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Correct some typos in FAQ
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docs/faq.md
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docs/faq.md
@ -21,11 +21,11 @@ For a lot more generic questions and answers, see the [matrix.org FAQ](https://m
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[Matrix](https://matrix.org/) is a new type of realtime communication (chat) network, the closest analogy to which is probably "email".
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You don't just use the "email" protocols (SMTP, POP3, IMAP) directly though. There's a some *server* somewhere which stores your data (`@gmail.com`, `@yahoo.com`, `@hotmail.com`, `@your-company.com`) and you access using these "email" protocol using use some *client* program (Outlook, Thunderbird, some website, etc).
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You don't just use the "email" protocols (SMTP, POP3, IMAP) directly though. There's a *server* somewhere which stores your data (`@gmail.com`, `@yahoo.com`, `@hotmail.com`, `@your-company.com`) and you access it by using these "email" protocols via some *client* program (Outlook, Thunderbird, some website, etc).
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In the world of the Matrix chat protocol, there are various client programs. The first and currently most full-featured one is called [Element](https://element.io/) (used to be called Riot.im and Vector.im in the past). There are [many other clients](https://matrix.org/clients/). You can switch clients as much as you want until you find the one that is right for you on a given platform (you may use Element on your desktop, but Fluffychat on your phone, etc).
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Matrix is also like email due to the fact that are many servers around the world which can all talk to each other (you can send email from `@gmail.com` addresses to `@yahoo.com` and `@hotmail.com` addresses). It's the same with Matrix (`@bob:his-domain.com` can talk to `@alice:her-domain.org`).
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Matrix is also like email due to the fact that there are many servers around the world which can all talk to each other (you can send email from `@gmail.com` addresses to `@yahoo.com` and `@hotmail.com` addresses). It's the same with Matrix (`@bob:his-domain.com` can talk to `@alice:her-domain.org`).
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If someone else is hosting your Matrix server (you being `@user:matrix.org` or some other public server like this), all you need is a Matrix client program, like Element.
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@ -37,11 +37,11 @@ In short:
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- Element is a client program you can use to participate on the Matrix chat network via some server (yours or someone else's). There are also [many other client programs](https://matrix.org/clients/).
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- Synapse is a server program you can use to host your very own Matrix server.
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This FAQ here mostly focuses on installing Matrix services using the Ansible automation tool. You can learn much more about Matrix in the [matrix.org FAQ](https://matrix.org/faq/).
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This FAQ here mostly focuses on installing various Matrix services using the Ansible automation tool. You can learn much more about Matrix in the [matrix.org FAQ](https://matrix.org/faq/).
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## People I wish to talk to are not on Matrix. Can I talk to them?
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You most likely can. Besides Matrix-native chats, Matrix also supports this concept of "bridging", which allows you to plug other networks into it.
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You most likely can. Besides Matrix-native chats, Matrix also supports the concept of "bridging", which allows you to plug other networks into it.
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This Ansible playbook can help you install [tens of bridges for various networks](configuring-playbook.md#bridging-other-networks).
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@ -82,9 +82,9 @@ To learn more, see our [dedicated Ansible documentation page](ansible.md).
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### Why use this playbook and not install Synapse and other things manually?
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There's various guides telling you how easy it is to install [Synapse](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse).
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There are various guides telling you how easy it is to install [Synapse](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse).
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Reading this Ansible playbook's documentation, you may also be thinking:
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Reading the documentation of this Ansible playbook, you may also be thinking:
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> I don't know what [Ansible](https://www.ansible.com/) is. I don't know what [Docker](https://www.docker.com/) is. This looks more complicated.
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@ -173,7 +173,7 @@ It also lets us have a unified setup which runs the same across various supporte
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### Is Docker a hard requirement?
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Yes. See [Why don't you use Podman instead of Docker?](#is-docker-a-hard-requirement) for why we're not using another container runtime.
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Yes. See [Why don't you use Podman instead of Docker?](#why-dont-you-use-podman-instead-of-docker) for why we're not using another container runtime.
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All of our services run in containers. It's how we achieve predictability and also how we support tens of different services across lots of distros.
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@ -203,7 +203,7 @@ This largely depends on your use case. It's not so much the number of users that
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Federated rooms with lots of history and containing hundreds of other servers are very heavy CPU-wise and memory-wise.
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You can probably use a 1 CPU + 1GB memory server to host hundreds of local users just fine, but as soon as of them joins a federated room like `#matrix:matrix.org` (Matrix HQ) or some IRC-bridged room (say `##linux`), your server will get the need for a lot more power (at least 2GB RAM, etc).
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You can probably use a 1 CPU + 1GB memory server to host hundreds of local users just fine, but as soon as one of them joins a federated room like `#matrix:matrix.org` (Matrix HQ) or some IRC-bridged room (say `##linux`), your server will get the need for a lot more power (at least 2GB RAM, etc).
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Running Matrix on a server with 1GB of memory is possible (especially if you disable some not-so-important services). See [How do I optimize this setup for a low-power server?](#how-do-i-optimize-this-setup-for-a-low-power-server).
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@ -220,7 +220,7 @@ If your distro runs within an [LXC container](https://linuxcontainers.org/), you
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### Why install my server at matrix.DOMAIN and not at the base DOMAIN?
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It's the same with email servers. Your email address is likely `name@company.com`, not `name@mail.company.com`, even though it's really `mail.company.com` that is really handling your data for `@company.com` email to work.
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It's the same with email servers. Your email address is likely `name@company.com`, not `name@mail.company.com`, even though it's `mail.company.com` that is really handling your data for `@company.com` email to work.
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Using a separate domain name is easier to manage (although it's a little hard to get right at first) and keeps your Matrix server isolated from your website (if you have one), from your email server (if you have one), etc.
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@ -230,7 +230,7 @@ If you'd really like to install Matrix services directly on the base domain, see
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### I don't control anything on the base domain and can't set up delegation to matrix.DOMAIN. What do I do?
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If you're not in control of your base domain (or server handling it) at all, you can take a look at [How do I install on matrix.DOMAIN without involving the base DOMAIN?](#how-do-i-install-on-matrixdomain-without-involving-the-base-domain)
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If you're not in control of your base domain (or the server handling it) at all, you can take a look at [How do I install on matrix.DOMAIN without involving the base DOMAIN?](#how-do-i-install-on-matrixdomain-without-involving-the-base-domain)
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### I can't set up HTTPS on the base domain. How will I get Matrix federating?
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@ -345,7 +345,7 @@ Refer to both of these for inspiration. Still, as mentioned in [Configuring the
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### I'd like to adjust some configuration which doesn't have a corresponding variable. How do I do it?
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The playbook doesn't aim to expose all configuration settings for all services using variables.
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Doing so would amount is to hundreds of variables that we have to create and maintain.
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Doing so would amount to hundreds of variables that we have to create and maintain.
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Instead, we only try to make some important basics configurable using dedicated variables you can see in each role.
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See [What configuration variables are available?](#what-configuration-variables-are-available).
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@ -398,9 +398,9 @@ Available service names can be seen by doing `ls /etc/systemd/system/matrix*.ser
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Some services also log to files in `/matrix/*/data/..`, but we're slowly moving away from that.
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We also disable Docker logging, so you can't use `docker logs matrix-*` either. We do this to prevent useless double (or even tripple) logging and to avoid having to rotate log files.
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We also disable Docker logging, so you can't use `docker logs matrix-*` either. We do this to prevent useless double (or even triple) logging and to avoid having to rotate log files.
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We just simply delegate logging to journald and it takes care of persistenec and expiring old data.
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We just simply delegate logging to journald and it takes care of persistence and expiring old data.
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Also see: [How long do systemd/journald logs persist for?](#how-long-do-systemdjournald-logs-persist-for)
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@ -438,7 +438,7 @@ If your previous installation is done in some other way (not using this Ansible
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### How do I back up the data on my server?
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We haven't document this properly yet, but the general advice is to:
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We haven't documented this properly yet, but the general advice is to:
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- back up Postgres by making a database dump. See [Backing up PostgreSQL](maintenance-postgres.md#backing-up-postgresql)
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