From `@<username>`, `@your_username`, `@example`, etc. Signed-off-by: Suguru Hirahara <acioustick@noreply.codeberg.org>
6.2 KiB
Setting up a Generic Mautrix Bridge (optional)
The playbook can install and configure various mautrix bridges (twitter, facebook, instagram, signal, hangouts, googlechat, etc.), as well as many other (non-mautrix) bridges. This is a common guide for configuring mautrix bridges.
You can see each bridge's features at in the ROADMAP.md
file in its corresponding mautrix repository.
Adjusting the playbook configuration
To enable the bridge, add the following configuration to your inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml
file:
# Replace SERVICENAME with one of: twitter, facebook, instagram, ..
matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_enabled: true
There are some additional things you may wish to configure about the bridge before you continue. Each bridge may have additional requirements besides _enabled: true
. For example, the mautrix-telegram bridge (our documentation page about it is here) requires the matrix_mautrix_telegram_api_id
and matrix_mautrix_telegram_api_hash
variables to be defined. Refer to each bridge's individual documentation page for details about enabling bridges.
To configure a user as an administrator for all bridges, add the following configuration to your inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml
file:
matrix_admin: "@alice:{{ matrix_domain }}"
Alternatively (more verbose, but allows multiple admins to be configured), you can do the same on a per-bridge basis with:
matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_configuration_extension_yaml: |
bridge:
permissions:
'@alice:{{ matrix_domain }}': admin
encryption
Encryption support is off by default. If you would like to enable encryption, add the following configuration to your inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml
file:
for all bridges with encryption support:
matrix_bridges_encryption_enabled: true
matrix_bridges_encryption_default: true
Alternatively, for a specific bridge:
matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_bridge_encryption_enabled: true
matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_bridge_encryption_default: true
relay mode
Relay mode is off by default. If you would like to enable relay mode, add the following configuration to your inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml
file:
for all bridges with relay mode support:
matrix_bridges_relay_enabled: true
Alternatively, for a specific bridge:
matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_configuration_extension_yaml: |
bridge:
relay:
enabled: true
You can only have one matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_configuration_extension_yaml
definition in vars.yml
per bridge, so if you need multiple pieces of configuration there, just merge them like this:
matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_configuration_extension_yaml: |
bridge:
permissions:
'@alice:{{ matrix_domain }}': admin
encryption:
allow: true
default: true
Setting the bot's username
matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_appservice_bot_username: "BOTNAME"
Can be used to set the username for the bridge.
Discovering additional configuration options
You may wish to look at roles/custom/matrix-bridge-mautrix-SERVICENAME/templates/config.yaml.j2
and roles/custom/matrix-bridge-mautrix-SERVICENAME/defaults/main.yml
to find other things you would like to configure.
Installing
After configuring the playbook, run it with playbook tags as below:
ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all,ensure-matrix-users-created,start
Notes:
-
The
ensure-matrix-users-created
playbook tag makes the playbook automatically create the bot's user account. -
The shortcut commands with the
just
program are also available:just install-all
orjust setup-all
just install-all
is useful for maintaining your setup quickly (2x-5x faster thanjust setup-all
) when its components remain unchanged. If you adjust yourvars.yml
to remove other components, you'd need to runjust setup-all
, or these components will still remain installed.
Set up Double Puppeting
To set up Double Puppeting enable the Appservice Double Puppet service for this playbook.
The bridge automatically performs Double Puppeting if Shared Secret Auth is configured and enabled on the server for this playbook by adding
matrix_appservice_double_puppet_enabled: true
This is the recommended way of setting up Double Puppeting, as it's easier to accomplish, works for all your users automatically, and has less of a chance of breaking in the future.
Controlling the logging level
matrix_mautrix_SERVICENAME_logging_level: WARN
to vars.yml
to control the logging level, where you may replace WARN with one of the following to control the verbosity of the logs generated: TRACE, DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, or FATAL.
If you have issues with a service, and are requesting support, the higher levels of logging will generally be more helpful.
Usage
You then need to start a chat with @SERVICENAMEbot:example.com
(where example.com
is your base domain, not the matrix.
domain).
Send login
to the bridge bot to get started. You can learn more here about authentication from the bridge's official documentation on Authentication: https://docs.mau.fi/bridges/python/SERVICENAME/authentication.html
If you run into trouble, check the Troubleshooting section below.
Troubleshooting
For troubleshooting information with a specific bridge, please see the playbook documentation about it (some other document in in docs/
) and the upstream (mautrix) bridge documentation for that specific bridge.
Reporting bridge bugs should happen upstream, in the corresponding mautrix repository, not to us.