`/`443` and make it hard for other services to join in on the party. Such a thing forces people into running multiple servers (one for each service), which does provide nice security benefits, but is costly and ineffiecient. We'd like to make self-hosting these services cheap and easy.
These other playbooks have been using [Traefik](https://traefik.io/) as their default reverse-proxy for a long time. They can all coexist nicely together (as an example, see the [Interoperability](https://github.com/spantaleev/nextcloud-docker-ansible-deploy/blob/master/docs/configuring-playbook-interoperability.md) documentation for the [Nextcloud playbook](https://github.com/spantaleev/nextcloud-docker-ansible-deploy)). Now that this playbook is gaining Traefik support, it will be able to interoperate with them. If you're going this way, make sure to have the Matrix playbook install Traefik and have the others use `*_reverse_proxy_type: other-traefik-container`.
Finally, at [etke.cc - a managed Matrix server hosting service](https://etke.cc) (built on top of this playbook, and coincidentally [turning 2 years old today](https://etke.cc/news/upsyw4ykbtgmwhz8k7ukldx0zbbfq-fh0iqi3llixi0/) 🎉), we're allowing people to host some additional services besides Matrix components. Exposing these services to the web requires ugly hacks and configuration files being dropped into `/matrix/nginx-proxy/conf.d`. We believe that everything should run in independent containers and be exposed to the web via a Traefik server, without a huge Ansible role like `matrix-nginx-proxy` that everything else needs to integrate with.
### How do these changes fix all these problems?
The new `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type` lets you easily specify your preferred reverse-proxy type, including `other-on-same-host`, `other-on-another-host` and `none`, so people who'd like to reverse-proxy with their own web server have more options now.
Using Traefik greatly simplifies things, so going forward we'll have a simpler and easier to maintain playbook, which is also interoperable with other services.
Traefik is a web server, which has been specifically **designed for reverse-proxying to services running in containers**. It's ideal for usage in an Ansible playbook which runs everything in containers.
**Traefik obtains SSL certificates automatically**, so there's no need for plugging additional tools like [Certbot](https://certbot.eff.org/) into your web server (like we were doing in the `matrix-nginx-proxy` role). No more certificate renewal timers, web server reloading timers, etc. It's just simpler.
Traefik is a **modern web server**. [HTTP/3](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/routing/entrypoints/#http3) is supported already (experimentally) and will move to stable soon, in the upcoming Traefik v3 release.
Traefik does not lock important functionality we'd like to use into [plus packages like nginx does](https://www.nginx.com/products/nginx/), leading us to resolve to configuration workarounds. The default Traefik package is good enough as it is.
### Where we're at right now?
`matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type` still defaults to a value of `playbook-managed-nginx`.
Unless we have some regression, **existing `matrix-nginx-proxy` users should be able to update their Matrix server and not observe any changes**. Their setup should still remain on nginx and everything should still work as expected.
**Users using [their own webservers](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md) will need to change `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type`** to something like `other-on-same-host`, `other-on-another-host` or `other-nginx-non-container`. Previously, they could toggle `matrix_nginx_proxy_enabled` to `false`, and that made the playbook automatically expose services locally. Currently, we only do this if you change the reverse-proxy type to `other-on-same-host`, `other-on-another-host` or `other-nginx-non-container`.
You may still need to keep certain old `matrix_nginx_proxy_*` variables (like `matrix_nginx_proxy_base_domain_serving_enabled`), even when using Traefik. For now, we recommend keeping all `matrix_nginx_proxy_*` variables just in case. In the future, reliance on `matrix-nginx-proxy` will be removed.
Switching to Traefik will obtain new SSL certificates from Let's Encrypt (stored in `/matrix/traefik/ssl/acme.json`). **The switch is reversible**. You can always go back to `playbook-managed-nginx` if Traefik is causing you trouble.
**Note**: toggling `matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type` between Traefik and nginx will uninstall the Traefik role and all of its data (under `/matrix/traefik`), so you may run into a Let's Encrypt rate limit if you do it often.
Treafik directly reverse-proxies to **some** services right now, but for most other services it goes through `matrix-nginx-proxy` (e.g. Traefik -> `matrix-nginx-proxy` -> [Ntfy](docs/configuring-playbook-ntfy.md)). So, even if you opt into Traefik, you'll still see `matrix-nginx-proxy` being installed in local-only mode. This will improve with time.
Some services (like [Coturn](docs/configuring-playbook-turn.md) and [Postmoogle](docs/configuring-playbook-bot-postmoogle.md)) cannot be reverse-proxied to directly from Traefik, so they require direct access to SSL certificate files extracted out of Traefik. The playbook does this automatically thanks to a new [com.devture.ansible.role.traefik_certs_dumper](https://github.com/devture/com.devture.ansible.role.traefik_certs_dumper) role utilizing the [traefik-certs-dumper](https://github.com/ldez/traefik-certs-dumper) tool.
Our Traefik setup mostly works, but certain esoteric features may not work. If you have a default setup, we expect you to have a good experience.
### Where we're going in the near future?
The `matrix-nginx-proxy` role is quite messy. It manages both nginx and Certbot and its certificate renewal scripts and timers. It generates configuration even when the role is disabled (weird). Although it doesn't directly reach into variables from other roles, it has explicit awareness of various other services that it reverse-proxies to (`roles/custom/matrix-nginx-proxy/templates/nginx/conf.d/matrix-ntfy.conf.j2`, etc.). We'd like to clean this up. The only way is probably to just get rid of the whole thing at some point.
For now, `matrix-nginx-proxy` will stay around.
As mentioned above, Traefik still reverse-proxies to some (most) services by going through a local-only `matrix-nginx-proxy` server. This has allowed us to add Traefik support to the playbook early on (without having to rework all services), but is not the final goal. We'll **work on making each service support Traefik natively**, so that traffic will not need to go through `matrix-nginx-proxy` anymore. In the end, choosing Traefik should only give you a pure Traefik installation with no `matrix-nginx-proxy` in sight.
As Traefik support becomes complete and proves to be stable for a while, especially as a playbook default, we will **most likely remove `matrix-nginx-proxy` completely**. It will likely be some months before this happens though. Keeping support for both Traefik and nginx in the playbook will be a burden, especially with most of us running Traefik in the future. The Traefik role should do everything nginx does in a better and cleaner way. Users who use their own `nginx` server on the Matrix server will be inconvenienced, as nothing will generate ready-to-include nginx configuration for them. Still, we hope it won't be too hard to migrate their setup to another way of doing things, like:
- not using nginx anymore. A common reason for using nginx until now was that you were running other containers and you need your own nginx to reverse-proxy to all of them. Just switch them to Traefik as well.
- running Traefik in local-only mode (`traefik_config_entrypoint_web_secure_enabled: false`) and using some nginx configuration which reverse-proxies to Traefik (we should introduce examples for this in `examples/nginx`).
- **explicitly switching your server to Traefik** right now (see example configuration in [How do I explicitly switch to Traefik right now?](#how-do-i-explicitly-switch-to-traefik-right-now) above), testing, reporting troubles
- **adding native Traefik support to a role** (requires adding Traefik labels, etc.) - for inspiration, see these roles ([prometheus_node_exporter](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-prometheus-node-exporter), [prometheus_postgres_exporter](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-prometheus-postgres-exporter)) and how they're hooked into the playbook via [group_vars/matrix_servers](group_vars/matrix_servers).
- **adding reverse-proxying examples for nginx users** in `examples/nginx`. People who insist on using their own `nginx` server on the same Matrix host, can run Traefik in local-only mode (`traefik_config_entrypoint_web_secure_enabled: false`) and reverse-proxy to the Traefik server
Thanks to [Jakob S.](https://github.com/jakicoll) ([zakk gGmbH](https://github.com/zakk-it)), Jitsi can now use Matrix for authentication (via [Matrix User Verification Service](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-user-verification-service)).
Additional details are available in the [Authenticate using Matrix OpenID (Auth-Type 'matrix')](docs/configuring-playbook-jitsi.md#authenticate-using-matrix-openid-auth-type-matrix).
Thanks to [FSG-Cat](https://github.com/FSG-Cat), the playbook can now install and configure the [Draupnir](https://github.com/the-draupnir-project/Draupnir) moderation tool (bot). Draupnir is a fork of [Mjolnir](docs/configuring-playbook-bot-mjolnir.md) (which the playbook has supported for a long time) maintained by Mjolnir's former lead developer.
## The matrix-prometheus-postgres-exporter role lives independently now
**TLDR**: the `matrix-prometheus-postgres-exporter` role is now included from another repository. Some variables have been renamed. All functionality remains intact.
The `matrix-prometheus-postgres-exporter` role (which configures [Prometheus Postgres Exporter](https://github.com/prometheus-community/postgres_exporter)) has been extracted from the playbook and now lives in its own repository at https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-prometheus-postgres-exporter
It's still part of the playbook, but is now installed via `ansible-galaxy` (by running `just roles` / `make roles`). Some variables have been renamed (`matrix_prometheus_postgres_exporter_` -> `prometheus_postgres_exporter_`, etc.). The playbook will report all variables that you need to rename to get upgraded. All functionality remains intact.
The `matrix-prometheus-services-proxy-connect` role has bee adjusted to help integrate the new `prometheus_postgres_exporter` role with our own services (`matrix-nginx-proxy`)
Other roles which aren't strictly related to Matrix are likely to follow this fate of moving to their own repositories. Extracting them out allows other Ansible playbooks to make use of these roles easily.
Large Coturn deployments (with a huge range of ports specified via `matrix_coturn_turn_udp_min_port` and `matrix_coturn_turn_udp_max_port`) experience a huge slowdown with how Docker publishes all these ports (setting up firewall forwarding rules), which leads to a very slow Coturn service startup and shutdown.
Such deployments don't need to run Coturn within a private container network anymore. Coturn can now run with host-networking by using configuration like this:
Thanks to us [tightening Coturn security](#backward-compatibility-tightening-coturn-security-can-lead-to-connectivity-issues), running Coturn with host-networking should be safe and not expose neither other services running on the host, nor other services running on the local network.
## (Backward Compatibility) Tightening Coturn security can lead to connectivity issues
**TLDR**: users who run and access their Matrix server on a private network (likely a small minority of users) may experience connectivity issues with our new default Coturn blocklists. They may need to override `matrix_coturn_denied_peer_ips` and remove some IP ranges from it.
Inspired by [this security article](https://www.rtcsec.com/article/cve-2020-26262-bypass-of-coturns-access-control-protection/), we've decided to make use of Coturn's `denied-peer-ip` functionality to prevent relaying network traffic to certain private IP subnets. This ensures that your Coturn server won't accidentally try to forward traffic to certain services running on your local networks. We run Coturn in a container and in a private container network by default, which should prevent such access anyway, but having additional block layers in place is better.
If you access your Matrix server from a local network and need Coturn to relay to private IP addresses, you may observe that relaying is now blocked due to our new default `denied-peer-ip` lists (specified in `matrix_coturn_denied_peer_ips`). If you experience such connectivity problems, consider overriding this setting in your `vars.yml` file and removing certain networks from it.
## The matrix-prometheus-node-exporter role lives independently now
**TLDR**: the `matrix-prometheus-node-exporter` role is now included from another repository. Some variables have been renamed. All functionality remains intact.
The `matrix-prometheus-node-exporter` role (which configures [Prometheus node exporter](https://github.com/prometheus/node_exporter)) has been extracted from the playbook and now lives in its own repository at https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-prometheus-node-exporter
It's still part of the playbook, but is now installed via `ansible-galaxy` (by running `just roles` / `make roles`). Some variables have been renamed (`matrix_prometheus_node_exporter_` -> `prometheus_node_exporter_`, etc.). The playbook will report all variables that you need to rename to get upgraded. All functionality remains intact.
A new `matrix-prometheus-services-proxy-connect` role was added to the playbook to help integrate the new `prometheus_node_exporter` role with our own services (`matrix-nginx-proxy`)
Other roles which aren't strictly related to Matrix are likely to follow this fate of moving to their own repositories. Extracting them out allows other Ansible playbooks to make use of these roles easily.
We've previously used [make](https://www.gnu.org/software/make/) for easily running some playbook commands (e.g. `make roles` which triggers `ansible-galaxy`, see [Makefile](Makefile)).
Our `Makefile` is still around and you can still run these commands.
In addition, we've added support for running commands via [just](https://github.com/casey/just) - a more modern command-runner alternative to `make`. Instead of `make roles`, you can now run `just roles` to accomplish the same.
Our [justfile](justfile) already defines some additional helpful **shortcut** commands that weren't part of our `Makefile`. Here are some examples:
-`just install-all` to trigger the much longer `ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=install-all,ensure-matrix-users-created,start` command
-`just install-all --ask-vault-pass` - commands also support additional arguments (`--ask-vault-pass` will be appended to the above installation command)
-`just run-tags install-mautrix-slack,start` - to run specific playbook tags
-`just start-all` - (re-)starts all services
-`just stop-group postgres` - to stop only the Postgres service
-`just register-user john secret-password yes` - registers a `john` user with the `secret-password` password and admin access (admin = `yes`)
Additional helpful commands and shortcuts may be defined in the future.
This is all completely optional. If you find it difficult to [install `just`](https://github.com/casey/just#installation) or don't find any of this convenient, feel free to run all commands manually.
Thanks to [Cody Neiman](https://github.com/xangelix)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Slack](https://slack.com/) via the [mautrix-slack](https://mau.dev/mautrix/slack) bridge. See our [Setting up Mautrix Slack bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-slack.md) documentation page for getting started.
**Note**: this is a new Slack bridge. The playbook still retains Slack bridging via [matrix-appservice-slack](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-slack.md) and [mx-puppet-slack](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-slack.md). You're free to use the bridge that serves you better, or even all three of them (for different users and use-cases).
Thanks to [@bertybuttface](https://github.com/bertybuttface), the playbook can now help you set up [matrix-chatgpt-bot](https://github.com/matrixgpt/matrix-chatgpt-bot) - a bot through which you can talk to the [ChatGPT](https://openai.com/blog/chatgpt/) model.
See our [Setting up matrix-bot-chatgpt](docs/configuring-playbook-bot-chatgpt.md) documentation to get started.
Just like we've [replaced Postgres with an external role](#matrix-postgres-has-been-replaced-by-the-comdevtureansiblerolepostgres-external-role) on 2022-11-28, we're now replacing `matrix-postgres-backup` with an external role - [com.devture.ansible.role.postgres_backup](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-postgres_backup).
**TLDR**: the tasks that install the integrated Postgres server now live in an external role - [ansible-role-postgres](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-postgres). You'll need to run `make roles` to install it, and to also rename your `matrix_postgres`-prefixed variables to use a `devture_postgres` prefix (e.g. `matrix_postgres_connection_password` -> `postgres_connection_password`). All your data will still be there! Some scripts have moved (`/usr/local/bin/matrix-postgres-cli` -> `/matrix/postgres/bin/cli`).
The `matrix-postgres` role that has been part of the playbook for a long time has been replaced with the [ansible-role-postgres](https://github.com/mother-of-all-self-hosting/ansible-role-postgres) role. This was done as part of our work to [use external roles for some things](#the-playbook-now-uses-external-roles-for-some-things) for better code re-use and maintainability.
The new role is an upgraded version of the old `matrix-postgres` role with these notable differences:
- it uses different names for its variables (`matrix_postgres` -> `devture_postgres`)
- when [Vacuuming PostgreSQL](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#vacuuming-postgresql), it will vacuum all your databases, not just the Synapse one
You'll need to run `make roles` to install the new role. You would also need to rename your `matrix_postgres`-prefixed variables to use a `devture_postgres` prefix.
Note: the systemd service still remains the same - `matrix-postgres.service`. Your data will still be in `/matrix/postgres`, etc.
Postgres-related scripts will be moved to `/matrix/postgres/bin` (`/usr/local/bin/matrix-postgres-cli` -> `/matrix/postgres/bin/cli`, etc). Also see [The playbook no longer installs scripts in /usr/local/bin](#the-playbook-no-longer-installs-scripts-in-usrlocalbin).
## The playbook no longer installs scripts to /usr/local/bin
The locations of various scripts installed by the playbook have changed.
The playbook no longer contaminates your `/usr/local/bin` directory.
All scripts installed by the playbook now live in `bin/` directories under `/matrix`. Some examples are below:
## 2x-5x performance improvements in playbook runtime
**TLDR**: the playbook is 2x faster for running `--tags=setup-all` (and various other tags). It also has new `--tags=install-*` tags (like `--tags=install-all`), which skip uninstallation tasks and bring an additional 2.5x speedup. In total, the playbook can maintain your server 5 times faster.
Our [etke.cc managed Matrix hosting service](https://etke.cc) runs maintenance against hundreds of servers, so the playbook being fast means a lot.
The [etke.cc Ansible playbook](https://github.com/etkecc/ansible) (which is an extension of this one) is growing to support more and more services (besides just Matrix), so the Matrix playbook being leaner prevents runtimes from becoming too slow and improves the customer experience.
Even when running `ansible-playbook` manually (as most of us here do), it's beneficial not to waste time and CPU resources.
Recently, a few large optimizations have been done to this playbook and its external roles (see [The playbook now uses external roles for some things](#the-playbook-now-uses-external-roles-for-some-things) and don't forget to run `make roles`):
1. Replacing Ansible `import_tasks` calls with `include_tasks`, which decreased runtime in half. Using `import_tasks` is slower and causes Ansible to go through and skip way too many tasks (tasks which could have been skipped altogether by not having Ansible include them in the first place). On an experimental VM, **deployment time was decreased from ~530 seconds to ~250 seconds**.
2. Introducing new `install-*` tags (`install-all` and `install-COMPONENT`, e.g. `install-synapse`, `install-bot-postmoogle`), which only run Ansible tasks pertaining to installation, while skipping uninstallation tasks. In most cases, people are maintaining the same setup or they're *adding* new components. Removing components is rare. Running thousands of uninstallation tasks each time is wasteful. On an experimental VM, **deployment time was decreased from ~250 seconds (`--tags=setup-all`) to ~100 seconds (`--tags=install-all`)**.
You can still use `--tags=setup-all`. In fact, that's the best way to ensure your server is reconciled with the `vars.yml` configuration.
If you know you haven't uninstalled any services since the last time you ran the playbook, you could run `--tags=install-all` instead and benefit from quicker runtimes.
It should be noted that a service may become "eligible for uninstallation" even if your `vars.yml` file remains the same. In rare cases, we toggle services from being auto-installed to being optional, like we did on the 17th of March 2022 when we made [ma1sd not get installed by default](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#compatibility-break-ma1sd-identity-server-no-longer-installed-by-default). In such rare cases, you'd also need to run `--tags=setup-all`.
From now on, the playbook automatically determines your server's architecture and sets the `matrix_architecture` variable accordingly.
You no longer need to set this variable manually in your `vars.yml` file.
# Docker and the Docker SDK for Python are now installed via external roles
We're continuing our effort to make [the playbook use external roles for some things](#the-playbook-now-uses-external-roles-for-some-things), so as to avoid doing everything ourselves and to facilitate code re-use.
Docker will now be installed on the server via the [geerlingguy.docker](https://github.com/geerlingguy/ansible-role-docker) Ansible role.
If you'd like to manage the Docker installation yourself, you can disable the playbook's installation of Docker by setting `matrix_playbook_docker_installation_enabled: false`.
The Docker SDK for Python (named `docker-python`, `python-docker`, etc. on the different platforms) is now also installed by another role ([com.devture.ansible.role.docker_sdk_for_python](https://github.com/devture/com.devture.ansible.role.docker_sdk_for_python)). To disable this role and install the necessary tools yourself, use `devture_docker_sdk_for_python_installation_enabled: false`.
If you're hitting issues with Docker installation or Docker SDK for Python installation, consider reporting bugs or contributing to these other projects.
These additional roles are downloaded into the playbook directory (to `roles/galaxy`) via an `ansible-galaxy ..` command. `make roles` is an easy shortcut for invoking the `ansible-galaxy` command to download these roles.
## (Backward Compatibility Break) Changing how reverse-proxying to Synapse works - now via a `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` service
**TLDR**: There's now a `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` nginx service, which helps with reverse-proxying to Synapse and its various worker processes (if workers are enabled), so that `matrix-nginx-proxy` can be relieved of this role. `matrix-nginx-proxy` still remains as the public SSL-terminating reverse-proxy in the playbook. `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` is just one more reverse-proxy thrown into the mix for convenience. People with a more custom reverse-proxying configuration may be affected - see [Webserver configuration](#webserver-configuration) below.
### Background
Previously, `matrix-nginx-proxy` forwarded requests to Synapse directly. When Synapse is running in worker mode, the reverse-proxying configuration is more complicated (different requests need to go to different Synapse worker processes). `matrix-nginx-proxy` had configuration for sending each URL endpoint to the correct Synapse worker responsible for handling it. However, sometimes people like to disable `matrix-nginx-proxy` (for whatever reason) as detailed in [Using your own webserver, instead of this playbook's nginx proxy](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md).
Because `matrix-nginx-proxy` was so central to request forwarding, when it was disabled and Synapse was running with workers enabled, there was nothing which could forward requests to the correct place anymore.. which caused [problems such as this one affecting Dimension](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/2090).
### Solution
From now on, `matrix-nginx-proxy` is relieved of its function of reverse-proxying to Synapse and its various worker processes.
This role is now handled by the new `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` nginx service and works even if `matrix-nginx-proxy` is disabled.
The purpose of the new `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` service is to:
- serve as a companion to Synapse and know how to reverse-proxy to Synapse correctly (no matter if workers are enabled or not)
- provide a unified container address for reaching Synapse (no matter if workers are enabled or not)
-`matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion:8008` for Synapse Client-Server API traffic
-`matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion:8048` for Synapse Server-Server (Federation) API traffic
- simplify `matrix-nginx-proxy` configuration - it now only needs to send requests to `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` or `matrix-dendrite`, etc., without having to worry about workers
- allow reverse-proxying to Synapse, even if `matrix-nginx-proxy` is disabled
`matrix-nginx-proxy` still remains as the public SSL-terminating reverse-proxy in the playbook. All traffic goes through it before reaching any of the services.
It's just that now the Synapse traffic is routed through `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` like this:
(`matrix-nginx-proxy` -> `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` -> (`matrix-synapse` or some Synapse worker)).
Various services (like Dimension, etc.) still talk to Synapse via `matrix-nginx-proxy` (e.g. `http://matrix-nginx-proxy:12080`) preferentially. They only talk to Synapse via the reverse-proxy companion (e.g. `http://matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion:8008`) if `matrix-nginx-proxy` is disabled. Services should not be talking to Synapse (e.g. `https://matrix-synapse:8008` directly anymore), because when workers are enabled, that's the Synapse `master` process and may not be serving all URL endpoints needed by the service.
### Webserver configuration
- if you're using `matrix-nginx-proxy` (`matrix_nginx_proxy_enabled: true`, which is the default for the playbook), you don't need to do anything
- if you're using your own `nginx` webserver running on the server, you shouldn't be affected. The `/matrix/nginx/conf.d` configuration and exposed ports that you're relying on will automatically be updated in a way that should work
- if you're using another local webserver (e.g. Apache, etc.) and haven't changed any ports (`matrix_*_host_bind_port` definitions), you shouldn't be affected. You're likely sending Matrix traffic to `127.0.0.1:8008` and `127.0.0.1:8048`. These ports (`8008` and `8048`) will still be exposed on `127.0.0.1` by default - just not by the `matrix-synapse` container from now on, but by the `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` container instead
- if you've been exposing `matrix-synapse` ports (`matrix_synapse_container_client_api_host_bind_port`, etc.) manually, you should consider exposing `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` ports instead
- if you're running Traefik and reverse-proxying directly to the `matrix-synapse` container, you should start reverse-proxying to the `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion` container instead. See [our updated Traefik example configuration](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md#sample-configuration-for-running-behind-traefik-20). Note: we now recommend calling the federation entry point `federation` (instead of `synapse`) and reverse-proxying the federation traffic via `matrix-nginx-proxy`, instead of sending it directly to Synapse (or `matrix-synapse-reverse-proxy-companion`). This makes the configuration simpler.
Until now, [Etherpad](https://etherpad.org/) (which [the playbook could install for you](docs/configuring-playbook-etherpad.md)) required the [Dimension integration manager](docs/configuring-playbook-dimension.md) to also be installed, because Etherpad was hosted on the Dimension domain (at `dimension.example.com/etherpad`).
From now on, Etherpad can be installed in `standalone` mode on `etherpad.example.com` and used even without Dimension. This is much more versatile, so the playbook now defaults to this new mode (`etherpad_mode: standalone`).
- **either** keep hosting Etherpad under the Dimension domain by adding `etherpad_mode: dimension` to your `vars.yml` file. All your existing room widgets will continue working at the same URLs and no other changes will be necessary.
- **or**, you could change to hosting Etherpad separately on `etherpad.example.com`. You will need to [configure a DNS record](docs/configuring-dns.md) for this new domain. You will also need to reconfigure Dimension to use the new pad URLs (`https://etherpad.example.com/...`) going forward (refer to our [configuring Etherpad documentation](docs/configuring-playbook-etherpad.md)). All your existing room widgets (which still use `https://dimension.example.com/etherpad/...`) will break as Etherpad is not hosted there anymore. You will need to re-add them or to consider not using `standalone` mode
## The playbook now uses external roles for some things
**TLDR**: when updating the playbook and before running it, you'll need to run `make roles` to make [ansible-galaxy](https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/cli/ansible-galaxy.html) download dependency roles (see the [`requirements.yml` file](requirements.yml)) to the `roles/galaxy` directory. Without this, the playbook won't work.
We're in the process of trimming the playbook and making it reuse Ansible roles.
Starting now, the playbook is composed of 2 types of Ansible roles:
- those that live within the playbook itself (`roles/custom/*`)
- those downloaded from other sources (using [ansible-galaxy](https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/cli/ansible-galaxy.html) to `roles/galaxy`, based on the [`requirements.yml` file](requirements.yml)). These roles are maintained by us or by other people from the Ansible community.
We're doing this for greater code-reuse (across Ansible playbooks, including our own related playbooks [gitea-docker-ansible-deploy](https://github.com/spantaleev/gitea-docker-ansible-deploy) and [nextcloud-docker-ansible-deploy](https://github.com/spantaleev/nextcloud-docker-ansible-deploy)) and decreased maintenance burden. Until now, certain features were copy-pasted across playbooks or were maintained separately in each one, with improvements often falling behind. We've also tended to do too much by ourselves - installing Docker on the server from our `matrix-base` role, etc. - something that we'd rather not do anymore by switching to the [geerlingguy.docker](https://galaxy.ansible.com/geerlingguy/docker) role.
Some variable names will change during the transition to having more and more external (galaxy) roles. There's a new `custom/matrix_playbook_migration` role added to the playbook which will tell you about these changes each time you run the playbook.
**From now on**, every time you update the playbook (well, every time the `requirements.yml` file changes), it's best to run `make roles` to update the roles downloaded from other sources. `make roles` is a shortcut (a `roles` target defined in [`Makefile`](Makefile) and executed by the [`make`](https://www.gnu.org/software/make/) utility) which ultimately runs [ansible-galaxy](https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/cli/ansible-galaxy.html) to download Ansible roles. If you don't have `make`, you can also manually run the commands seen in the `Makefile`.
You can now store your Synapse media repository files on Amazon S3 (or another S3-compatible object store) using [synapse-s3-storage-provider](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse-s3-storage-provider) - a media provider for Synapse (Python module), which should work faster and more reliably than our previous [Goofys](docs/configuring-playbook-s3-goofys.md) implementation (Goofys will continue to work).
This is not just for initial installations. Users with existing files (stored in the local filesystem) can also migrate their files to `synapse-s3-storage-provider`.
To get started, see our [Storing Synapse media files on Amazon S3 with synapse-s3-storage-provider](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse-s3-storage-provider.md) documentation.
## Synapse container image customization support
We now support customizing the Synapse container image by adding additional build steps to its [`Dockerfile`](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/builder/).
Our [synapse-s3-storage-provider support](#synapse-s3-storage-provider-support) is actually built on this. When `s3-storage-provider` is enabled, we automatically add additional build steps to install its Python module into the Synapse image.
Besides this kind of auto-added build steps (for components supported by the playbook), we also let you inject your own custom build steps using configuration like this:
RUN echo 'This is a custom step for building the customized Docker image for Synapse.'
RUN echo 'You can override matrix_synapse_container_image_customizations_dockerfile_body_custom to add your own steps.'
RUN echo 'You do NOT need to include a FROM clause yourself.'
```
People who have needed to customize Synapse previously had to fork the git repository, make their changes to the `Dockerfile` there, point the playbook to the new repository (`matrix_synapse_container_image_self_build_repo`) and enable self-building from scratch (`matrix_synapse_container_image_self_build: true`). This is harder and slower.
With the new Synapse-customization feature in the playbook, we use the original upstream (pre-built, if available) Synapse image and only build on top of it, right on the Matrix server. This is much faster than building all of Synapse from scratch.
Thanks to [@TheOneWithTheBraid](https://github.com/TheOneWithTheBraid), we now support installing [matrix-ldap-registration-proxy](https://gitlab.com/activism.international/matrix_ldap_registration_proxy) - a proxy which handles Matrix registration requests and forwards them to LDAP.
- see the [Potential Backward Incompatibilities after these Synapse worker changes](#potential-backward-incompatibilities-after-these-synapse-worker-changes)
### Stream writers support
From now on, the playbook lets you easily set up various [stream writer workers](https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/latest/workers.html#stream-writers) which can handle different streams (`events` stream; `typing` URL endpoints, `to_device` URL endpoints, `account_data` URL endpoints, `receipts` URL endpoints, `presence` URL endpoints). All of this work was previously handled by the main Synapse process, but can now be offloaded to stream writer worker processes.
If you're using `matrix_synapse_workers_preset: one-of-each`, you'll automatically get 6 additional workers (one for each of the above stream types). Our `little-federation-helper` preset (meant to be quite minimal and focusing in improved federation performance) does not include stream writer workers.
If you'd like to customize the number of workers we also make that possible using these variables:
```yaml
# Synapse only supports more than 1 worker for the `events` stream.
# All other streams can utilize either 0 or 1 workers, not more than that.
Until now, we only supported a single `federation_sender` worker (`matrix_synapse_workers_federation_sender_workers_count` could either be `0` or `1`).
From now on, you can have as many as you want to help with your federation traffic.
From now on, you can put [background task processing on a worker](https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/latest/workers.html#background-tasks).
With `matrix_synapse_workers_preset: one-of-each`, you'll get one `background` worker automatically.
You can also control the `background` workers count with `matrix_synapse_workers_background_workers_count`. Only `0` or `1` workers of this type are supported by Synapse.
We previously had an `appservice` worker type, which [Synapse deprecated in v1.59.0](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/blob/v1.59.0/docs/upgrade.md#deprecation-of-the-synapseappappservice-and-synapseappuser_dir-worker-application-types). So did we, at the time.
With `matrix_synapse_workers_preset: one-of-each`, you'll get one `appservice` worker automatically.
You can also control the `appservice` workers count with `matrix_synapse_workers_appservice_workers_count`. Only `0` or `1` workers of this type are supported by Synapse.
We previously had a `user_dir` worker type, which [Synapse deprecated in v1.59.0](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/blob/v1.59.0/docs/upgrade.md#deprecation-of-the-synapseappappservice-and-synapseappuser_dir-worker-application-types). So did we, at the time.
The new way to implement such workers is by using a `generic_worker` and dedicating it to the task of serving the user directory.
From now on, we have support for this.
With `matrix_synapse_workers_preset: one-of-each`, you'll get one `user_dir` worker automatically.
You can also control the `user_dir` workers count with `matrix_synapse_workers_user_dir_workers_count`. Only `0` or `1` workers of this type are supported by Synapse.
### Using more than 1 media repository worker is now more reliable
With `matrix_synapse_workers_preset: one-of-each`, we only launch one `media_repository` worker.
If you've been configuring `matrix_synapse_workers_media_repository_workers_count` manually, you may have increased that to more workers.
When multiple media repository workers are in use, background tasks related to the media repository must always be configured to run on a single `media_repository` worker via `media_instance_running_background_jobs`. Until now, we weren't doing this correctly, but we now are.
- Due to increased worker types support above, people who use `matrix_synapse_workers_preset: one-of-each` should be aware that with these changes, **the playbook will deploy 9 additional workers** (6 stream writers, 1 `appservice` worker, 1 `user_dir` worker, 1 background task worker). This **may increase RAM/CPU usage**, etc. If you find your server struggling, consider disabling some workers with the appropriate `matrix_synapse_workers_*_workers_count` variables.
- **Metric endpoints have also changed** (`/metrics/synapse/worker/generic_worker-18111` -> `/metrics/synapse/worker/generic-worker-0`). If you're [collecting metrics to an external Prometheus server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md#collecting-metrics-to-an-external-prometheus-server), consider revisiting our [Collecting Synapse worker metrics to an external Prometheus server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md#collecting-synapse-worker-metrics-to-an-external-prometheus-server) docs and updating your Prometheus configuration. **If you're collecting metrics to the integrated Prometheus server** (not enabled by default), **your Prometheus configuration will be updated automatically**. Old data (from before this change) may stick around though.
- **the format of `matrix_synapse_workers_enabled_list` has changed**. You were never advised to use this variable for directly creating workers (we advise people to control workers using `matrix_synapse_workers_preset` or by tweaking `matrix_synapse_workers_*_workers_count` variables only), but some people may have started using the `matrix_synapse_workers_enabled_list` variable to gain more control over workers. If you're one of them, you'll need to adjust its value. See `roles/custom/matrix-synapse/defaults/main.yml` for more information on the new format. The playbook will also do basic validation and complain if you got something wrong.
Thanks to [Julian-Samuel Gebühr (@moan0s)](https://github.com/moan0s), the playbook can now set up [Cactus Comments](https://cactus.chat) - federated comment system for the web based on Matrix.
Thanks to [Aine](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc) of [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/), the playbook can now set up the new [Postmoogle](https://github.com/etkecc/postmoogle) email bridge/bot. Postmoogle is like the [email2matrix bridge](https://github.com/devture/email2matrix) (also [already supported by the playbook](docs/configuring-playbook-email2matrix.md)), but more capable and with the intention to soon support *sending* emails, not just receiving.
In [Pull Request #2012](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/2012), we've made some changes to the default configuration used by the `mautrix-whatsapp` bridge.
If you're using this bridge, you should look into this PR and see if the new configuration suits you. If not, you can always change individual preferences in your `vars.yml` file.
Most notably, spaces support has been enabled by default. The bridge will now group rooms into a Matrix space. **If you've already bridged to Whatsapp** prior to this update, you will need to send `!wa sync space` to the bridge bot to make it create the space and put your existing rooms into it.
Thanks to [Charles Wright](https://github.com/cvwright), we now have optional experimental [Conduit](https://conduit.rs) homeserver support for new installations. This comes as a follow-up to the playbook getting [Dendrite support](#dendrite-support) earlier this year.
Existing Synapse or Dendrite installations do **not** need to be updated. **Synapse is still the default homeserver implementation** installed by the playbook.
To try out Conduit, we recommend that you **use a new server** and the following `vars.yml` configuration:
```yaml
matrix_homeserver_implementation: conduit
```
**The homeserver implementation of an existing server cannot be changed** (e.g. from Synapse or Dendrite to Conduit) without data loss.
Thanks to [MdotAmaan](https://github.com/MdotAmaan)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Discord](https://discordapp.com/) via the [mautrix-discord](https://mau.dev/mautrix/discord) bridge. See our [Setting up Mautrix Discord bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-discord.md) documentation page for getting started.
**Note**: this is a new Discord bridge. The playbook still retains Discord bridging via [matrix-appservice-discord](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-discord.md) and [mx-puppet-discord](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-discord.md). You're free to use the bridge that serves you better, or even all three of them (for different users and use-cases).
The playbook now supports bridging to [Kakaotalk](https://www.kakaocorp.com/page/service/service/KakaoTalk?lang=ENG) via [matrix-appservice-kakaotalk](https://src.miscworks.net/fair/matrix-appservice-kakaotalk) - a bridge based on [node-kakao](https://github.com/storycraft/node-kakao) (now unmaintained) and some [mautrix-facebook](https://github.com/mautrix/facebook) code. Thanks to [hnarjis](https://github.com/hnarjis) for helping us add support for this!
See our [Setting up Appservice Kakaotalk bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-kakaotalk.md) documentation to get started.
Thanks to [Stuart Mumford (@Cadair)](https://github.com/cadair) for starting ([PR #373](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/373) and [PR #622](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/622)) and to [Julian-Samuel Gebühr (@moan0s)](https://github.com/moan0s) for finishing up (in [PR #1894](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/1894)), the playbook can now help you set up [maubot](https://github.com/maubot/maubot) - a plugin-based Matrix bot system.
See our [Setting up maubot](docs/configuring-playbook-bot-maubot.md) documentation to get started.
The playbook no longer includes the [mx-puppet-skype](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-skype) bridge, because it has been broken and unmaintaned for a long time. Users that have `matrix_mx_puppet_skype_enabled` in their configuration files will encounter an error when running the playbook until they remove references to this bridge from their configuration.
To completely clean up your server from `mx-puppet-skype`'s presence on it:
- ensure your Ansible configuration (`vars.yml` file) no longer contains `matrix_mx_puppet_skype_*` references
- stop and disable the systemd service (run `systemctl disable --now matrix-mx-puppet-skype` on the server)
- delete the systemd service (run `rm /etc/systemd/system/matrix-mx-puppet-skype.service` on the server)
- delete `/matrix/mx-puppet-skype` (run `rm -rf /matrix/mx-puppet-skype` on the server)
- drop the `matrix_mx_puppet_skype` database (run `/usr/local/bin/matrix-postgres-cli` on the server, and execute the `DROP DATABASE matrix_mx_puppet_skype;` query there)
If you still need bridging to [Skype](https://www.skype.com/), consider switching to [go-skype-bridge](https://github.com/kelaresg/go-skype-bridge) instead. See [Setting up Go Skype Bridge bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-go-skype-bridge.md).
If you think this is a mistake and `mx-puppet-skype` works for you (or you get it to work somehow), let us know and we may reconsider this removal.
In [Pull Request #1921](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/1921) we upgraded [signald](https://signald.org/) (used by the mautrix-signal bridge) from `v0.18.5` to `v0.20.0`.
Back in the [`v0.19.0` released of signald](https://gitlab.com/signald/signald/-/blob/main/releases/0.19.0.md) (which we skipped and migrated straight to `v0.20.0`), a new `--migrate-data` command had been added that migrates avatars, group images, attachments, etc., into the database (those were previously stored in the filesystem).
We attempt to do this data migration automatically every time Signald starts (`matrix-mautrix-signal-daemon.service`) using a `ExecStartPre` systemd unit definition.
Keep an eye on your Signal bridge and let us know (in our [support room](README.md#support) or in [Pull Request #1921](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/1921)) if you experience any trouble!
Thanks to [Julian Foad](https://matrix.to/#/@julian:foad.me.uk), the playbook can now install a [ntfy](https://ntfy.sh/) push notifications server for you.
See our [Setting up the ntfy push notifications server](docs/configuring-playbook-ntfy.md) documentation to get started.
## (Potential Backward Compatibility Break) Changes around metrics collection
**TLDR**: we've made extensive **changes to metrics exposure/collection, which concern people using an external Prometheus server**. If you don't know what that is, you don't need to read below.
**Why do major changes to metrics**? Because various services were exposing metrics in different, hacky, ways. Synapse was exposing metrics at `/_synapse/metrics` and `/_synapse-worker-.../metrics` on the `matrix.example.com`. The Hookshot role was **repurposing** the Granana web UI domain (`stats.example.com`) for exposing its metrics on `stats.example.com/hookshot/metrics`, while protecting these routes using Basic Authentication **normally used for Synapse** (`/_synapse/metrics`). Node-exporter and Postgres-exporter roles were advising for more `stats.example.com` usage in manual ways. Each role was doing things differently and mixing variables from other roles. Each metrics endpoint was ending up in a different place, protected by who knows what Basic Authentication credentials (if protected at all).
**The solution**: a completely revamped way to expose metrics to an external Prometheus server. We are **introducing new `https://matrix.example.com/metrics/*` endpoints**, where various services *can* expose their metrics, for collection by external Prometheus servers. To enable the `/metrics/*` endpoints, use `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_metrics_enabled: true`. There's also a way to protect access using [Basic Authentication](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_access_authentication). See the `matrix-nginx-proxy` role or our [Collecting metrics to an external Prometheus server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md#collecting-metrics-to-an-external-prometheus-server) documentation for additional variables around `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_metrics_enabled`.
- If Prometheus is enabled (`prometheus_enabled: true`), then Hookshot metrics will be enabled automatically (`matrix_hookshot_metrics_enabled: true`). These metrics will be collected from the local (in-container) Prometheus over the container network.
- **If Prometheus is not enabled** (you are either not using Prometheus or are using an external one), **Hookshot metrics will not be enabled by default anymore**. Feel free to enable them by setting `matrix_hookshot_metrics_enabled: true`. Also, see below.
2. When metrics are meant to be **consumed by an external Prometheus server**, `matrix_hookshot_metrics_proxying_enabled` needs to be set to `true`, so that metrics would be exposed (proxied) "publicly" on `https://matrix.example.com/metrics/hookshot`. To make use of this, you'll also need to enable the new `https://matrix.example.com/metrics/*` endpoints mentioned above, using `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_metrics_enabled`. Learn more in our [Collecting metrics to an external Prometheus server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md#collecting-metrics-to-an-external-prometheus-server) documentation.
3.**We've changed the URL we're exposing Hookshot metrics at** for external Prometheus servers. Until now, you were advised to consume Hookshot metrics from `https://stats.example.com/hookshot/metrics` (working in conjunction with `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_synapse_metrics`). From now on, **this no longer works**. As described above, you need to start consuming metrics from `https://matrix.example.com/metrics/hookshot`.
**If you're using node-exporter** (`matrix_prometheus_node_exporter_enabled: true`) and would like to collect its metrics from an external Prometheus server, see `matrix_prometheus_node_exporter_metrics_proxying_enabled` described in our [Collecting metrics to an external Prometheus server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md#collecting-metrics-to-an-external-prometheus-server) documentation. You will be able to collect its metrics from `https://matrix.example.com/metrics/node-exporter`.
**If you're using [postgres-exporter](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-postgres.md)** (`prometheus_postgres_exporter_enabled: true`) and would like to collect its metrics from an external Prometheus server, see `matrix_prometheus_services_proxy_connect_prometheus_postgres_exporter_metrics_proxying_enabled` described in our [Collecting metrics to an external Prometheus server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md#collecting-metrics-to-an-external-prometheus-server) documentation. You will be able to collect its metrics from `https://matrix.example.com/metrics/postgres-exporter`.
**If you're using Synapse** and would like to collect its metrics from an external Prometheus server, you may find that:
1. Exposing metrics is now done using `matrix_synapse_metrics_proxying_enabled`, not `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_synapse_metrics: true`. You may still need to enable metrics using `matrix_synapse_metrics_enabled: true` before exposing them.
2. Protecting metrics endpoints using [Basic Authentication](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_access_authentication) is now done in another way. See our [Collecting metrics to an external Prometheus server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md#collecting-metrics-to-an-external-prometheus-server) documentation
3. If Synapse metrics are exposed, they will be made available at `https://matrix.example.com/metrics/synapse/main-process` or `https://matrix.example.com/metrics/synapse/worker/TYPE-ID` (when workers are enabled), not at `https://matrix.example.com/_synapse/metrics` and `https://matrix.example.com/_synapse-worker-.../metrics`
4. The playbook still generates an `external_prometheus.yml.example` sample file for scraping Synapse from Prometheus as described in [Collecting Synapse worker metrics to an external Prometheus server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md#collecting-synapse-worker-metrics-to-an-external-prometheus-server), but it's now saved under `/matrix/synapse` (not `/matrix`).
**If you where already using a external Prometheus server** before this change, and you gave a hashed version of the password as a variable, the playbook will now take care of hashing the password for you. Thus, you need to provide the non-hashed version now.
Thanks to [CyberShadow](https://github.com/CyberShadow), the playbook can now install the [go-skype-bridge](https://github.com/kelaresg/go-skype-bridge) bridge for bridging Matrix to [Skype](https://www.skype.com/).
The playbook has supported [mx-puppet-skype](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-skype) bridging (see [Setting up MX Puppet Skype bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-skype.md)) since [2020-04-09](#2020-04-09), but `mx-puppet-skype` is reportedly broken.
## Running Ansible in a container can now happen on the Matrix server itself
If you're tired of being on an old and problematic Ansible version, you can now run [run Ansible in a container on the Matrix server itself](docs/ansible.md#running-ansible-in-a-container-on-the-matrix-server-itself).
We haven't observed this problem yet, but [the Synapse v1.60.0 upgrade notes](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/blob/v1.60.0/docs/upgrade.md#adding-a-new-unique-index-to-state_group_edges-could-fail-if-your-database-is-corrupted) mention it, so we're giving you a heads up here in case you're unlucky.
Thanks to [Aine](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc) of [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/), the playbook can now set up [the Buscarron bot](https://github.com/etkecc/buscarron). It's a bot you can use to send any form (HTTP POST, HTML) to a (encrypted) Matrix room
Thanks to [Julian-Samuel Gebühr (@moan0s)](https://github.com/moan0s), the playbook can now help you set up [matrix-registration-bot](https://github.com/moan0s/matrix-registration-bot) - a bot that is used to create and manage registration tokens for a Matrix server.
Thanks to [Aine](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc) of [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/), the playbook can now set up [Borg](https://www.borgbackup.org/) backups with [borgmatic](https://torsion.org/borgmatic/) of your Matrix server.
If you're running a worker setup for Synapse (`matrix_synapse_workers_enabled: true`), the [Synapse v1.57 upgrade notes](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/blob/v1.57.0rc1/docs/upgrade.md#changes-to-database-schema-for-application-services) say that you may need to take special care when upgrading:
> Synapse v1.57.0 includes a change to the way transaction IDs are managed for application services. If your deployment uses a dedicated worker for application service traffic, **it must be stopped** when the database is upgraded (which normally happens when the main process is upgraded), to ensure the change is made safely without any risk of reusing transaction IDs.
If you're not running an `appservice` worker (`matrix_synapse_workers_preset: little-federation-helper` or `matrix_synapse_workers_appservice_workers_count: 0`), you are probably safe to upgrade as per normal, without taking any special care.
If you are running a setup with an `appservice` worker, or otherwise want to be on the safe side, we recommend the following upgrade path:
0. Pull the latest playbook changes
1. Stop all services (`ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=stop`)
2. Re-run the playbook (`ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all`)
3. Start Postgres (`systemctl start matrix-postgres` on the server)
4. Start the main Synapse process (`systemctl start matrix-synapse` on the server)
5. Wait a while so that Synapse can start and complete the database migrations. You can use `journalctl -fu matrix-synapse` on the server to get a clue. Waiting a few minutes should also be enough.
6. It should now be safe to start all other services. `ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=start` will do it for you
## (Compatibility Break) Changes to `docker-src` permissions necessitating manual action
Users who build container images from source will need to manually correct file permissions of some directories on the server.
When self-building, the playbook used to `git clone` repositories (into `/matrix/SERVICE/docker-src`) using the `root` user, but now uses `matrix` instead to work around [the following issue with git 2.35.2](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/1749).
If you're on a non-`amd64` architecture (that is, you're overriding `matrix_architecture` in your `vars.yml` file) or you have enabled self-building for some service (e.g. `matrix_*_self_build: true`), you're certainly building some container images from source and have `docker-src` directories with mixed permissions lying around in various `/matrix/SERVICE` directories.
The playbook *could* correct these permissions automatically, but that requires additional Ansible tasks in some ~45 different places - something that takes considerable effort. So we ask users observing errors related to `docker-src` directories to correct the problem manually by **running this command on the Matrix server** (which deletes all `/matrix/*/docker-src` directories): `find /matrix -maxdepth 2 -name 'docker-src' | xargs rm -rf`
## (Compatibility Break) ma1sd identity server no longer installed by default
The playbook no longer installs the [ma1sd](https://github.com/ma1uta/ma1sd) identity server by default. The next time you run the playbook, ma1sd will be uninstalled from your server, unless you explicitly enable the ma1sd service (see how below).
The main reason we used to install ma1sd by default in the past was to prevent Element from talking to the `matrix.org` / `vector.im` identity servers, by forcing it to talk to our own self-hosted (but otherwise useless) identity server instead, thus preventing contact list leaks.
Since Element no longer defaults to using a public identity server if another one is not provided, we can stop installing ma1sd.
If you need to install the ma1sd identity server for some reason, you can explicitly enable it by adding this to your `vars.yml` file:
We now support installing the [matrix_encryption_disabler](https://github.com/digitalentity/matrix_encryption_disabler) Synapse module, which lets you prevent End-to-End-Encryption from being enabled by users on your homeserver. The popular opinion is that this is dangerous and shouldn't be done, but there are valid use cases for disabling encryption discussed [here](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4401).
To enable this module (and prevent encryption from being used on your homserver), add `matrix_synapse_ext_encryption_disabler_enabled: true` to your configuration. This module provides further customization. Check its other configuration settings (and defaults) in `roles/custom/matrix-synapse/defaults/main.yml`.
Thanks to [HarHarLinks](https://github.com/HarHarLinks), the playbook can now install the [matrix-hookshot](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-hookshot) bridge for bridging Matrix to multiple project management services, such as GitHub, GitLab and JIRA.
See our [Setting up matrix-hookshot](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-hookshot.md) documentation to get started.
# 2022-01-31
## ARM support for matrix-corporal
[matrix-corporal](https://github.com/devture/matrix-corporal) (as of version `2.2.3`) is now published to Docker Hub (see [devture/matrix-corporal](https://hub.docker.com/r/devture/matrix-corporal)) as a multi-arch container image with support for all these platforms: `linux/amd64`, `linux/arm64/v8` and `linux/arm/v7`. The playbook no longer resorts to self-building matrix-corporal on these ARM architectures.
**TLDR**: We now have optional experimental [Dendrite](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite) homeserver support for new installations. **Existing (Synapse) installations need to be updated**, because some internals changed. See [Adapting the configuration for existing Synapse installations](#adapting-the-configuration-for-existing-synapse-installations).
[Jip J. Dekker](https://github.com/Dekker1) did the [initial work](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/818) of adding [Dendrite](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite) support to the playbook back in January 2021. Lots of work (and time) later, Dendrite support is finally ready for testing.
The playbook was previously quite [Synapse](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse)-centric, but can now accommodate multiple homeserver implementations. Only one homeserver implementation can be active (installed) at a given time.
**Synapse is still the default homeserver implementation** installed by the playbook. A new variable (`matrix_homeserver_implementation`) controls which server implementation is enabled (`synapse` or `dendrite` at the given moment).
Thanks to [Aine](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc) of [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/), the playbook can now help you set up [Honoroit](https://github.com/etkecc/honoroit) - a helpdesk bot.
Thanks to [Aine](https://gitlab.com/etke.cc) of [etke.cc](https://etke.cc/), the playbook now supports [Cinny](https://cinny.in/) - a new simple, elegant and secure Matrix client.
By default, we still install Element. Still, people who'd like to try Cinny out can now install it via the playbook.
Additional details are available in [Setting up Cinny](docs/configuring-playbook-client-cinny.md).
Thanks to [Matthew Cengia](https://github.com/mattcen) and [Shreyas Ajjarapu](https://github.com/shreyasajj), besides [mx-puppet-twitter](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-twitter.md), bridging to [Twitter](https://twitter.com/) can now also happen with [mautrix-twitter](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-twitter.md).
## (Security) Users of the Signal bridge may wish to upgrade it to work around log4j vulnerability
Recently, a security vulnerability affecting the Java logging package `log4j` [has been discovered](https://www.huntress.com/blog/rapid-response-critical-rce-vulnerability-is-affecting-java). Software that uses this Java package is potentially vulnerable.
One such piece of software that is part of the playbook is the [mautrix-signal bridge](./docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-signal.md), which [has been patched already](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/1452). If you're running this bridge, you may wish to [upgrade](./docs/maintenance-upgrading-services.md).
Postgres v9.6 reached its end of life today, so the playbook will refuse to run for you if you're still on that version.
Synapse still supports v9.6 (for now), but we're retiring support for it early, to avoid having to maintain support for so many Postgres versions. Users that are still on Postgres v9.6 can easily [upgrade Postgres](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#upgrading-postgresql) via the playbook.
## Hangouts bridge no longer updated, superseded by a Googlechat bridge
The mautrix-hangouts bridge is no longer receiving updates upstream and is likely to stop working in the future.
We still retain support for this bridge in the playbook, but you're encouraged to switch away from it.
There's a new [mautrix-googlechat](https://github.com/mautrix/googlechat) bridge that you can [install using the playbook](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-googlechat.md).
Your **Hangouts bridge data will not be migrated**, however. You need to start fresh with the new bridge.
Thanks to [Alexandar Mechev](https://github.com/apmechev), the playbook can now install the [beeper-linkedin](https://gitlab.com/beeper/linkedin) bridge for bridging to [LinkedIn](https://www.linkedin.com/) Messaging.
This brings the total number of bridges supported by the playbook up to 20. See all supported bridges [here](docs/configuring-playbook.md#bridging-other-networks).
To get started with bridging to LinkedIn, see [Setting up Beeper LinkedIn bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-beeper-linkedin.md).
# Sygnal upgraded - ARM support and no longer requires a database
The [Sygnal](docs/configuring-playbook-sygnal.md) push gateway has been upgraded from `v0.9.0` to `v0.10.1`.
This is an optional component for the playbook, so most of our users wouldn't care about this announcement.
Since this feels like a relatively big (and untested, as of yet) Sygnal change, we're putting up this changelog entry.
The new version is also available for the ARM architecture. It also no longer requires a database anymore.
If you need to downgrade to the previous version, changing `matrix_sygnal_version` or `matrix_sygnal_docker_image` will not be enough, as we've removed the `database` configuration completely. You'd need to switch to an earlier playbook commit.
Thanks to [Aaron Raimist](https://github.com/aaronraimist), the playbook now supports [Hydrogen](https://github.com/vector-im/hydrogen-web) - a new lightweight Matrix client with legacy and mobile browser support.
By default, we still install Element, as Hydrogen is still not fully-featured. Still, people who'd like to try Hydrogen out can now install it via the playbook.
Thanks to [Toni Spets (hifi)](https://github.com/hifi), the playbook now supports bridging to [IRC](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Relay_Chat) using yet another bridge (besides matrix-appservice-irc), called [Heisenbridge](https://github.com/hifi/heisenbridge).
Additional details are available in [Setting up Heisenbridge bouncer-style IRC bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-heisenbridge.md).
To improve security, we've [removed TLSv1 and TLSv1.1 support](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/999) from our default [Coturn](https://github.com/coturn/coturn) configuration.
If you need to support old clients, you can re-enable both (or whichever one you need) with the following configuration:
Thanks to [foxcris](https://github.com/foxcris), the playbook can now make automated local Postgres backups on a fixed schedule using [docker-postgres-backup-local](https://github.com/prodrigestivill/docker-postgres-backup-local).
Additional details are available in [Setting up postgres backup](docs/configuring-playbook-postgres-backup.md).
Thanks to [Aaron Raimist](https://github.com/aaronraimist), the playbook can now install and configure the [Mjolnir](https://github.com/matrix-org/mjolnir) moderation tool (bot).
Additional details are available in [Setting up Mjolnir](docs/configuring-playbook-bot-mjolnir.md).
Thanks to [Cody Neiman](https://github.com/xangelix), the playbook can now install the [mx-puppet-groupme](https://gitlab.com/robintown/mx-puppet-groupme) bridge for bridging to [GroupMe](https://groupme.com).
This brings the total number of bridges supported by the playbook up to 18. See all supported bridges [here](docs/configuring-playbook.md#bridging-other-networks).
To get started, follow our [Setting up MX Puppet GroupMe](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-groupme.md) docs.
The playbook now supports bridging with [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/) by installing the [mautrix-instagram](https://github.com/tulir/mautrix-instagram) bridge. This playbook functionality is available thanks to [@MarcProe](https://github.com/MarcProe).
Additional details are available in [Setting up Mautrix Instagram bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-instagram.md).
After [lots and lots of work](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/456) (done over many months by [Marcel Partap](https://github.com/eMPee584), [Max Klenk](https://github.com/maxklenk), a few others from the [Technical University of Dresden, Germany](https://tu-dresden.de/) and various other contributors), support for Synapse workers has finally landed.
Having support for workers makes the playbook suitable for larger homeserver deployments.
Our setup is not yet perfect (we don't support all types of workers; scaling some of them (like `pusher`, `federation_sender`) beyond a single instance is not yet supported). Still, it's a great start and can already power homeservers with thousands of users, like the [Matrix deployment at TU Dresden](https://doc.matrix.tu-dresden.de/en/) discussed in [Matrix Live S06E09 - TU Dresden on their Matrix deployment](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHJX2pmT2gk).
By default, workers are disabled and Synapse runs as a single process (homeservers don't necessarily need the complexity and increased memory requirements of running a worker-based setup).
To enable Synapse workers, follow our [Load balancing with workers](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md#load-balancing-with-workers) documentation.
Thanks to [@Peetz0r](https://github.com/Peetz0r), the playbook can now install a bunch of tools for monitoring your Matrix server: the [Prometheus](https://prometheus.io) time-series database server, the Prometheus [node-exporter](https://prometheus.io/docs/guides/node-exporter/) host metrics exporter, and the [Grafana](https://grafana.com/) web UI.
To get get these installed, follow our [Enabling metrics and graphs (Prometheus, Grafana) for your Matrix server](docs/configuring-playbook-prometheus-grafana.md) docs page.
This update comes with a **potential breaking change** for people who were already exposing Synapse metrics (for consumption via another Prometheus installation). From now on, `matrix_synapse_metrics_enabled: true` no longer exposes metrics publicly via matrix-nginx-proxy (at `https://matrix.example.com/_synapse/metrics`). To do so, you'd need to explicitly set `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_synapse_metrics: true`.
Thanks to [@pushytoxin](https://github.com/pushytoxin), the playbook can now install the [Etherpad](https://etherpad.org) realtime collaborative text editor. It can be used in a [Jitsi](https://jitsi.org/) audio/video call or integrated as a widget into Matrix chat rooms via the [Dimension](https://dimension.t2bot.io) integration manager.
To get it installed, follow [our Etherpad docs page](docs/configuring-playbook-etherpad.md).
## (Breaking Change) Postgres changes that require manual intervention
We've made a lot of changes to our Postgres setup and some manual action is required (described below). Sorry about the hassle.
**TLDR**: people running an [external Postgres server](docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md) don't need to change anything for now. Everyone else (the common/default case) is affected and manual intervention is required.
### Why?
- we had a default Postgres password (`matrix_postgres_connection_password: synapse-password`), which we think is **not ideal for security anymore**. We now ask you to generate/provide a strong password yourself. Postgres is normally not exposed outside the container network, making it relatively secure, but still:
- by tweaking the configuration, you may end up intentionally or unintentionally exposing your Postgres server to the local network (or even publicly), while still using the default default credentials (`synapse` + `synapse-password`)
- we can't be sure we trust all these services (bridges, etc). Some of them may try to talk to or attack `matrix-postgres` using the default credentials (`synapse` + `synapse-password`)
- you may have other containers running on the same Docker network, which may try to talk to or attack `matrix-postgres` using the default credentials (`synapse` + `synapse-password`)
- our Postgres usage **was overly-focused on Synapse** (default username of `synapse` and default/main database of `homeserver`). Additional homeserver options are likely coming in the future ([Dendrite](https://matrix.org/docs/projects/server/dendrite), [Conduit](https://matrix.org/docs/projects/server/conduit), [The Construct](https://matrix.org/docs/projects/server/construct)), so being too focused on `matrix-synapse` is not great. From now on, Synapse is just another component of this playbook, which happens to have an *additional database* (called `synapse`) on the Postgres server.
- we try to reorganize things a bit, to make the playbook even friendlier to people running an [external Postgres server](docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md). Work on this will proceed in the future.
So, this is some **effort to improve security** and to **prepare for a brighter future of having more homeserver options** than just Synapse.
### What has really changed?
- the default superuser Postgres username is now `matrix` (used to be `synapse`)
- the default Postgres database is now `matrix` (used to be `homeserver`)
- Synapse's database is now `synapse` (used to be `homeserver`). This is now just another "additional database" that the playbook manages for you
- Synapse's user called `synapse` is just a regular user that can only use the `synapse` database (not a superuser anymore)
### What do I do if I'm using the integrated Postgres server (default)?
By default, the playbook runs an integrated Postgres server for you in a container (`matrix-postgres`). Unless you've explicitly configured an [external Postgres server](docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md), these steps are meant for you.
To migrate to the new setup, expect a few minutes of downtime, while you follow these steps:
1. We believe the steps below are safe and you won't encounter any data loss, but consider [making a Postgres backup](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#backing-up-postgresql) anyway. If you've never backed up Postgres, now would be a good time to try it.
2. Generate a strong password to be used for your superuser Postgres user (called `matrix`). You can use `pwgen -s 64 1` to generate it, or some other tool. The **maximum length** for a Postgres password is 100 bytes (characters). Don't go crazy!
If you've explicitly configured an [external Postgres server](docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md), there are **no changes** that you need to do at this time.
The fact that we've renamed Synapse's database from `homeserver` to `synapse` (in our defaults) should not affect you, as you're already explicitly defining `matrix_synapse_database_database` (if you've followed our guide, that is). If you're not explicitly defining this variable, you may wish to do so (`matrix_synapse_database_database: homeserver`), to avoid the new `synapse` default and keep things as they were.
**Update from 2021-11-15**: SQLite support has been re-added to the mautrix-facebook bridge in [v0.3.2](https://github.com/mautrix/facebook/releases/tag/v0.3.2). You can ignore this changelog entry.
A new version of the [mautrix-facebook](https://github.com/tulir/mautrix-facebook) bridge has been released. It's a full rewrite of its backend and the bridge now requires Postgres. New versions of the bridge can no longer run on SQLite.
**TLDR**: if you're NOT using an [external Postgres server](docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md) and have NOT forcefully kept the bridge on SQLite during [The big move to all-on-Postgres (potentially dangerous)](#the-big-move-to-all-on-postgres-potentially-dangerous), you will be automatically upgraded without manual intervention. All you need to do is send a `login` message to the Facebook bridge bot again.
Whether this change requires your intervention depends mostly on:
- whether you're using an [external Postgres server](docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md). If yes, then [you need to do something](#upgrade-path-for-people-running-an-external-postgres-server).
- or whether you've force-changed the bridge's database engine to SQLite (`matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_engine: 'sqlite'` in your `vars.yml`) some time in the past (likely during [The big move to all-on-Postgres (potentially dangerous)](#the-big-move-to-all-on-postgres-potentially-dangerous)).
As already mentioned above, you most likely don't need to do anything. If you rerun the playbook and don't get an error, you've been automatically upgraded. Just send a `login` message to the Facebook bridge bot again. Otherwise, read below for a solution.
### Upgrade path for people NOT running an external Postgres server (default for the playbook)
If you're **not running an external Postgres server**, then this bridge either already works on Postgres for you, or you've intentionally kept it back on SQLite with custom configuration (`matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_engine: 'sqlite'` in your `vars.yml`) .
Simply remove that custom configuration from your `vars.yml` file (if it's there) and re-run the playbook. It should upgrade you automatically.
You'll need to send a `login` message to the Facebook bridge bot again.
Alternatively, [you can stay on SQLite for a little longer](#staying-on-sqlite-for-a-little-longer-temporary-solution).
### Upgrade path for people running an external Postgres server
For people using the internal Postgres server (the default for the playbook):
- we automatically create an additional `matrix_mautrix_facebook` Postgres database and credentials to access it
- we automatically adjust the bridge's `matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_*` variables to point the bridge to that Postgres database
- we use [pgloader](https://pgloader.io/) to automatically import the existing SQLite data for the bridge into the `matrix_mautrix_facebook` Postgres database
If you are using an [external Postgres server](docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md), unfortunately we currently can't do any of that for you.
You have 3 ways to proceed:
- contribute to the playbook to make this possible (difficult)
- define `matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_*` variables in your `vars.yml` file (credentials, etc.) - you can find their defaults in `roles/custom/matrix-mautrix-facebook/defaults/main.yml`
- re-run the playbook (`--tags=setup-all,start`) and ensure the bridge works (`systemctl status matrix-mautrix-facebook` and `journalctl -fu matrix-mautrix-facebook`)
- send a `login` message to the Facebook bridge bot again
- or, [stay on SQLite for a little longer (temporary solution)](#staying-on-sqlite-for-a-little-longer-temporary-solution)
### Staying on SQLite for a little longer (temporary solution)
To keep using this bridge with SQLite for a little longer (**not recommended**), use the following configuration in your `vars.yml` file:
```yaml
# Force-change the database engine to SQLite.
matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_engine: 'sqlite'
# Force-downgrade to the last bridge version which supported SQLite.
If you do this, keep in mind that **you can't run this forever**. This SQLite-supporting bridge version is not getting any updates and will break sooner or later. The playbook will also drop support for SQLite at some point in the future.
[matrix-corporal v2 has been released](https://github.com/devture/matrix-corporal/releases/tag/2.0.0) and the playbook also supports it now.
No manual intervention is required in the common case.
The new [matrix-corporal](https://github.com/devture/matrix-corporal) version is also the first one to support Interactive Authentication. If you wish to enable that (hint: you should), you'll need to set up the [REST auth password provider](docs/configuring-playbook-rest-auth.md). There's more information in [our matrix-corporal docs](docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-corporal.md).
SSL configuration (protocols, ciphers) can now be more easily controlled thanks to us making use of configuration presets.
We define a few presets (old, intermediate, modern), following the [Mozilla SSL Configuration Generator](https://ssl-config.mozilla.org/#server=nginx).
A new variable `matrix_nginx_proxy_ssl_preset` controls which preset is used (defaults to `"intermediate"`).
Compared to before, this changes nginx's `ssl_prefer_server_ciphers` to `off` (used to default to `on`). It also add some more ciphers to the list, giving better performance on mobile devices, and removes some weak ciphers. More information in the [documentation](docs/configuring-playbook-nginx.md).
To revert to the old behaviour, set the following variables:
Just like before, you can still use your own custom protocols by specifying them in `matrix_nginx_proxy_ssl_protocols`. Doing so overrides the values coming from the preset.
Thanks to [laszabine](https://github.com/laszabine)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Signal](https://www.signal.org/) via the [mautrix-signal](https://github.com/tulir/mautrix-signal) bridge. See our [Setting up Mautrix Signal bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-signal.md) documentation page for getting started.
If you had installed the mautrix-signal bridge while its Pull Request was still work-in-progress, you can migrate your data to the new and final setup by referring to [this comment](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/686#issuecomment-753510789).
## The big move to all-on-Postgres (potentially dangerous)
**TLDR**: all your bridges (and other services) will likely be auto-migrated from SQLite/nedb to Postgres, hopefully without trouble. You can opt-out (see how below), if too worried about breakage.
Until now, we've only used Postgres as a database for Synapse. All other services (bridges, bots, etc.) were kept simple and used a file-based database (SQLite or nedb).
Since [this huge pull request](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/740), **all of our services now use Postgres by default**. Thanks to [Johanna Dorothea Reichmann](https://github.com/jdreichmann) for starting the work on it and for providing great input!
Moving all services to Postgres brings a few **benefits** to us:
- **improved performance**
- **improved compatibility**. Most bridges are deprecating SQLite/nedb support or offer less features when not on Postgres.
- **easier backups**. It's still some effort to take a proper backup (Postgres dump + various files, keys), but a Postgres dump now takes you much further.
- we're now **more prepared to introduce other services** that need a Postgres database - [Dendrite](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite), the [mautrix-signal](https://github.com/tulir/mautrix-signal) bridge (existing [pull request](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/686)), etc.
### Key takeway
- existing installations that use an [external Postgres](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/blob/master/docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md) server should be unaffected (they remain on SQLite/nedb for all services, except Synapse)
- for existing installations which use our integrated Postgres database server (`matrix-postgres`, which is the default), **we automatically migrate data** from SQLite/nedb to Postgres and **archive the database files** (`something.db` -> `something.db.backup`), so you can restore them if you need to go back (see how below).
This is a **very large and somewhat untested change** (potentially dangerous), so **if you're not feeling confident/experimental, opt-out** of it for now. Still, it's the new default and what we (and various bridges) will focus on going forward, so don't stick to old ways for too long.
You can remain on SQLite/nedb (at least for now) by adding a variable like this to your `vars.yml` file for each service you use: `matrix_COMPONENT_database_engine: sqlite` (e.g. `matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_engine: sqlite`).
Some services (like `appservice-irc` and `appservice-slack`) don't use SQLite, so use `nedb`, instead of `sqlite` for them.
### Going back to SQLite/nedb if things went wrong
If you went with the Postgres migration and it went badly for you (some bridge not working as expected or not working at all), do this:
- stop all services (`ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=stop`)
- SSH into the server and rename the old database files (`something.db.backup` -> `something.db`). Example: `mv /matrix/mautrix-facebook/data/mautrix-facebook.db.backup /matrix/mautrix-facebook/data/mautrix-facebook.db`
- switch the affected service back to SQLite (e.g. `matrix_mautrix_facebook_database_engine: sqlite`). Some services (like `appservice-irc` and `appservice-slack`) don't use SQLite, so use `nedb`, instead of `sqlite` for them.
- re-run the playbook (`ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all,start`)
We've removed support for the unmaintained [synapse-janitor](https://github.com/xwiki-labs/synapse_scripts) script. There's been past reports of it corrupting the Synapse database. Since there hasn't been any new development on it and it doesn't seem too useful nowadays, there's no point in including it in the playbook.
If you need to clean up or compact your database, consider using the Synapse Admin APIs directly. See our [Synapse maintenance](docs/maintenance-synapse.md) and [Postgres maintenance](docs/maintenance-postgres.md) documentation pages for more details.
(No need to do anything special in relation to this. Just something to keep in mind)
Docker 20.10 got released recently and your server will likely get it the next time you update.
This is the first major Docker update in a long time and it packs a lot of changes.
Some of them introduced some breakage for us initially (see [here](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/commit/d08b27784f222effcbce2abf924bf07bbe0893be) and [here](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/commit/7593d969e316cc0144bce378a5be58c76c2c37ee)), but it should be all good now.
## openid APIs exposed by default on the federation port when federation disabled
We've changed some defaults. People running with our default configuration (federation enabled), are not affected at all.
If you are running an unfederated server (`matrix_synapse_federation_enabled: false`), this may be of interest to you.
When federation is disabled, but ma1sd or Dimension are enabled, we'll now expose the `openid` APIs on the federation port.
These APIs are necessary for some ma1sd features to work. If you'd like to prevent this, you can: `matrix_synapse_federation_port_openid_resource_required: false`.
## Recent Jitsi updates may require configuration changes
We've recently [updated from Jitsi build 4857 to build 5142](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/719), which brings a lot of configuration changes.
**If you use our default Jitsi settings, you won't have to do anything.**
People who have [fine-tuned Jitsi](docs/configuring-playbook-jitsi.md#optional-fine-tune-jitsi) may find that some options got renamed now, others are gone and yet others still need to be defined in another way.
The next time you run the playbook [installation](docs/installing.md) command, our validation logic will tell you if you're using some variables like that and will recommend a migration path for each one.
Additionally, we've recently disabled transcriptions (`jitsi_enable_transcriptions: false`) and recording (`jitsi_enable_recording: false`) by default. These features did not work anyway, because we don't install the required dependencies for them (Jigasi and Jibri, respectively). If you've been somehow pointing your Jitsi installation to some manually installed Jigasi/Jibri service, you may need to toggle these flags back to enabled to have transcriptions and recordings working.
Because of many problems using gammu as SMS provider, matrix-sms-bridge now uses (https://github.com/RebekkaMa/android-sms-gateway-server) by default. See (the docs)[./docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-matrix-bridge-sms.md] which new vars you need to add.
If you are using this playbook to deploy matrix-sms-bridge and still really want to use gammu as SMS provider, we could possibly add support for both android-sms-gateway-server and gammu.
The new version of [matrix-sms-bridge](https://github.com/benkuly/matrix-sms-bridge) changed its database from neo4j to h2. You need to sync the bridge at the first start. Note that this only will sync rooms where the @smsbot:yourServer is member. For rooms without @smsbot:yourServer you need to kick and invite the telephone number **or** invite @smsbot:yourServer.
1. Add the following to your `vars.yml` file: `matrix_sms_bridge_container_extra_arguments=['--env SPRING_PROFILES_ACTIVE=initialsync']`
2. Login to your host shell and remove old systemd file from your host: `rm /etc/systemd/system/matrix-sms-bridge-database.service`
Since `matrix.example.com` may be accessed by regular users in certain conditions, it's probably better to redirect them to a better place (e.g. to the [Element](docs/configuring-playbook-client-element.md) client).
If Element is installed (`matrix_client_element_enabled: true`, which it is by default), we now redirect people to it, instead of showing them a Synapse static page.
If you'd like to control where the redirect goes, use the `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_client_redirect_root_uri_to_domain` variable.
To restore the old behavior of not redirecting anywhere and serving the Synapse static page, set it to an empty value (`matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_client_redirect_root_uri_to_domain: ""`).
However, following [official Synapse's reverse-proxying recommendations](https://github.com/element-hq/synapse/blob/master/docs/reverse_proxy.md#synapse-administration-endpoints), we're no longer exposing `/_synapse/admin` by default.
We were claiming to support [Ansible](https://www.ansible.com/) v2.5.2 and higher, but issues like [#662](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/662) demonstrate that we need at least v2.7.0.
If you've been using the playbook without getting any errors until now, you're probably on a version higher than that already (or you're not using the `matrix-ma1sd` and `matrix-client-element` roles).
Our [Ansible docs page](docs/ansible.md) contains information on how to run a more up-to-date version of Ansible.
The playbook now installs [Postgres 13](https://www.postgresql.org/about/news/postgresql-13-released-2077/) by default.
If you have have an existing setup, it's likely running on an older Postgres version (9.x, 10.x, 11.x or 12.x). You can easily upgrade by following the [upgrading PostgreSQL guide](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#upgrading-postgresql).
The playbook can now help you set up [matrix-registration](https://github.com/ZerataX/matrix-registration) - an application that lets you keep your Matrix server's registration private, but still allow certain users (those having a unique registration link) to register by themselves.
See our [Setting up matrix-registration](docs/configuring-playbook-matrix-registration.md) documentation page to get started.
The playbook can now help you use [rust-synapse-compress-state](https://github.com/matrix-org/rust-synapse-compress-state) to compress the state groups in your Synapse database.
See our [Compressing state with rust-synapse-compress-state](docs/maintenance-synapse.md#compressing-state-with-rust-synapse-compress-state) documentation page to get started.
Thanks to [Hugues Morisset](https://github.com/izissise)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Steam](https://steamapp.com/) via the [mx-puppet-steam](https://github.com/icewind1991/mx-puppet-steam) bridge. See our [Setting up MX Puppet Steam bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-steam.md) documentation page for getting started.
Thanks to [Hugues Morisset](https://github.com/izissise)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Discord](https://discordapp.com/) via the [mx-puppet-discord](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-discord) bridge. See our [Setting up MX Puppet Discord bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-discord.md) documentation page for getting started.
**Note**: this is a new Discord bridge. The playbook still retains Discord bridging via [matrix-appservice-discord](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-discord.md). You're free too use the bridge that serves you better, or even both (for different users and use-cases).
Thanks to [Johanna Dorothea Reichmann](https://github.com/jdreichmann)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/) via the [mx-puppet-instagram](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-instagram) bridge. See our [Setting up MX Puppet Instagram bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-instagram.md) documentation page for getting started.
Thanks to [Tulir Asokan](https://github.com/tulir)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Twitter](https://twitter.com/) via the [mx-puppet-twitter](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-twitter) bridge. See our [Setting up MX Puppet Twitter bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-twitter.md) documentation page for getting started.
## (Post Mortem / fixed Security Issue) Re-enabling User Directory search powered by the ma1sd Identity Server
User Directory search requests used to go to the ma1sd identity server by default, which queried its own stores and the Synapse database.
ma1sd's [security issue](https://github.com/ma1uta/ma1sd/issues/44) has been fixed in version `2.4.0`, with [this commit](ma1uta/ma1sd@2bb5a734d11662b06471113cf3d6b4cee5e33a85). `ma1sd 2.4.0` is now the default version for this playbook. For more information on what happened, please check the mentioned issue.
We are re-enabling user directory search with this update. Those who would like to keep it disabled can use this configuration: `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_user_directory_search_enabled: false`
As always, re-running the playbook is enough to get the updated bits.
The current version of [matrix-sms-bridge](https://github.com/benkuly/matrix-sms-bridge) needs you to delete the database to work as expected. Just remove `/matrix/matrix-sms-bridge/database/*`. It also adds a new requried var `matrix_sms_bridge_default_region`.
To reuse your existing rooms, invite `@smsbot:yourServer` to the room or write a message. You are also able to use automated room creation with telephonenumers by writing `sms send -t 01749292923 "Hello World"` in a room with `@smsbot:yourServer`. See [the docs](https://github.com/benkuly/matrix-sms-bridge) for more information.
Thanks to [benkuly](https://github.com/benkuly)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to SMS (with one telephone number only) via [matrix-sms-bridge](https://github.com/benkuly/matrix-sms-bridge).
## (Compatibility Break / Security Issue) Disabling User Directory search powered by the ma1sd Identity Server
User Directory search requests used to go to the ma1sd identity server by default, which queried its own stores and the Synapse database.
ma1sd current has [a security issue](https://github.com/ma1uta/ma1sd/issues/44), which made it leak information about all users - including users created by bridges, etc.
Until the issue gets fixed, we're making User Directory search not go to ma1sd by default. You **need to re-run the playbook and restart services to apply this workaround**.
*If you insist on restoring the old behavior* (**which has a security issue!**), you *might* use this configuration: `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_user_directory_search_enabled: "{{ matrix_ma1sd_enabled }}"`
Thanks to [Rodrigo Belem](https://github.com/rbelem)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Slack](https://slack.com) via the [mx-puppet-slack](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-slack) bridge.
See our [Setting up MX Puppet Slack bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-slack.md) documentation page for getting started.
Thanks to [Rodrigo Belem](https://github.com/rbelem)'s efforts, the playbook now supports bridging to [Skype](https://www.skype.com) via the [mx-puppet-skype](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-skype) bridge.
See our [Setting up MX Puppet Skype bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mx-puppet-skype.md) documentation page for getting started.
The [Jitsi support](#jitsi-support) we had landed a few weeks ago was working well, but it was always open to the whole world.
Running such an open instance is not desirable to most people, so [teutat3s](https://github.com/teutat3s) has contributed support for making Jitsi use authentication.
To make your Jitsi server more private, see the [configure internal Jitsi authentication and guests mode](docs/configuring-playbook-jitsi.md#optional-configure-internal-jitsi-authentication-and-guests-mode) section in our Jitsi documentation.
Thanks to [Marcel Partap](https://github.com/eMPee584)'s efforts, the [mxisd](https://github.com/kamax-io/mxisd) identity server, which has been deprecated for a long time, has finally been replaced by [ma1sd](https://github.com/ma1uta/ma1sd), a compatible fork.
**If you're using the default playbook configuration**, you don't need to do anything -- your mxisd installation will be replaced with ma1sd and all existing data will be migrated automatically the next time you run the playbook.
**If you're doing something more special** (defining custom `matrix_mxisd_*` variables), the playbook will ask you to rename them to `matrix_ma1sd_*`.
You're also encouraged to test that ma1sd works well for such a more custom setup.
Thanks to [Christian Lupus](https://github.com/christianlupus)'s efforts, the playbook now supports installing to an [Archlinux](https://www.archlinux.org/) server.
The playbook can now (optionally) install the [Jitsi](https://jitsi.org/) video-conferencing platform and integrate it with [Riot](docs/configuring-playbook-riot-web.md).
See our [Jitsi documentation page](docs/configuring-playbook-jitsi.md) to get started.
Thanks to [Gergely Horváth](https://github.com/hooger)'s effort, the playbook supports installing to a Raspberry Pi server, for at least some of the services.
The login page previously said "Sign in to your Matrix account on matrix.example.org" (the homeserver's domain name). It will now say "Sign in ... on example.org" (the server name) by default, or "Sign in ... on Our Server" if you set the variable to "Our Server".
To support this, the config.json template is changed to use the configuration key `default_server_config` for setting the default HS/IS, and the new configuration key `server_name` is added in there.
To improve security, we've removed TLSv1.1 support from our default matrix-nginx-proxy configuration.
If you need to support old clients, you can re-enable it with the following configuration: `matrix_nginx_proxy_ssl_protocols: "TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3"`
By default, we've been using a UTF-8 collation for Postgres. This is known to cause Synapse some troubles (see the [relevant issue](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/6722)) on systems that use [glibc](https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/). We run Postgres in an [Alpine Linux](https://alpinelinux.org/) container (which uses [musl](https://www.musl-libc.org/), and not glibc), so our users are likely not affected by the index corruption problem observed by others.
Still, we might become affected in the future. In any case, it's imminent that Synapse will complain about databases which do not use a C collation.
To avoid future problems, we recommend that you run the following command:
It forces a [Postgres database upgrade](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#upgrading-postgresql), which would recreate your Postgres database using the proper (`C`) collation. If you are low on disk space, or run into trouble, refer to the Postgres database upgrade documentation page.
Thanks to a contribution from [Björn Marten](https://github.com/tripleawwy) from [netresearch](https://www.netresearch.de/), the playbook can now install and configure [matrix-appservice-webhooks](https://github.com/turt2live/matrix-appservice-webhooks) for you. This bridge provides support for Slack-compatible webhooks.
## Added support for automatic Double Puppeting for all Mautrix bridges
Double Puppeting can now be easily enabled for all Mautrix bridges supported by the playbook (Facebook, Hangouts, Whatsapp, Telegram).
This is possible due to those bridges' integration with [matrix-synapse-shared-secret-auth](https://github.com/devture/matrix-synapse-shared-secret-auth) - yet another component that this playbook can install for you.
To get started, following the playbook's documentation for the bridge you'd like to configure.
## Added support for an alternative method for using another webserver
We have added support for making `matrix-nginx-proxy` not being so invasive, so that it would be easier to [use your own webserver](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md).
The documentation has been updated with a **Method 2**, which might make "own webserver" setup easier in some cases (such as [reverse-proxying using Traefik](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/296)).
**Existing users** are not affected by this and **don't need to change anything**.
The defaults are still the same (`matrix-nginx-proxy` obtaining SSL certificates and doing everything for you automatically).
## Tightened security around room directory publishing
As per this [advisory blog post](https://matrix.org/blog/2019/11/09/avoiding-unwelcome-visitors-on-private-matrix-servers), we've decided to change the default publishing rules for the Matrix room directory.
Our general goal is to favor privacy and security when running personal (family & friends) and corporate homeservers.
Both of these likely benefit from having a more secure default of **not showing the room directory without authentication** and **not publishing the room directory over federation**.
As with anything else, these new defaults can be overriden by changing the `matrix_synapse_allow_public_rooms_without_auth` and `matrix_synapse_allow_public_rooms_over_federation` variables, respectively.
Postgres [upgrading](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#upgrading-postgresql) and [importing](docs/importing-postgres.md) have been improved to add support for multiple databases and roles.
Previously, the playbook would only take care of the `homeserver` database and `synapse` user.
We now back up and restore all databases and users on the Postgres server.
For now, the playbook only uses that one database (`homeserver`) and that one single user (`synapse`), so it's all the same.
However, in the future, additional components besides Synapse may also make use the Postgres database server.
One such example is the [matrix-appservice-slack](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-appservice-slack) bridge, which strongly encourages use of Postgres in its v1.0 release. We are yet to upgrade to it.
Additionally, Postgres [upgrading](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#upgrading-postgresql) now uses gzipped dump files by default, to minimize disk space usage.
The playbook now installs [Postgres 12](https://www.postgresql.org/about/news/1976/) by default.
If you have have an existing setup, it's likely running on an older Postgres version (9.x, 10.x or 11.x). You can easily upgrade by following the [upgrading PostgreSQL guide](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#upgrading-postgresql).
Synapse 1.4.0 [is out](https://matrix.org/blog/2019/10/03/synapse-1-4-0-released) with lots of changes related to privacy.
Its new defaults (which we adopt as well) mean that certain old data will automatically get purged after a certain number of days. 1.4.0 automatically garbage collects redacted messages (defaults to 7 days) and removes unused IP and user agent information stored in the user_ips table (defaults to 30 days). If you'd like to preserve this data, we encourage you to look at the `redaction_retention_period` and `user_ips_max_age` options (controllable by the `matrix_synapse_redaction_retention_period` and `matrix_synapse_user_ips_max_age` playbook variables, respectively) before doing the upgrade. If you'd like to keep data indefinitely, set these variables to `null` (e.g. `matrix_synapse_redaction_retention_period: ~`).
From now on the `trusted_key_servers` setting for Synapse is configurable. It still defaults to `matrix.org` just like it always has, but in a more explicit way now. If you'd like to use another trusted key server, adjust the `matrix_synapse_trusted_key_servers` playbook variable.
Synapse 1.4.0 also changes lots of things related to identity server integration.
Because Synapse will now by default be responsible for validating email addresses for user accounts, running without an identity server looks more feasible.
We still [have concerns](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/275/files#r331104117) over disabling the identity server by default, so for now it remains enabled.
There have been lots of invite-spam attacks lately and [Travis](https://github.com/t2bot) has created a Synapse module ([synapse-simple-antispam](https://github.com/t2bot/synapse-simple-antispam)) to let people protect themselves.
From now on, you can easily install and configure this spam checker module through the playbook.
Learn more in [Setting up Synapse Simple Antispam](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse-simple-antispam.md).
Similarly to [Extensible Synapse configuration](#extensible-synapse-configuration) (below), Riot-web configuration is also extensible now.
From now on, you can extend/override Riot-web's configuration by making use of the `matrix_riot_web_configuration_extension_json` variable.
This should be enough for most customization needs.
If you need even more power, you can now also take full control and override `matrix_riot_web_configuration_default` (or `matrix_riot_web_configuration`) directly.
Previously, we had to create custom Ansible variables for each and every Synapse setting.
This lead to too much effort (and configuration ugliness) to all of Synapse's settings, so naturally, not all features of Synapse could be controlled through the playbook.
From now on, you can extend/override the Synapse server's configuration by making use of the `matrix_synapse_configuration_extension_yaml` variable.
This should be enough for most customization needs.
If you need even more power, you can now also take full control and override `matrix_synapse_configuration` (or `matrix_synapse_configuration_yaml`) directly.
Learn more here in [Configuring Synapse](docs/configuring-playbook-synapse.md).
Thanks to the [great work](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/205) of [kingoftheconnors](https://github.com/kingoftheconnors) and [Stuart Mumford (Cadair)](https://github.com/Cadair), the playbook now supports bridging to [Slack](https://slack.com) via the [appservice-slack](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-appservice-slack) bridge.
Additional details are available in [Setting up Appservice Slack bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-slack.md).
Thanks to the [great work](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/251) of [Eduardo Beltrame (Munfred)](https://github.com/Munfred) and [Robbie D (microchipster)](https://github.com/microchipster), the playbook now supports bridging to [Google Hangouts](https://hangouts.google.com/) via the [mautrix-hangouts](https://mau.dev/tulir/mautrix-hangouts) bridge.
Additional details are available in [Setting up Mautrix Hangouts bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-hangouts.md).
## Synapse logging level has been reduced to WARNING
After [some discussion in our support room](https://matrix.to/#/!PukFFdIcHgtaaHZflT:devture.com/$156476852524179TBeKy:matrix.org?via=devture.com&via=matrix.org&via=librem.one), we've decided to change the default logging level for Synapse from `INFO` to `WARNING`.
This greatly reduces the number of log messages that are being logged, leading to:
- much less disk space dedicated to Synapse and thus, logs kept for longer
- easier to find some important `WARNING`, `ERROR` and `CRITICAL` messages, as they're not longer buried in thousands of non-important `INFO` messages
If you'd like to track down an issue, you [can always increase the logging level as described here](./docs/maintenance-and-troubleshooting.md#increasing-synapse-logging).
## Synapse Maintenance docs and synapse-janitor support are available
The playbook can now help you with Synapse's maintenance.
There's a new documentation page about [Synapse maintenance](./docs/maintenance-synapse.md) and another section on [Postgres vacuuming](./docs/maintenance-postgres.md#vacuuming-postgresql).
Among other things, if your Postgres database has grown significantly over time, you may wish to [ask the playbook to purge unused data with synapse-janitor](./docs/maintenance-synapse.md#purging-unused-data-with-synapse-janitor) for you.
Following what the official Synapse Docker image is doing ([#5565](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/5565)) and what we've been doing for mostly everything installed by this playbook, **Synapse no longer logs to text files** (`/matrix/synapse/run/homeserver.log*`).
From now on, Synapse would only log to console, which goes to systemd's journald.
To see Synapse's logs, execute: `journalctl -fu matrix-synapse`
Because of this, the following variables have become obsolete and were removed:
-`matrix_synapse_max_log_file_size_mb`
-`matrix_synapse_max_log_files_count`
To prevent confusion, it'd be better if you delete all old files manually after you've upgraded (`rm -f /matrix/synapse/run/homeserver.log*`).
Because Synapse is incredibly chatty when it comes to logging (here's [one such issue](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4751) describing the problem), if you're running an ancient distribution (like CentOS 7.0), be advised that systemd's journald default logging restrictions may not be high enough to capture all log messages generated by Synapse. This is especially true if you've got a busy (Synapse) server. We advise that you manually add `RateLimitInterval=0` and `RateLimitBurst=0` under `[Storage]` in the `/etc/systemd/journald.conf` file, followed by restarting the logging service (`systemctl restart systemd-journald`).
## (BC Break) Discord bridge configuration is now entirely managed by the playbook
Until now, the `config.yaml` file for the [Discord bridge](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-discord.md) was managed by the playbook, but the `registration.yaml` file was not.
From now on, the playbook will keep both configuration files sync for you.
This means that if you were making manual changes to the `/matrix/appservice-discord/discord-registration.yaml` configuration file, those would be lost the next time you run the playbook.
The bridge now stores configuration in a subdirectory (`/matrix/appservice-discord/config`).
Likewise, data is now also stored in a subdirectory (`/matrix/appservice-discord/data`). When you run the playbook with an existing database file (`/matrix/appservice-discord/discord.db`), the playbook will stop the bridge and relocate the database file to the `./data` directory. There's no data-loss involved. You'll need to restart the bridge manually though (`--tags=start`).
The main directory (`/matrix/appservice-discord`) may contain some leftover files (`user-store.db`, `room-store.db`, `config.yaml`, `discord-registration.yaml`, `invite_link`). These are no longer necessary and can be deleted manually.
We're now following the default sample configuration for the Discord bridge.
If you need to override some values, define them in `matrix_appservice_discord_configuration_extension_yaml`.
## (BC Break) WhatsApp bridge configuration is now entirely managed by the playbook
Until now, configuration files for the [WhatsApp bridge](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-whatsapp.md) were created by the playbook initially, but never modified later on.
From now on, the playbook will keep the configuration in sync for you.
This means that if you were making manual changes to the `/matrix/mautrix-whatsapp/config.yaml` or `/matrix/mautrix-whatsapp/registration.yaml` configuration files, those would be lost the next time you run the playbook.
The bridge now stores configuration in a subdirectory (`/matrix/mautrix-whatsapp/config`), so your old configuration remains in the base directory (`/matrix/mautrix-whatsapp`).
You need to migrate any manual changes over to the new `matrix_mautrix_whatsapp_configuration_extension_yaml` variable, so that the playbook would apply them for you.
Likewise, data is now also stored in a subdirectory (`/matrix/mautrix-whatsapp/data`). When you run the playbook with an existing database file (`/matrix/mautrix-whatsapp/mautrix-whatsapp.db`), the playbook will stop the bridge and relocate the database file to the `./data` directory. There's no data-loss involved. You'll need to restart the bridge manually though (`--tags=start`).
We're now following the default configuration for the WhatsApp bridge.
## (BC Break) IRC bridge configuration is now entirely managed by the playbook
Until now, configuration files for the [IRC bridge](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-irc.md) were created by the playbook initially, but never modified later on.
From now on, the playbook will keep the configuration in sync for you.
This means that if you were making manual changes to the `/matrix/appservice-irc/config.yaml` or `/matrix/appservice-irc/registration.yaml` configuration files, those would be lost the next time you run the playbook.
The bridge now stores configuration in a subdirectory (`/matrix/appservice-irc/config`), so your old configuration remains in the base directory (`/matrix/appservice-irc`).
Previously, we asked people to configure bridged IRC servers by extending the bridge configuration (`matrix_appservice_irc_configuration_extension_yaml`). While this is still possible and will continue working forever, **we now recommend defining IRC servers in the easier to use `matrix_appservice_irc_ircService_servers` variable**. See [our IRC bridge documentation page](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-irc.md) for an example.
If you decide to continue using `matrix_appservice_irc_configuration_extension_yaml`, you might be interested to know that `ircService.databaseUri` and a few other keys now have default values in the base configuration (`matrix_appservice_irc_configuration_yaml`). You may wish to stop redefining those keys, unless you really intend to override them. You most likely only need to override `ircService.servers`.
Bridge data (`passkey.pem` and database files) is now also stored in a subdirectory (`/matrix/appservice-irc/data`).
When you run the playbook with an existing `/matrix/appservice-irc/passkey.pem` file, the playbook will stop the bridge and relocate the passkey and database files (`rooms.db` and `users.db`) to the `./data` directory. There's no data-loss involved. You'll need to restart the bridge manually though (`--tags=start`).
## (BC Break) Telegram bridge configuration is now entirely managed by the playbook
Until now, configuration files for the [Telegram bridge](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-telegram.md) were created by the playbook initially, but never modified later on.
This means that if you were making manual changes to the `/matrix/mautrix-telegram/config.yaml` or `/matrix/mautrix-telegram/registration.yaml` configuration files, those would be lost the next time you run the playbook.
The bridge now stores configuration in a subdirectory (`/matrix/mautrix-telegram/config`), so your old configuration remains in the base directory (`/matrix/mautrix-telegram`).
You need to migrate any manual changes over to the new `matrix_mautrix_telegram_configuration_extension_yaml` variable, so that the playbook would apply them for you.
Likewise, data is now also stored in a subdirectory (`/matrix/mautrix-telegram/data`). When you run the playbook with an existing database file (`/matrix/mautrix-telegram/mautrix-telegram.db`), the playbook will stop the bridge and relocate the database file to the `./data` directory. There's no data-loss involved. You'll need to restart the bridge manually though (`--tags=start`).
Also, we're now following the default configuration for the Telegram bridge, so some default configuration values are different:
-`edits_as_replies` (used to be `false`, now `true`) - previously replies were not sent over to Matrix at all; ow they are sent over as a reply to the original message
-`inline_images` (used to be `true`, now `false`) - this has to do with captioned images. Inline-image (included caption) are said to exhibit troubles on Riot iOS. When `false`, the caption arrives on the Matrix side as a separate message.
-`authless_portals` (used to be `false`, now `true`) - creating portals from the Telegram side is now possible
-`whitelist_group_admins` (used to be `false`, now `true`) - allows Telegram group admins to use the bot commands
If the new values are not to your liking, use `matrix_mautrix_telegram_configuration_extension_yaml` to specify an override (refer to `matrix_mautrix_telegram_configuration_yaml` to figure out which variable goes where).
With [Synapse v1.0 now available](https://matrix.org/blog/2019/06/11/introducing-matrix-1-0-and-the-matrix-org-foundation) and most people being on at least Synapse v0.99, it's time to remove the `_matrix._tcp` DNS SRV record that we've been keeping for compatibility with old Synapse versions (<= 0.34).
According to the [Server Discovery specification](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/r0.1.2.html#server-discovery), it's no harm to keep the DNS SRV record. But since it's not necessary for federating with the larger Matrix network anymore, you should be safe to get rid of it.
**Note**: don't confuse the `_matrix._tcp` and `_matrix-identity._tcp` DNS SRV records. The latter, **must not** be removed.
For completeness, we must say that using a `_matrix._tcp` [SRV record for Server Delegation](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#server-delegation-via-a-dns-srv-record-advanced) is still valid and useful for certain deployments. It's just that our guide recommends the [`/.well-known/matrix/server` Server Delegation method](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#server-delegation-via-a-well-known-file), due to its easier implementation when using this playbook.
Besides this optional/non-urgent DNS change, assuming you're already on Synapse v0.99, upgrading to Synapse v1.0 should be as simple as [re-running the playbook](docs/maintenance-upgrading-services.md).
## (BC Break) Facebook bridge configuration is now entirely managed by the playbook
Until now, configuration files for the [Facebook bridge](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-facebook.md) were created by the playbook initially, but never modified later on.
This means that if you were making manual changes to the `/matrix/mautrix-facebook/config.yaml` or `/matrix/mautrix-facebook/registration.yaml` configuration files, those would be lost the next time you run the playbook.
The bridge now stores configuration in a subdirectory (`/matrix/mautrix-facebook/config`), so your old configuration remains in the base directory (`/matrix/mautrix-facebook`).
You need to migrate any manual changes over to the new `matrix_mautrix_facebook_configuration_extension_yaml` variable, so that the playbook would apply them for you.
Likewise, data is now also stored in a subdirectory (`/matrix/mautrix-facebook/data`). When you run the playbook with an existing database file (`/matrix/mautrix-facebook/mautrix-facebook.db`), the playbook will stop the bridge and relocate the database file to the `./data` directory. There's no data-loss involved. You'll need to restart the bridge manually though (`--tags=start`).
## Support for exposing container ports publicly (not just to the host)
Until now, various roles supported a `matrix_*_expose_port` variable, which would expose their container's port to the host. This was mostly useful for reverse-proxying manually (in case `matrix-nginx-proxy` was disabled). It could also be used for installing some playbook services (e.g. bridges, etc.) and wiring them to a separate (manual) Matrix setup.
`matrix_*_expose_port` variables were not granular enough - sometimes they would expose one port, other times multiple. They also didn't provide control over **where** to expose (to which port number and to which network interface), because they would usually hardcode something like `127.0.0.1:8080`.
All such variables have been superseded by a better (more flexible) way to do it.
**Most** people (including those not using `matrix-nginx-proxy`), **don't need** to bother with this.
Porting examples follow for people having more customized setups:
Thanks to [@danbob](https://github.com/danbob), the playbook now [supports the new Ansible 2.8](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/187).
A manual change is required to the `inventory/hosts` file, changing the group name from `matrix-servers` to `matrix_servers` (dash to underscore).
If you would prefer to install Synapse another way and just use the playbook to install other services, it should be possible (`matrix_synapse_enabled: false`).
Note that it won't necessarily be the best experience, since the playbook wires things to Synapse by default.
If you're using your own Synapse instance (especially one not running in a container), you may have to override many variables to point them to the correct place.
Having Synapse not be a required component potentially opens the door for installing alternative Matrix homeservers.
## Bridges are now separate from the Synapse role
Bridges are no longer part of the `matrix-synapse` role.
These bridge roles are independent of the `matrix-synapse` role, so it should be possible to use them with a Synapse instance installed another way (not through the playbook).
Besides a myriad of bug fixes and minor improvements, here are the more notable (bigger) features we can announce today.
## Mautrix Facebook/Messenger bridging support
The playbook now supports bridging with [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/) by installing the [mautrix-facebook](https://github.com/tulir/mautrix-facebook) bridge. This playbook functionality is available thanks to [@izissise](https://github.com/izissise).
The playbook can now help you integrate with mxisd's [Registration](https://github.com/kamax-matrix/mxisd/blob/master/docs/features/registration.md) feature.
Learn more in [mxisd-controlled Registration](docs/configuring-playbook-mxisd.md#mxisd-controlled-registration).
# 2019-04-16
## Caddy webserver examples
If you prefer using the [Caddy](https://caddyserver.com/) webserver instead of our own integrated nginx, we now have examples for it in the [`examples/caddy`](examples/caddy) directory
# 2019-04-10
## Goofys support for other S3-compatible object stores
Until now, you could optionally host Synapse's media repository on Amazon S3, but we now also support [using other S3-compatible object stores](docs/configuring-playbook-s3.md),
Due to recent playbook improvements and the fact that the world keeps turning, we're bumping the [version requirement for Ansible](docs/ansible.md#supported-ansible-versions) (2.4 -> 2.5).
We've also started building our own Docker image of Ansible ([devture/ansible](https://hub.docker.com/r/devture/ansible/)), which is useful for people who can't upgrade their local Ansible installation (see [Using Ansible via Docker](docs/ansible.md#using-ansible-via-docker)).
People who have an extra firewall (besides the iptables firewall, which Docker manages automatically), will need to open these additional firewall ports: `5349/tcp` (TURN over TCP) and `5349/udp` (TURN over UDP).
People who build their own custom playbook from our roles should be aware that:
- the `matrix-coturn` role and actually starting Coturn (e.g. `--tags=start`), requires that certificates are already put in place. For this reason, it's usually a good idea to have the `matrix-coturn` role execute after `matrix-nginx-proxy` (which retrieves the certificates).
- there are a few variables that can help you enable TLS support for Coturn. See the `matrix-coturn` section in [group_vars/matrix-servers](./group_vars/matrix-servers).
## matrix-nginx-proxy support for serving the base domain
If you don't have a dedicated server for your base domain and want to set up [Server Delegation via a well-known file](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#server-delegation-via-a-well-known-file), the playbook has got you covered now.
It's now possible for the playbook to obtain an SSL certificate and serve the necessary files for Matrix Server Delegation on your base domain.
Take a look at the new [Serving the base domain](docs/configuring-playbook-base-domain-serving.md) documentation page.
## (BC break) matrix-nginx-proxy data variable renamed
`matrix_nginx_proxy_data_path` was renamed to `matrix_nginx_proxy_base_path`.
There's a new `matrix_nginx_proxy_data_path` variable, which has a different use-purpose now (it's a subdirectory of `matrix_nginx_proxy_base_path` and is meant for storing various data files).
Thanks to [NullIsNot0](https://github.com/NullIsNot0), the playbook can now (optionally) install the [Dimension](https://dimension.t2bot.io/) integration manager. To learn more, see the [Setting up Dimension](docs/configuring-playbook-dimension.md) documentation page.
[@Lionstiger](https://github.com/Lionstiger) has done some great work adding Discord bridging support via [matrix-appservice-discord](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-appservice-discord).
However, we still provide you with hooks to install your own `home.html` file by specifying the `matrix_riot_web_embedded_pages_home_path` variable (used to be called `matrix_riot_web_homepage_template` before).
As we're moving toward Synapse v1.0, things are beginning to stabilize.
Upgrading from v0.99.0 to v0.99.1 should be painless.
If you've been overriding the default configuration so that you can terminate TLS at the Synapse side (`matrix_synapse_no_tls: false`), you'll now have to replace this custom configuration with `matrix_synapse_tls_federation_listener_enabled: true`. The `matrix_synapse_no_tls` variable is no more.
## Synapse v0.99 support and preparation for Synapse v1.0
Matrix is undergoing a lot of changes as it matures towards Synapse v1.0.
The first step is the Synapse v0.99 transitional release, which this playbook now supports.
If you've been using this playbook successfully until now, you'd be aware that we've been doing [Server Delegation](docs/howto-server-delegation.md) using a `_matrix._tcp` DNS SRV record (as per [Configuring DNS](docs/configuring-dns.md)).
Due to changes related to certificate file requirements that will affect us at Synapse v1.0, we'll have to stop using a **`_matrix._tcp` DNS SRV record in the future** (when Synapse goes to v1.0 - around 5th of March 2019). We **still need to keep the SRV record for now**, for backward compatibility with older Synapse versions (lower than v0.99).
**What you need to do now** is make use of this transitional Synapse v0.99 release to **prepare your federation settings for the future**. You have 2 choices to prepare yourself for compatibility with the future Synapse v1.0:
- (recommended) set up [Server Delegation via a well-known file](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#server-delegation-via-a-well-known-file), unless you are affected by the [Downsides of well-known-based Server Delegation](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#downsides-of-well-known-based-server-delegation). If you had previously set up the well-known `client` file, depending on how you've done it, it may be that there is nothing new required of you (besides [upgrading](docs/maintenance-upgrading-services.md)). After upgrading, you can [run a self-check](docs/maintenance-checking-services.md), which will tell you if you need to do anything extra with regard to setting up [Server Delegation via a well-known file](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#server-delegation-via-a-well-known-file). After some time, when most people have upgraded to Synapse v0.99 and older releases have disappeared, be prepared to drop your `_matrix._tcp` SRV record.
- (more advanced) if the [Downsides of well-known-based Server Delegation](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#downsides-of-well-known-based-server-delegation) are not to your liking, **as an alternative**, you can set up [Server Delegation via a DNS SRV record](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#server-delegation-via-a-dns-srv-record-advanced). In such a case, you get to keep using your existing `_matrix._tcp` DNS SRV record forever and need to NOT set up a `/.well-known/matrix/server` file. Don't forget that you need to do certificate changes though. Follow the guide at [Server Delegation via a DNS SRV record](docs/howto-server-delegation.md#server-delegation-via-a-dns-srv-record-advanced).
Now that the [nginx Docker image](https://hub.docker.com/_/nginx) has [added support for TLS v1.3](https://github.com/nginxinc/docker-nginx/issues/190), we have enabled that protocol by default.
When using:
- the **integrated nginx server**: TLS v1.3 support might not kick in immediately, because the nginx version hasn't been bumped and you may have an older build of the nginx Docker image (currently `nginx:1.15.8-alpine`). Typically, we do not re-pull images that you already have. When the nginx version gets bumped in the future, everyone will get the update. Until then, you could manually force-pull the rebuilt Docker image by running this on the server: `docker pull nginx:1.15.8-alpine`.
- **your own external nginx server**: if your external nginx server is too old, the new configuration we generate for you in `/matrix/nginx-proxy/conf.d/` might not work anymore, because it mentions `TLSv1.3` and your nginx version might not support that. You can adjust the SSL protocol list by overriding the `matrix_nginx_proxy_ssl_protocols` variable. Learn more in the documentation page for [Using your own webserver, instead of this playbook's nginx proxy](docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md)
- **another web server**: you don't need to do anything to accommodate this change
[Devon Maloney (@Plailect)](https://github.com/Plailect) has done some great work bringing IRC bridging support via [matrix-appservice-irc](https://github.com/TeDomum/matrix-appservice-irc).
For additional security, various capabilities are also dropped (see [why it's important](https://github.com/projectatomic/atomic-site/issues/203)) for all containers.
Additionally, most containers now use a read-only filesystem (see [why it's important](https://www.projectatomic.io/blog/2015/12/making-docker-images-write-only-in-production/)).
Containers are given write access only to the directories they need to write to.
A minor breaking change is the `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_client_api_client_max_body_size` variable having being renamed to `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_client_api_client_max_body_size_mb` (note the `_mb` suffix). The new variable expects a number value (e.g. `25M` -> `25`).
If you weren't customizing this variable, this wouldn't affect you.
## matrix-mailer is now based on Exim, not Postfix
While we would have preferred to stay with [Postfix](http://www.postfix.org/), we found out that it cannot run as a non-root user.
We've had to replace it with [Exim](https://www.exim.org/) (via the [devture/exim-relay](https://hub.docker.com/r/devture/exim-relay) container image).
The internal `matrix-mailer` service (running in a container) now listens on port `8025` (used to be `587` before).
The playbook will update your Synapse and mxisd email settings to match (`matrix-mailer:587` -> `matrix-mailer:8025`).
Using the [devture/exim-relay](https://hub.docker.com/r/devture/exim-relay) container image instead of [panubo/postfix](https://hub.docker.com/r/panubo/postfix/) also gives us a nice disk usage reduction (~200MB -> 8MB).
## (BC Break) Making the playbook's roles more independent of one another
The following change **affects people running a more non-standard setup** - external Postgres or using our roles in their own other playbook.
**Most users don't need to do anything**, besides becoming aware of the new glue variables file [`group_vars/matrix-servers`](group_vars/matrix-servers).
Because people like using the playbook's components independently (outside of this playbook) and because it's much better for maintainability, we've continued working on separating them.
Still, we'd like to offer a turnkey solution for running a fully-featured Matrix server, so this playbook remains important for wiring up the various components.
- glue variables had to be introduced to the playbook, so it can wire together the various components. Those glue vars are stored in the [`group_vars/matrix-servers`](group_vars/matrix-servers) file. When overriding variables for a given component (role), you need to be aware of both the role defaults (`role/ROLE/defaults/main.yml`) and the role's corresponding section in the [`group_vars/matrix-servers`](group_vars/matrix-servers) file.
-`matrix_postgres_use_external` has been superceeded by the more consistently named `matrix_postgres_enabled` variable and a few other `matrix_synapse_database_` variables. See the [Using an external PostgreSQL server (optional)](docs/configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md) documentation page for an up-to-date replacement.
- Postgres tools (`matrix-postgres-cli` and `matrix-make-user-admin`) are no longer installed if you're not enabling the `matrix-postgres` role (`matrix_postgres_enabled: false`)
- roles, being more independent now, are more minimal and do not do so much magic for you. People that are building their own playbook using our roles will definitely need to take a look at the [`group_vars/matrix-servers`](group_vars/matrix-servers) file and adapt their playbooks with the same (or similar) wiring logic.
For better maintainability, the playbook logic (which all used to reside in a single `matrix-server` role)
has been split out into a number of different roles: `matrix-synapse`, `matrix-postgres`, `matrix-riot-web`, `matrix-mxisd`, etc. (see the `roles/` directory).
To keep the filesystem more consistent with this separation, the **Postgres data had to be relocated**.
The default value of `matrix_postgres_data_path` was changed from `/matrix/postgres` to `/matrix/postgres/data`. The `/matrix/postgres` directory is what we consider a base path now (new variable `matrix_postgres_base_path`). **Your Postgres data files will automatically be relocated by the playbook** (`/matrix/postgres/*` -> `/matrix/postgres/data/`) when you run with `--tags=setup-all` (or `--tags=setup-postgres`). While this shouldn't cause data-loss, **it's better if you do a Postgres backup just in case**. You'd need to restart all services after this migration (`--tags=start`).
## (BC Break) Cronjob schedule no longer configurable
Due to the way we manage cronjobs now, you can no longer configure the schedule they're invoked at.
If you were previously using `matrix_ssl_lets_encrypt_renew_cron_time_definition` or `matrix_nginx_proxy_reload_cron_time_definition`
to set a custom schedule, you should note that these variables don't affect anything anymore.
If you miss this functionality, please [open an Issue](https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/new) and let us know about your use case!
## (BC Break) mxisd upgrade with multiple base DN support
mxisd has bee upgraded to [version 1.2.2](https://github.com/kamax-matrix/mxisd/releases/tag/v1.2.2), which supports [multiple base DNs](https://github.com/kamax-matrix/mxisd/blob/v1.2.2/docs/stores/ldap.md#base).
If you were configuring this playbook's `matrix_mxisd_ldap_connection_baseDn` variable until now (a string containing a single base DN), you'll need to change to configuring the `matrix_mxisd_ldap_connection_baseDns` variable (an array containing multiple base DNs).
The [LDAP identity store for mxisd](https://github.com/kamax-matrix/mxisd/blob/master/docs/stores/ldap.md) can now be configured easily using playbook variables (see the `matrix_mxisd_ldap_` variables in `roles/custom/matrix-server/defaults/main.yml`).
The playbook now allows you to set the log levels used by Synapse. The default logging levels remain the same.
You can now override following variables with any of the supported log levels listed here: https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html#logging-levels
This now allows you use a custom integration manager like [Dimension](https://dimension.t2bot.io). For example, if you wish to use the Dimension instance hosted at dimension.t2bot.io, you can set the following in your vars.yml file:
There's now a new `matrix_nginx_proxy_ssl_protocols` playbook variable, which controls the SSL protocols used to serve Riot and Synapse. Its default value is `TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2`. This playbook previously used `TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2` to serve Riot and Synapse.
If you have have an existing setup, it's likely running on an older Postgres version (9.x or 10.x). You can easily upgrade by following the [upgrading PostgreSQL guide](docs/maintenance-postgres.md#upgrading-postgresql).
Due to the large amount of features added to this playbook lately, to keep things manageable we've had to reorganize its configuration variables a bit.
The following playbook variables were renamed:
- from `matrix_docker_image_mxisd` to `matrix_mxisd_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_mautrix_telegram` to `matrix_mautrix_telegram_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_mautrix_whatsapp` to `matrix_mautrix_whatsapp_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_mailer` to `matrix_mailer_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_coturn` to `matrix_coturn_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_goofys` to `matrix_s3_goofys_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_riot` to `matrix_riot_web_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_nginx` to `matrix_nginx_proxy_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_synapse` to `matrix_synapse_docker_image`
- from `matrix_docker_image_postgres_v9` to `matrix_postgres_docker_image_v9`
- from `matrix_docker_image_postgres_v10` to `matrix_postgres_docker_image_v10`
- from `matrix_docker_image_postgres_latest` to `matrix_postgres_docker_image_latest`
The playbook now supports bridging with [Whatsapp](https://www.whatsapp.com/) by installing the [mautrix-whatsapp](https://github.com/tulir/mautrix-whatsapp) bridge. This playbook functionality is available thanks to [@izissise](https://github.com/izissise).
Additional details are available in [Setting up Mautrix Whatsapp bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-whatsapp.md).
The playbook can now help you with [Controlling Matrix federation](docs/configuring-playbook-federation), should you wish to run a more private (isolated) server.
The playbook can now enable/disable user presence-status tracking in Synapse, through the playbook's `matrix_synapse_use_presence` variable (having a default value of `true` - enabled).
If users participate in large rooms with many other servers, disabling presence will decrease server load significantly.
The playbook now makes the Synapse cache factor configurable, through the playbook's `matrix_synapse_cache_factor` variable (having a default value of `0.5`).
Changing that value allows you to potentially decrease RAM usage or to increase performance by caching more stuff.
`--log-driver=none` is used for all Docker containers now.
All these containers are started through systemd anyway and get logged in journald, so there's no need for Docker to be logging the same thing using the default `json-file` driver. Doing that was growing `/var/lib/docker/containers/..` infinitely until service/container restart.
As a result of this, things like `docker logs matrix-synapse` won't work anymore. `journalctl -u matrix-synapse` is how one can see the logs.
The playbook now helps you set up [service discovery](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.4.0.html#server-discovery) using a `/.well-known/matrix/client` file.
Additional details are available in [Configuring service discovery via .well-known](docs/configuring-well-known.md).
The playbook now supports bridging with [Telegram](https://telegram.org/) by installing the [mautrix-telegram](https://github.com/tulir/mautrix-telegram) bridge. This playbook functionality is available thanks to [@izissise](https://github.com/izissise).
Additional details are available in [Setting up Mautrix Telegram bridging](docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-telegram.md).
The playbook now supports enabling password-peppering for increased security in Matrix Synapse via the `matrix_synapse_password_config_pepper` playbook variable. Using a password pepper is disabled by default (just like it used to be before this playbook variable got introduced) and is not to be enabled/disabled after initial setup, as that would invalidate all existing passwords.
## Statistics-reporting support for Matrix Synapse
There's now a new `matrix_synapse_report_stats` playbook variable, which controls the `report_stats` configuration option for Matrix Synapse. It defaults to `false`, so no change is required to retain your privacy.
If you'd like to start reporting statistics about your homeserver (things like number of users, number of messages sent, uptime, load, etc.) to matrix.org, you can turn on stats reporting.
## Changing the way SSL certificates are retrieved
We've been using [acmetool](https://github.com/hlandau/acme) (with the [willwill/acme-docker](https://hub.docker.com/r/willwill/acme-docker/) Docker image) until now.
Due to the Docker image being deprecated, and things looking bleak for acmetool's support of the newer ACME v2 API endpoint, we've switched to using [certbot](https://certbot.eff.org/) (with the [certbot/certbot](https://hub.docker.com/r/certbot/certbot/) Docker image).
Changed the way the Docker containers are linked together. The ones that need to communicate with others operate in a `matrix` network now and not in the default bridge network.