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8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Richard van der Hoff
45ad44b076 Fix typo
Co-Authored-By: anoadragon453 <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
2019-01-21 16:05:29 +00:00
Andrew Morgan
8b0a9b3ad7 Set default config value for tests 2019-01-17 13:23:16 +00:00
Andrew Morgan
53f8936b40 Simplify code slightly 2019-01-17 12:09:31 +00:00
Andrew Morgan
439d71a8d1 Fix missing hs property 2019-01-17 12:03:48 +00:00
Andrew Morgan
a82b682b07 linting 2019-01-17 10:52:04 +00:00
Andrew Morgan
1128d9b9b2 Clarify this is not for use with a SOCKS proxy 2019-01-16 17:36:20 +00:00
Andrew Morgan
2c9ce72071 Add changelog file 2019-01-16 17:23:08 +00:00
Andrew Morgan
6a83652dee Allow for Synapse to run through a http proxy
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morgan <andrew@amorgan.xyz>
2019-01-16 17:17:50 +00:00
387 changed files with 11123 additions and 22788 deletions

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@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
CI
BUILDKITE
BUILDKITE_BUILD_NUMBER
BUILDKITE_BRANCH
BUILDKITE_BUILD_NUMBER
BUILDKITE_JOB_ID
BUILDKITE_BUILD_URL
BUILDKITE_PROJECT_SLUG
BUILDKITE_COMMIT
BUILDKITE_PULL_REQUEST
BUILDKITE_TAG
CODECOV_TOKEN
TRIAL_FLAGS

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@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
version: '3.1'
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:9.4
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
testenv:
image: python:2.7
depends_on:
- postgres
env_file: .env
environment:
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_HOST: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_USER: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
working_dir: /app
volumes:
- ..:/app

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@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
version: '3.1'
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:9.5
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
testenv:
image: python:2.7
depends_on:
- postgres
env_file: .env
environment:
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_HOST: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_USER: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
working_dir: /app
volumes:
- ..:/app

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@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
version: '3.1'
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:9.4
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
testenv:
image: python:3.5
depends_on:
- postgres
env_file: .env
environment:
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_HOST: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_USER: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
working_dir: /app
volumes:
- ..:/app

View File

@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
version: '3.1'
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:9.5
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
testenv:
image: python:3.5
depends_on:
- postgres
env_file: .env
environment:
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_HOST: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_USER: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
working_dir: /app
volumes:
- ..:/app

View File

@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
version: '3.1'
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:11
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
testenv:
image: python:3.7
depends_on:
- postgres
env_file: .env
environment:
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_HOST: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_USER: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
working_dir: /app
volumes:
- ..:/app

View File

@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
version: '3.1'
services:
postgres:
image: postgres:9.5
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
testenv:
image: python:3.7
depends_on:
- postgres
env_file: .env
environment:
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_HOST: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_USER: postgres
SYNAPSE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD: postgres
working_dir: /app
volumes:
- ..:/app

View File

@@ -1,168 +0,0 @@
env:
CODECOV_TOKEN: "2dd7eb9b-0eda-45fe-a47c-9b5ac040045f"
steps:
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e pep8"
label: "\U0001F9F9 PEP-8"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:3.6"
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e packaging"
label: "\U0001F9F9 packaging"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:3.6"
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e check_isort"
label: "\U0001F9F9 isort"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:3.6"
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "scripts-dev/check-newsfragment"
label: ":newspaper: Newsfile"
branches: "!master !develop !release-*"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:3.6"
propagate-environment: true
- wait
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e check-sampleconfig"
label: "\U0001F9F9 check-sample-config"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:3.6"
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e py27,codecov"
label: ":python: 2.7 / SQLite"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 2"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:2.7"
propagate-environment: true
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e py35,codecov"
label: ":python: 3.5 / SQLite"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 2"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:3.5"
propagate-environment: true
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e py36,codecov"
label: ":python: 3.6 / SQLite"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 2"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:3.6"
propagate-environment: true
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e py37,codecov"
label: ":python: 3.7 / SQLite"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 2"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:3.7"
propagate-environment: true
- command:
- "python -m pip install tox"
- "tox -e py27-old,codecov"
label: ":python: 2.7 / SQLite / Old Deps"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 2"
plugins:
- docker#v3.0.1:
image: "python:2.7"
propagate-environment: true
- label: ":python: 2.7 / :postgres: 9.4"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 4"
command:
- "bash -c 'python -m pip install tox && python -m tox -e py27-postgres,codecov'"
plugins:
- docker-compose#v2.1.0:
run: testenv
config:
- .buildkite/docker-compose.py27.pg94.yaml
- label: ":python: 2.7 / :postgres: 9.5"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 4"
command:
- "bash -c 'python -m pip install tox && python -m tox -e py27-postgres,codecov'"
plugins:
- docker-compose#v2.1.0:
run: testenv
config:
- .buildkite/docker-compose.py27.pg95.yaml
- label: ":python: 3.5 / :postgres: 9.4"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 4"
command:
- "bash -c 'python -m pip install tox && python -m tox -e py35-postgres,codecov'"
plugins:
- docker-compose#v2.1.0:
run: testenv
config:
- .buildkite/docker-compose.py35.pg94.yaml
- label: ":python: 3.5 / :postgres: 9.5"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 4"
command:
- "bash -c 'python -m pip install tox && python -m tox -e py35-postgres,codecov'"
plugins:
- docker-compose#v2.1.0:
run: testenv
config:
- .buildkite/docker-compose.py35.pg95.yaml
- label: ":python: 3.7 / :postgres: 9.5"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 4"
command:
- "bash -c 'python -m pip install tox && python -m tox -e py37-postgres,codecov'"
plugins:
- docker-compose#v2.1.0:
run: testenv
config:
- .buildkite/docker-compose.py37.pg95.yaml
- label: ":python: 3.7 / :postgres: 11"
env:
TRIAL_FLAGS: "-j 4"
command:
- "bash -c 'python -m pip install tox && python -m tox -e py37-postgres,codecov'"
plugins:
- docker-compose#v2.1.0:
run: testenv
config:
- .buildkite/docker-compose.py37.pg11.yaml

View File

@@ -4,21 +4,19 @@ jobs:
machine: true
steps:
- checkout
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}-py2 .
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}-py3 --build-arg PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 .
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG} .
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}-py3 --build-arg PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 .
- run: docker login --username $DOCKER_HUB_USERNAME --password $DOCKER_HUB_PASSWORD
- run: docker push matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}
- run: docker push matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}-py2
- run: docker push matrixdotorg/synapse:${CIRCLE_TAG}-py3
dockerhubuploadlatest:
machine: true
steps:
- checkout
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:latest-py2 .
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:latest -t matrixdotorg/synapse:latest-py3 --build-arg PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 .
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:latest .
- run: docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --label gitsha1=${CIRCLE_SHA1} -t matrixdotorg/synapse:latest-py3 --build-arg PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 .
- run: docker login --username $DOCKER_HUB_USERNAME --password $DOCKER_HUB_PASSWORD
- run: docker push matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
- run: docker push matrixdotorg/synapse:latest-py2
- run: docker push matrixdotorg/synapse:latest-py3
sytestpy2:
docker:

View File

@@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
comment:
layout: "diff"
coverage:
status:
project:
default:
target: 0 # Target % coverage, can be auto. Turned off for now
threshold: null
base: auto
patch:
default:
target: 0
threshold: null
base: auto

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,11 @@
[run]
branch = True
parallel = True
include = synapse/*
source = synapse
[paths]
source=
coverage
[report]
precision = 2

View File

@@ -4,9 +4,9 @@ about: Create a report to help us improve
---
<!--
<!--
**IF YOU HAVE SUPPORT QUESTIONS ABOUT RUNNING OR CONFIGURING YOUR OWN HOME SERVER**:
**IF YOU HAVE SUPPORT QUESTIONS ABOUT RUNNING OR CONFIGURING YOUR OWN HOME SERVER**:
You will likely get better support more quickly if you ask in ** #matrix:matrix.org ** ;)
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ the necessary data to fix your issue.
You can also preview your report before submitting it. You may remove sections
that aren't relevant to your particular case.
Text between <!-- and --> marks will be invisible in the report.
Text between <!-- and --> marks will be invisible in the report.
-->
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ Text between <!-- and --> marks will be invisible in the report.
- that reproduce the bug
- using hyphens as bullet points
<!--
<!--
Describe how what happens differs from what you expected.
If you can identify any relevant log snippets from _homeserver.log_, please include
@@ -48,8 +48,8 @@ those (please be careful to remove any personal or private data). Please surroun
If not matrix.org:
<!--
What version of Synapse is running?
<!--
What version of Synapse is running?
You can find the Synapse version by inspecting the server headers (replace matrix.org with
your own homeserver domain):
$ curl -v https://matrix.org/_matrix/client/versions 2>&1 | grep "Server:"

87
.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,40 +1,63 @@
# filename patterns
*~
.*.swp
.#*
*.deb
*.egg
*.egg-info
*.lock
*.pyc
*.tac
.*.swp
*~
*.lock
.DS_Store
_trial_temp/
_trial_temp*/
logs/
dbs/
*.egg
dist/
docs/build/
*.egg-info
# stuff that is likely to exist when you run a server locally
/*.db
/*.log
/*.log.config
/*.pid
/*.signing.key
/env/
cmdclient_config.json
homeserver*.db
homeserver*.log
homeserver*.log.*
homeserver*.pid
/homeserver*.yaml
/media_store/
/uploads
# IDEs
/.idea/
/.ropeproject/
/.vscode/
*.signing.key
*.tls.crt
*.tls.dh
*.tls.key
# build products
/.coverage*
!/.coveragerc
/.tox
/build/
/coverage.*
/dist/
/docs/build/
/htmlcov
/pip-wheel-metadata/
.coverage
.coverage.*
!.coverage.rc
htmlcov
demo/*/*.db
demo/*/*.log
demo/*/*.log.*
demo/*/*.pid
demo/media_store.*
demo/etc
uploads
cache
.idea/
media_store/
*.tac
build/
venv/
venv*/
*venv/
localhost-800*/
static/client/register/register_config.js
.tox
env/
*.config
.vscode/
.ropeproject/
*.deb
/debs

73
.travis.yml Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,73 @@
sudo: false
language: python
cache:
directories:
# we only bother to cache the wheels; parts of the http cache get
# invalidated every build (because they get served with a max-age of 600
# seconds), which means that we end up re-uploading the whole cache for
# every build, which is time-consuming In any case, it's not obvious that
# downloading the cache from S3 would be much faster than downloading the
# originals from pypi.
#
- $HOME/.cache/pip/wheels
# don't clone the whole repo history, one commit will do
git:
depth: 1
# only build branches we care about (PRs are built seperately)
branches:
only:
- master
- develop
- /^release-v/
# When running the tox environments that call Twisted Trial, we can pass the -j
# flag to run the tests concurrently. We set this to 2 for CPU bound tests
# (SQLite) and 4 for I/O bound tests (PostgreSQL).
matrix:
fast_finish: true
include:
- python: 2.7
env: TOX_ENV=packaging
- python: 3.6
env: TOX_ENV="pep8,check_isort"
- python: 2.7
env: TOX_ENV=py27,codecov TRIAL_FLAGS="-j 2"
- python: 2.7
env: TOX_ENV=py27-old TRIAL_FLAGS="-j 2"
- python: 2.7
env: TOX_ENV=py27-postgres,codecov TRIAL_FLAGS="-j 4"
services:
- postgresql
- python: 3.5
env: TOX_ENV=py35,codecov TRIAL_FLAGS="-j 2"
- python: 3.6
env: TOX_ENV=py36,codecov TRIAL_FLAGS="-j 2"
- python: 3.6
env: TOX_ENV=py36-postgres,codecov TRIAL_FLAGS="-j 4"
services:
- postgresql
- # we only need to check for the newsfragment if it's a PR build
if: type = pull_request
python: 3.6
env: TOX_ENV=check-newsfragment
script:
- git remote set-branches --add origin develop
- git fetch origin develop
- tox -e $TOX_ENV
install:
- pip install tox
script:
- tox -e $TOX_ENV

View File

@@ -69,6 +69,3 @@ Serban Constantin <serban.constantin at gmail dot com>
Jason Robinson <jasonr at matrix.org>
* Minor fixes
Joseph Weston <joseph at weston.cloud>
+ Add admin API for querying HS version

View File

@@ -1,293 +1,3 @@
Synapse 0.99.3 (2019-04-01)
===========================
No significant changes.
Synapse 0.99.3rc1 (2019-03-27)
==============================
Features
--------
- The user directory has been rewritten to make it faster, with less chance of falling behind on a large server. ([\#4537](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4537), [\#4846](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4846), [\#4864](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4864), [\#4887](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4887), [\#4900](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4900), [\#4944](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4944))
- Add configurable rate limiting to the /register endpoint. ([\#4735](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4735), [\#4804](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4804))
- Move server key queries to federation reader. ([\#4757](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4757))
- Add support for /account/3pid REST endpoint to client_reader worker. ([\#4759](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4759))
- Add an endpoint to the admin API for querying the server version. Contributed by Joseph Weston. ([\#4772](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4772))
- Include a default configuration file in the 'docs' directory. ([\#4791](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4791), [\#4801](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4801))
- Synapse is now permissive about trailing slashes on some of its federation endpoints, allowing zero or more to be present. ([\#4793](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4793))
- Add support for /keys/query and /keys/changes REST endpoints to client_reader worker. ([\#4796](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4796))
- Add checks to incoming events over federation for events evading auth (aka "soft fail"). ([\#4814](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4814))
- Add configurable rate limiting to the /login endpoint. ([\#4821](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4821), [\#4865](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4865))
- Remove trailing slashes from certain outbound federation requests. Retry if receiving a 404. Context: #3622. ([\#4840](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4840))
- Allow passing --daemonize flags to workers in the same way as with master. ([\#4853](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4853))
- Batch up outgoing read-receipts to reduce federation traffic. ([\#4890](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4890), [\#4927](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4927))
- Add option to disable searching the user directory. ([\#4895](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4895))
- Add option to disable searching of local and remote public room lists. ([\#4896](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4896))
- Add ability for password providers to login/register a user via 3PID (email, phone). ([\#4931](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4931))
Bugfixes
--------
- Fix a bug where media with spaces in the name would get a corrupted name. ([\#2090](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/2090))
- Fix attempting to paginate in rooms where server cannot see any events, to avoid unnecessarily pulling in lots of redacted events. ([\#4699](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4699))
- 'event_id' is now a required parameter in federated state requests, as per the matrix spec. ([\#4740](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4740))
- Fix tightloop over connecting to replication server. ([\#4749](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4749))
- Fix parsing of Content-Disposition headers on remote media requests and URL previews. ([\#4763](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4763))
- Fix incorrect log about not persisting duplicate state event. ([\#4776](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4776))
- Fix v4v6 option in HAProxy example config. Contributed by Flakebi. ([\#4790](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4790))
- Handle batch updates in worker replication protocol. ([\#4792](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4792))
- Fix bug where we didn't correctly throttle sending of USER_IP commands over replication. ([\#4818](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4818))
- Fix potential race in handling missing updates in device list updates. ([\#4829](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4829))
- Fix bug where synapse expected an un-specced `prev_state` field on state events. ([\#4837](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4837))
- Transfer a user's notification settings (push rules) on room upgrade. ([\#4838](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4838))
- fix test_auto_create_auto_join_where_no_consent. ([\#4886](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4886))
- Fix a bug where hs_disabled_message was sometimes not correctly enforced. ([\#4888](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4888))
- Fix bug in shutdown room admin API where it would fail if a user in the room hadn't consented to the privacy policy. ([\#4904](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4904))
- Fix bug where blocked world-readable rooms were still peekable. ([\#4908](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4908))
Internal Changes
----------------
- Add a systemd setup that supports synapse workers. Contributed by Luca Corbatto. ([\#4662](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4662))
- Change from TravisCI to Buildkite for CI. ([\#4752](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4752))
- When presence is disabled don't send over replication. ([\#4757](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4757))
- Minor docstring fixes for MatrixFederationAgent. ([\#4765](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4765))
- Optimise EDU transmission for the federation_sender worker. ([\#4770](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4770))
- Update test_typing to use HomeserverTestCase. ([\#4771](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4771))
- Update URLs for riot.im icons and logos in the default notification templates. ([\#4779](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4779))
- Removed unnecessary $ from some federation endpoint path regexes. ([\#4794](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4794))
- Remove link to deleted title in README. ([\#4795](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4795))
- Clean up read-receipt handling. ([\#4797](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4797))
- Add some debug about processing read receipts. ([\#4798](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4798))
- Clean up some replication code. ([\#4799](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4799))
- Add some docstrings. ([\#4815](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4815))
- Add debug logger to try and track down #4422. ([\#4816](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4816))
- Make shutdown API send explanation message to room after users have been forced joined. ([\#4817](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4817))
- Update example_log_config.yaml. ([\#4820](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4820))
- Document the `generate` option for the docker image. ([\#4824](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4824))
- Fix check-newsfragment for debian-only changes. ([\#4825](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4825))
- Add some debug logging for device list updates to help with #4828. ([\#4828](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4828))
- Improve federation documentation, specifically .well-known support. Many thanks to @vaab. ([\#4832](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4832))
- Disable captcha registration by default in unit tests. ([\#4839](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4839))
- Add stuff back to the .gitignore. ([\#4843](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4843))
- Clarify what registration_shared_secret allows for. ([\#4844](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4844))
- Correctly log expected errors when fetching server keys. ([\#4847](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4847))
- Update install docs to explicitly state a full-chain (not just the top-level) TLS certificate must be provided to Synapse. This caused some people's Synapse ports to appear correct in a browser but still (rightfully so) upset the federation tester. ([\#4849](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4849))
- Move client read-receipt processing to federation sender worker. ([\#4852](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4852))
- Refactor federation TransactionQueue. ([\#4855](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4855))
- Comment out most options in the generated config. ([\#4863](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4863))
- Fix yaml library warnings by using safe_load. ([\#4869](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4869))
- Update Apache setup to remove location syntax. Thanks to @cwmke! ([\#4870](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4870))
- Reinstate test case that runs unit tests against oldest supported dependencies. ([\#4879](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4879))
- Update link to federation docs. ([\#4881](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4881))
- fix test_auto_create_auto_join_where_no_consent. ([\#4886](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4886))
- Use a regular HomeServerConfig object for unit tests rater than a Mock. ([\#4889](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4889))
- Add some notes about tuning postgres for larger deployments. ([\#4895](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4895))
- Add a config option for torture-testing worker replication. ([\#4902](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4902))
- Log requests which are simulated by the unit tests. ([\#4905](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4905))
- Allow newsfragments to end with exclamation marks. Exciting! ([\#4912](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4912))
- Refactor some more tests to use HomeserverTestCase. ([\#4913](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4913))
- Refactor out the state deltas portion of the user directory store and handler. ([\#4917](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4917))
- Fix nginx example in ACME doc. ([\#4923](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4923))
- Use an explicit dbname for postgres connections in the tests. ([\#4928](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4928))
- Fix `ClientReplicationStreamProtocol.__str__()`. ([\#4929](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4929))
Synapse 0.99.2 (2019-03-01)
===========================
Features
--------
- Added an HAProxy example in the reverse proxy documentation. Contributed by Benoît S. (“Benpro”). ([\#4541](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4541))
- Add basic optional sentry integration. ([\#4632](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4632), [\#4694](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4694))
- Transfer bans on room upgrade. ([\#4642](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4642))
- Add configurable room list publishing rules. ([\#4647](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4647))
- Support .well-known delegation when issuing certificates through ACME. ([\#4652](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4652))
- Allow registration and login to be handled by a worker instance. ([\#4666](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4666), [\#4670](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4670), [\#4682](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4682))
- Reduce the overhead of creating outbound federation connections over TLS by caching the TLS client options. ([\#4674](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4674))
- Add prometheus metrics for number of outgoing EDUs, by type. ([\#4695](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4695))
- Return correct error code when inviting a remote user to a room whose homeserver does not support the room version. ([\#4721](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4721))
- Prevent showing rooms to other servers that were set to not federate. ([\#4746](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4746))
Bugfixes
--------
- Fix possible exception when paginating. ([\#4263](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4263))
- The dependency checker now correctly reports a version mismatch for optional
dependencies, instead of reporting the dependency missing. ([\#4450](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4450))
- Set CORS headers on .well-known requests. ([\#4651](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4651))
- Fix kicking guest users on guest access revocation in worker mode. ([\#4667](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4667))
- Fix an issue in the database migration script where the
`e2e_room_keys.is_verified` column wasn't considered as
a boolean. ([\#4680](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4680))
- Fix TaskStopped exceptions in logs when outbound requests time out. ([\#4690](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4690))
- Fix ACME config for python 2. ([\#4717](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4717))
- Fix paginating over federation persisting incorrect state. ([\#4718](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4718))
Internal Changes
----------------
- Run `black` to reformat user directory code. ([\#4635](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4635))
- Reduce number of exceptions we log. ([\#4643](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4643), [\#4668](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4668))
- Introduce upsert batching functionality in the database layer. ([\#4644](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4644))
- Fix various spelling mistakes. ([\#4657](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4657))
- Cleanup request exception logging. ([\#4669](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4669), [\#4737](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4737), [\#4738](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4738))
- Improve replication performance by reducing cache invalidation traffic. ([\#4671](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4671), [\#4715](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4715), [\#4748](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4748))
- Test against Postgres 9.5 as well as 9.4. ([\#4676](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4676))
- Run unit tests against python 3.7. ([\#4677](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4677))
- Attempt to clarify installation instructions/config. ([\#4681](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4681))
- Clean up gitignores. ([\#4688](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4688))
- Minor tweaks to acme docs. ([\#4689](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4689))
- Improve the logging in the pusher process. ([\#4691](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4691))
- Better checks on newsfragments. ([\#4698](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4698), [\#4750](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4750))
- Avoid some redundant work when processing read receipts. ([\#4706](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4706))
- Run `push_receipts_to_remotes` as background job. ([\#4707](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4707))
- Add prometheus metrics for number of badge update pushes. ([\#4709](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4709))
- Reduce pusher logging on startup ([\#4716](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4716))
- Don't log exceptions when failing to fetch remote server keys. ([\#4722](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4722))
- Correctly proxy exception in frontend_proxy worker. ([\#4723](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4723))
- Add database version to phonehome stats. ([\#4753](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4753))
Synapse 0.99.1.1 (2019-02-14)
=============================
Bugfixes
--------
- Fix "TypeError: '>' not supported" when starting without an existing certificate.
Fix a bug where an existing certificate would be reprovisoned every day. ([\#4648](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4648))
Synapse 0.99.1 (2019-02-14)
===========================
Features
--------
- Include m.room.encryption on invites by default ([\#3902](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/3902))
- Federation OpenID listener resource can now be activated even if federation is disabled ([\#4420](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4420))
- Synapse's ACME support will now correctly reprovision a certificate that approaches its expiry while Synapse is running. ([\#4522](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4522))
- Add ability to update backup versions ([\#4580](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4580))
- Allow the "unavailable" presence status for /sync.
This change makes Synapse compliant with r0.4.0 of the Client-Server specification. ([\#4592](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4592))
- There is no longer any need to specify `no_tls`: it is inferred from the absence of TLS listeners ([\#4613](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4613), [\#4615](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4615), [\#4617](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4617), [\#4636](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4636))
- The default configuration no longer requires TLS certificates. ([\#4614](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4614))
Bugfixes
--------
- Copy over room federation ability on room upgrade. ([\#4530](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4530))
- Fix noisy "twisted.internet.task.TaskStopped" errors in logs ([\#4546](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4546))
- Synapse is now tolerant of the `tls_fingerprints` option being None or not specified. ([\#4589](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4589))
- Fix 'no unique or exclusion constraint' error ([\#4591](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4591))
- Transfer Server ACLs on room upgrade. ([\#4608](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4608))
- Fix failure to start when not TLS certificate was given even if TLS was disabled. ([\#4618](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4618))
- Fix self-signed cert notice from generate-config. ([\#4625](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4625))
- Fix performance of `user_ips` table deduplication background update ([\#4626](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4626), [\#4627](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4627))
Internal Changes
----------------
- Change the user directory state query to use a filtered call to the db instead of a generic one. ([\#4462](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4462))
- Reject federation transactions if they include more than 50 PDUs or 100 EDUs. ([\#4513](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4513))
- Reduce duplication of ``synapse.app`` code. ([\#4567](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4567))
- Fix docker upload job to push -py2 images. ([\#4576](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4576))
- Add port configuration information to ACME instructions. ([\#4578](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4578))
- Update MSC1711 FAQ to calrify .well-known usage ([\#4584](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4584))
- Clean up default listener configuration ([\#4586](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4586))
- Clarifications for reverse proxy docs ([\#4607](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4607))
- Move ClientTLSOptionsFactory init out of `refresh_certificates` ([\#4611](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4611))
- Fail cleanly if listener config lacks a 'port' ([\#4616](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4616))
- Remove redundant entries from docker config ([\#4619](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4619))
- README updates ([\#4621](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4621))
Synapse 0.99.0 (2019-02-05)
===========================
Synapse v0.99.x is a precursor to the upcoming Synapse v1.0 release. It contains foundational changes to room architecture and the federation security model necessary to support the upcoming r0 release of the Server to Server API.
Features
--------
- Synapse's cipher string has been updated to require ECDH key exchange. Configuring and generating dh_params is no longer required, and they will be ignored. ([\#4229](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4229))
- Synapse can now automatically provision TLS certificates via ACME (the protocol used by CAs like Let's Encrypt). ([\#4384](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4384), [\#4492](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4492), [\#4525](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4525), [\#4572](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4572), [\#4564](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4564), [\#4566](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4566), [\#4547](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4547), [\#4557](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4557))
- Implement MSC1708 (.well-known routing for server-server federation) ([\#4408](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4408), [\#4409](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4409), [\#4426](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4426), [\#4427](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4427), [\#4428](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4428), [\#4464](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4464), [\#4468](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4468), [\#4487](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4487), [\#4488](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4488), [\#4489](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4489), [\#4497](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4497), [\#4511](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4511), [\#4516](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4516), [\#4520](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4520), [\#4521](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4521), [\#4539](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4539), [\#4542](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4542), [\#4544](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4544))
- Search now includes results from predecessor rooms after a room upgrade. ([\#4415](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4415))
- Config option to disable requesting MSISDN on registration. ([\#4423](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4423))
- Add a metric for tracking event stream position of the user directory. ([\#4445](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4445))
- Support exposing server capabilities in CS API (MSC1753, MSC1804) ([\#4472](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4472), [81b7e7eed](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/commit/81b7e7eed323f55d6550e7a270a9dc2c4c7b0fe0)))
- Add support for room version 3 ([\#4483](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4483), [\#4499](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4499), [\#4515](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4515), [\#4523](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4523), [\#4535](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4535))
- Synapse will now reload TLS certificates from disk upon SIGHUP. ([\#4495](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4495), [\#4524](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4524))
- The matrixdotorg/synapse Docker images now use Python 3 by default. ([\#4558](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4558))
Bugfixes
--------
- Prevent users with access tokens predating the introduction of device IDs from creating spurious entries in the user_ips table. ([\#4369](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4369))
- Fix typo in ALL_USER_TYPES definition to ensure type is a tuple ([\#4392](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4392))
- Fix high CPU usage due to remote devicelist updates ([\#4397](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4397))
- Fix potential bug where creating or joining a room could fail ([\#4404](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4404))
- Fix bug when rejecting remote invites ([\#4405](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4405), [\#4527](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4527))
- Fix incorrect logcontexts after a Deferred was cancelled ([\#4407](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4407))
- Ensure encrypted room state is persisted across room upgrades. ([\#4411](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4411))
- Copy over whether a room is a direct message and any associated room tags on room upgrade. ([\#4412](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4412))
- Fix None guard in calling config.server.is_threepid_reserved ([\#4435](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4435))
- Don't send IP addresses as SNI ([\#4452](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4452))
- Fix UnboundLocalError in post_urlencoded_get_json ([\#4460](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4460))
- Add a timeout to filtered room directory queries. ([\#4461](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4461))
- Workaround for login error when using both LDAP and internal authentication. ([\#4486](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4486))
- Fix a bug where setting a relative consent directory path would cause a crash. ([\#4512](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4512))
Deprecations and Removals
-------------------------
- Synapse no longer generates self-signed TLS certificates when generating a configuration file. ([\#4509](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4509))
Improved Documentation
----------------------
- Update debian installation instructions ([\#4526](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4526))
Internal Changes
----------------
- Synapse will now take advantage of native UPSERT functionality in PostgreSQL 9.5+ and SQLite 3.24+. ([\#4306](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4306), [\#4459](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4459), [\#4466](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4466), [\#4471](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4471), [\#4477](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4477), [\#4505](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4505))
- Update README to use the new virtualenv everywhere ([\#4342](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4342))
- Add better logging for unexpected errors while sending transactions ([\#4368](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4368))
- Apply a unique index to the user_ips table, preventing duplicates. ([\#4370](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4370), [\#4432](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4432), [\#4434](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4434))
- Silence travis-ci build warnings by removing non-functional python3.6 ([\#4377](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4377))
- Fix a comment in the generated config file ([\#4387](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4387))
- Add ground work for implementing future federation API versions ([\#4390](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4390))
- Update dependencies on msgpack and pymacaroons to use the up-to-date packages. ([\#4399](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4399))
- Tweak codecov settings to make them less loud. ([\#4400](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4400))
- Implement server support for MSC1794 - Federation v2 Invite API ([\#4402](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4402))
- debian package: symlink to explicit python version ([\#4433](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4433))
- Add infrastructure to support different event formats ([\#4437](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4437), [\#4447](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4447), [\#4448](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4448), [\#4470](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4470), [\#4481](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4481), [\#4482](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4482), [\#4493](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4493), [\#4494](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4494), [\#4496](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4496), [\#4510](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4510), [\#4514](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4514))
- Generate the debian config during build ([\#4444](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4444))
- Clarify documentation for the `public_baseurl` config param ([\#4458](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4458), [\#4498](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4498))
- Fix quoting for allowed_local_3pids example config ([\#4476](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4476))
- Remove deprecated --process-dependency-links option from UPGRADE.rst ([\#4485](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4485))
- Make it possible to set the log level for tests via an environment variable ([\#4506](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4506))
- Reduce the log level of linearizer lock acquirement to DEBUG. ([\#4507](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4507))
- Fix code to comply with linting in PyFlakes 3.7.1. ([\#4519](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4519))
- Add some debug for membership syncing issues ([\#4538](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4538))
- Docker: only copy what we need to the build image ([\#4562](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4562))
Synapse 0.34.1.1 (2019-01-11)
=============================

View File

@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ use github's pull request workflow to review the contribution, and either ask
you to make any refinements needed or merge it and make them ourselves. The
changes will then land on master when we next do a release.
We use `CircleCI <https://circleci.com/gh/matrix-org>`_ and `Travis CI
We use `CircleCI <https://circleci.com/gh/matrix-org>`_ and `Travis CI
<https://travis-ci.org/matrix-org/synapse>`_ for continuous integration. All
pull requests to synapse get automatically tested by Travis and CircleCI.
If your change breaks the build, this will be shown in GitHub, so please
@@ -74,39 +74,16 @@ entry. These are managed by Towncrier
To create a changelog entry, make a new file in the ``changelog.d``
file named in the format of ``PRnumber.type``. The type can be
one of ``feature``, ``bugfix``, ``removal`` (also used for
deprecations), or ``misc`` (for internal-only changes).
The content of the file is your changelog entry, which can contain Markdown
formatting. The entry should end with a full stop ('.') for consistency.
Adding credits to the changelog is encouraged, we value your
contributions and would like to have you shouted out in the release notes!
deprecations), or ``misc`` (for internal-only changes). The content of
the file is your changelog entry, which can contain Markdown
formatting. Adding credits to the changelog is encouraged, we value
your contributions and would like to have you shouted out in the
release notes!
For example, a fix in PR #1234 would have its changelog entry in
``changelog.d/1234.bugfix``, and contain content like "The security levels of
Florbs are now validated when recieved over federation. Contributed by Jane
Matrix.".
Debian changelog
----------------
Changes which affect the debian packaging files (in ``debian``) are an
exception.
In this case, you will need to add an entry to the debian changelog for the
next release. For this, run the following command::
dch
This will make up a new version number (if there isn't already an unreleased
version in flight), and open an editor where you can add a new changelog entry.
(Our release process will ensure that the version number and maintainer name is
corrected for the release.)
If your change affects both the debian packaging *and* files outside the debian
directory, you will need both a regular newsfragment *and* an entry in the
debian changelog. (Though typically such changes should be submitted as two
separate pull requests.)
Matrix".
Attribution
~~~~~~~~~~~

View File

@@ -1,434 +0,0 @@
* [Installing Synapse](#installing-synapse)
* [Installing from source](#installing-from-source)
* [Platform-Specific Instructions](#platform-specific-instructions)
* [Troubleshooting Installation](#troubleshooting-installation)
* [Prebuilt packages](#prebuilt-packages)
* [Setting up Synapse](#setting-up-synapse)
* [TLS certificates](#tls-certificates)
* [Registering a user](#registering-a-user)
* [Setting up a TURN server](#setting-up-a-turn-server)
* [URL previews](#url-previews)
# Installing Synapse
## Installing from source
(Prebuilt packages are available for some platforms - see [Prebuilt packages](#prebuilt-packages).)
System requirements:
- POSIX-compliant system (tested on Linux & OS X)
- Python 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, or 2.7
- At least 1GB of free RAM if you want to join large public rooms like #matrix:matrix.org
Synapse is written in Python but some of the libraries it uses are written in
C. So before we can install Synapse itself we need a working C compiler and the
header files for Python C extensions. See [Platform-Specific
Instructions](#platform-specific-instructions) for information on installing
these on various platforms.
To install the Synapse homeserver run:
```
mkdir -p ~/synapse
virtualenv -p python3 ~/synapse/env
source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
pip install --upgrade pip
pip install --upgrade setuptools
pip install matrix-synapse[all]
```
This will download Synapse from [PyPI](https://pypi.org/project/matrix-synapse)
and install it, along with the python libraries it uses, into a virtual environment
under `~/synapse/env`. Feel free to pick a different directory if you
prefer.
This Synapse installation can then be later upgraded by using pip again with the
update flag:
```
source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
pip install -U matrix-synapse[all]
```
Before you can start Synapse, you will need to generate a configuration
file. To do this, run (in your virtualenv, as before)::
```
cd ~/synapse
python -m synapse.app.homeserver \
--server-name my.domain.name \
--config-path homeserver.yaml \
--generate-config \
--report-stats=[yes|no]
```
... substituting an appropriate value for `--server-name`. The server name
determines the "domain" part of user-ids for users on your server: these will
all be of the format `@user:my.domain.name`. It also determines how other
matrix servers will reach yours for Federation. For a test configuration,
set this to the hostname of your server. For a more production-ready setup, you
will probably want to specify your domain (`example.com`) rather than a
matrix-specific hostname here (in the same way that your email address is
probably `user@example.com` rather than `user@email.example.com`) - but
doing so may require more advanced setup: see [Setting up Federation](docs/federate.md).
Beware that the server name cannot be changed later.
This command will generate you a config file that you can then customise, but it will
also generate a set of keys for you. These keys will allow your Home Server to
identify itself to other Home Servers, so don't lose or delete them. It would be
wise to back them up somewhere safe. (If, for whatever reason, you do need to
change your Home Server's keys, you may find that other Home Servers have the
old key cached. If you update the signing key, you should change the name of the
key in the `<server name>.signing.key` file (the second word) to something
different. See the
[spec](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/latest.html#retrieving-server-keys)
for more information on key management.)
You will need to give Synapse a TLS certficate before it will start - see [TLS
certificates](#tls-certificates).
To actually run your new homeserver, pick a working directory for Synapse to
run (e.g. `~/synapse`), and::
cd ~/synapse
source env/bin/activate
synctl start
### Platform-Specific Instructions
#### Debian/Ubuntu/Raspbian
Installing prerequisites on Ubuntu or Debian:
```
sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \
python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 \
libssl-dev python-virtualenv libjpeg-dev libxslt1-dev
```
#### ArchLinux
Installing prerequisites on ArchLinux:
```
sudo pacman -S base-devel python python-pip \
python-setuptools python-virtualenv sqlite3
```
#### CentOS/Fedora
Installing prerequisites on CentOS 7 or Fedora 25:
```
sudo yum install libtiff-devel libjpeg-devel libzip-devel freetype-devel \
lcms2-devel libwebp-devel tcl-devel tk-devel redhat-rpm-config \
python-virtualenv libffi-devel openssl-devel
sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools"
```
#### Mac OS X
Installing prerequisites on Mac OS X:
```
xcode-select --install
sudo easy_install pip
sudo pip install virtualenv
brew install pkg-config libffi
```
#### OpenSUSE
Installing prerequisites on openSUSE:
```
sudo zypper in -t pattern devel_basis
sudo zypper in python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 python-virtualenv \
python-devel libffi-devel libopenssl-devel libjpeg62-devel
```
#### OpenBSD
Installing prerequisites on OpenBSD:
```
doas pkg_add python libffi py-pip py-setuptools sqlite3 py-virtualenv \
libxslt jpeg
```
There is currently no port for OpenBSD. Additionally, OpenBSD's security
settings require a slightly more difficult installation process.
XXX: I suspect this is out of date.
1. Create a new directory in `/usr/local` called `_synapse`. Also, create a
new user called `_synapse` and set that directory as the new user's home.
This is required because, by default, OpenBSD only allows binaries which need
write and execute permissions on the same memory space to be run from
`/usr/local`.
2. `su` to the new `_synapse` user and change to their home directory.
3. Create a new virtualenv: `virtualenv -p python2.7 ~/.synapse`
4. Source the virtualenv configuration located at
`/usr/local/_synapse/.synapse/bin/activate`. This is done in `ksh` by
using the `.` command, rather than `bash`'s `source`.
5. Optionally, use `pip` to install `lxml`, which Synapse needs to parse
webpages for their titles.
6. Use `pip` to install this repository: `pip install matrix-synapse`
7. Optionally, change `_synapse`'s shell to `/bin/false` to reduce the
chance of a compromised Synapse server being used to take over your box.
After this, you may proceed with the rest of the install directions.
#### Windows
If you wish to run or develop Synapse on Windows, the Windows Subsystem For
Linux provides a Linux environment on Windows 10 which is capable of using the
Debian, Fedora, or source installation methods. More information about WSL can
be found at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10 for
Windows 10 and https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-on-server
for Windows Server.
### Troubleshooting Installation
XXX a bunch of this is no longer relevant.
Synapse requires pip 8 or later, so if your OS provides too old a version you
may need to manually upgrade it::
sudo pip install --upgrade pip
Installing may fail with `Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement pymacaroons-pynacl (from matrix-synapse==0.12.0)`.
You can fix this by manually upgrading pip and virtualenv::
sudo pip install --upgrade virtualenv
You can next rerun `virtualenv -p python3 synapse` to update the virtual env.
Installing may fail during installing virtualenv with `InsecurePlatformWarning: A true SSLContext object is not available. This prevents urllib3 from configuring SSL appropriately and may cause certain SSL connections to fail. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.org/en/latest/security.html#insecureplatformwarning.`
You can fix this by manually installing ndg-httpsclient::
pip install --upgrade ndg-httpsclient
Installing may fail with `mock requires setuptools>=17.1. Aborting installation`.
You can fix this by upgrading setuptools::
pip install --upgrade setuptools
If pip crashes mid-installation for reason (e.g. lost terminal), pip may
refuse to run until you remove the temporary installation directory it
created. To reset the installation::
rm -rf /tmp/pip_install_matrix
pip seems to leak *lots* of memory during installation. For instance, a Linux
host with 512MB of RAM may run out of memory whilst installing Twisted. If this
happens, you will have to individually install the dependencies which are
failing, e.g.::
pip install twisted
## Prebuilt packages
As an alternative to installing from source, prebuilt packages are available
for a number of platforms.
### Docker images and Ansible playbooks
There is an offical synapse image available at
https://hub.docker.com/r/matrixdotorg/synapse which can be used with
the docker-compose file available at [contrib/docker](contrib/docker). Further information on
this including configuration options is available in the README on
hub.docker.com.
Alternatively, Andreas Peters (previously Silvio Fricke) has contributed a
Dockerfile to automate a synapse server in a single Docker image, at
https://hub.docker.com/r/avhost/docker-matrix/tags/
Slavi Pantaleev has created an Ansible playbook,
which installs the offical Docker image of Matrix Synapse
along with many other Matrix-related services (Postgres database, riot-web, coturn, mxisd, SSL support, etc.).
For more details, see
https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy
### Debian/Ubuntu
#### Matrix.org packages
Matrix.org provides Debian/Ubuntu packages of the latest stable version of
Synapse via https://matrix.org/packages/debian/. To use them:
```
sudo apt install -y lsb-release curl apt-transport-https
echo "deb https://matrix.org/packages/debian `lsb_release -cs` main" |
sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/matrix-org.list
curl "https://matrix.org/packages/debian/repo-key.asc" |
sudo apt-key add -
sudo apt update
sudo apt install matrix-synapse-py3
```
#### Downstream Debian/Ubuntu packages
For `buster` and `sid`, Synapse is available in the Debian repositories and
it should be possible to install it with simply:
```
sudo apt install matrix-synapse
```
There is also a version of `matrix-synapse` in `stretch-backports`. Please see
the [Debian documentation on
backports](https://backports.debian.org/Instructions/) for information on how
to use them.
We do not recommend using the packages in downstream Ubuntu at this time, as
they are old and suffer from known security vulnerabilities.
### Fedora
Synapse is in the Fedora repositories as `matrix-synapse`:
```
sudo dnf install matrix-synapse
```
Oleg Girko provides Fedora RPMs at
https://obs.infoserver.lv/project/monitor/matrix-synapse
### OpenSUSE
Synapse is in the OpenSUSE repositories as `matrix-synapse`:
```
sudo zypper install matrix-synapse
```
### SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
Unofficial package are built for SLES 15 in the openSUSE:Backports:SLE-15 repository at
https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Backports:/SLE-15/standard/
### ArchLinux
The quickest way to get up and running with ArchLinux is probably with the community package
https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/any/matrix-synapse/, which should pull in most of
the necessary dependencies.
pip may be outdated (6.0.7-1 and needs to be upgraded to 6.0.8-1 ):
```
sudo pip install --upgrade pip
```
If you encounter an error with lib bcrypt causing an Wrong ELF Class:
ELFCLASS32 (x64 Systems), you may need to reinstall py-bcrypt to correctly
compile it under the right architecture. (This should not be needed if
installing under virtualenv):
```
sudo pip uninstall py-bcrypt
sudo pip install py-bcrypt
```
### FreeBSD
Synapse can be installed via FreeBSD Ports or Packages contributed by Brendan Molloy from:
- Ports: `cd /usr/ports/net-im/py-matrix-synapse && make install clean`
- Packages: `pkg install py27-matrix-synapse`
### NixOS
Robin Lambertz has packaged Synapse for NixOS at:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/nixos/modules/services/misc/matrix-synapse.nix
# Setting up Synapse
Once you have installed synapse as above, you will need to configure it.
## TLS certificates
The default configuration exposes a single HTTP port: http://localhost:8008. It
is suitable for local testing, but for any practical use, you will either need
to enable a reverse proxy, or configure Synapse to expose an HTTPS port.
For information on using a reverse proxy, see
[docs/reverse_proxy.rst](docs/reverse_proxy.rst).
To configure Synapse to expose an HTTPS port, you will need to edit
`homeserver.yaml`, as follows:
* First, under the `listeners` section, uncomment the configuration for the
TLS-enabled listener. (Remove the hash sign (`#`) at the start of
each line). The relevant lines are like this:
```
- port: 8448
type: http
tls: true
resources:
- names: [client, federation]
```
* You will also need to uncomment the `tls_certificate_path` and
`tls_private_key_path` lines under the `TLS` section. You can either
point these settings at an existing certificate and key, or you can
enable Synapse's built-in ACME (Let's Encrypt) support. Instructions
for having Synapse automatically provision and renew federation
certificates through ACME can be found at [ACME.md](docs/ACME.md). If you
are using your own certificate, be sure to use a `.pem` file that includes
the full certificate chain including any intermediate certificates (for
instance, if using certbot, use `fullchain.pem` as your certificate, not
`cert.pem`).
For those of you upgrading your TLS certificate in readiness for Synapse 1.0,
please take a look at [our guide](docs/MSC1711_certificates_FAQ.md#configuring-certificates-for-compatibility-with-synapse-100).
## Registering a user
You will need at least one user on your server in order to use a Matrix
client. Users can be registered either via a Matrix client, or via a
commandline script.
To get started, it is easiest to use the command line to register new
users. This can be done as follows:
```
$ source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
$ synctl start # if not already running
$ register_new_matrix_user -c homeserver.yaml http://localhost:8008
New user localpart: erikj
Password:
Confirm password:
Make admin [no]:
Success!
```
This process uses a setting `registration_shared_secret` in
`homeserver.yaml`, which is shared between Synapse itself and the
`register_new_matrix_user` script. It doesn't matter what it is (a random
value is generated by `--generate-config`), but it should be kept secret, as
anyone with knowledge of it can register users, including admin accounts,
on your server even if `enable_registration` is `false`.
## Setting up a TURN server
For reliable VoIP calls to be routed via this homeserver, you MUST configure
a TURN server. See [docs/turn-howto.rst](docs/turn-howto.rst) for details.
## URL previews
Synapse includes support for previewing URLs, which is disabled by default. To
turn it on you must enable the `url_preview_enabled: True` config parameter
and explicitly specify the IP ranges that Synapse is not allowed to spider for
previewing in the `url_preview_ip_range_blacklist` configuration parameter.
This is critical from a security perspective to stop arbitrary Matrix users
spidering 'internal' URLs on your network. At the very least we recommend that
your loopback and RFC1918 IP addresses are blacklisted.
This also requires the optional lxml and netaddr python dependencies to be
installed. This in turn requires the libxml2 library to be available - on
Debian/Ubuntu this means `apt-get install libxml2-dev`, or equivalent for
your OS.

View File

@@ -15,7 +15,6 @@ recursive-include docs *
recursive-include scripts *
recursive-include scripts-dev *
recursive-include synapse *.pyi
recursive-include tests *.pem
recursive-include tests *.py
recursive-include synapse/res *
@@ -38,8 +37,6 @@ prune docker
prune .circleci
prune .coveragerc
prune debian
prune .codecov.yml
prune .buildkite
exclude jenkins*
recursive-exclude jenkins *.sh

View File

@@ -26,6 +26,7 @@ via IRC bridge at irc://irc.freenode.net/matrix.
Synapse is currently in rapid development, but as of version 0.5 we believe it
is sufficiently stable to be run as an internet-facing service for real usage!
About Matrix
============
@@ -80,30 +81,210 @@ Thanks for using Matrix!
Synapse Installation
====================
.. _federation:
Synapse is the reference Python/Twisted Matrix homeserver implementation.
* For details on how to install synapse, see `<INSTALL.md>`_.
* For specific details on how to configure Synapse for federation see `docs/federate.md <docs/federate.md>`_
System requirements:
- POSIX-compliant system (tested on Linux & OS X)
- Python 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, or 2.7
- At least 1GB of free RAM if you want to join large public rooms like #matrix:matrix.org
Installing from source
----------------------
(Prebuilt packages are available for some platforms - see `Platform-Specific
Instructions`_.)
Synapse is written in Python but some of the libraries it uses are written in
C. So before we can install Synapse itself we need a working C compiler and the
header files for Python C extensions.
Installing prerequisites on Ubuntu or Debian::
sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \
python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 \
libssl-dev python-virtualenv libjpeg-dev libxslt1-dev
Installing prerequisites on ArchLinux::
sudo pacman -S base-devel python python-pip \
python-setuptools python-virtualenv sqlite3
Installing prerequisites on CentOS 7 or Fedora 25::
sudo yum install libtiff-devel libjpeg-devel libzip-devel freetype-devel \
lcms2-devel libwebp-devel tcl-devel tk-devel redhat-rpm-config \
python-virtualenv libffi-devel openssl-devel
sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools"
Installing prerequisites on Mac OS X::
xcode-select --install
sudo easy_install pip
sudo pip install virtualenv
brew install pkg-config libffi
Installing prerequisites on Raspbian::
sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \
python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 \
libssl-dev python-virtualenv libjpeg-dev
Installing prerequisites on openSUSE::
sudo zypper in -t pattern devel_basis
sudo zypper in python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 python-virtualenv \
python-devel libffi-devel libopenssl-devel libjpeg62-devel
Installing prerequisites on OpenBSD::
doas pkg_add python libffi py-pip py-setuptools sqlite3 py-virtualenv \
libxslt jpeg
To install the Synapse homeserver run::
mkdir -p ~/synapse
virtualenv -p python3 ~/synapse/env
source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
pip install --upgrade pip
pip install --upgrade setuptools
pip install matrix-synapse[all]
This installs Synapse, along with the libraries it uses, into a virtual
environment under ``~/synapse/env``. Feel free to pick a different directory
if you prefer.
This Synapse installation can then be later upgraded by using pip again with the
update flag::
source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
pip install -U matrix-synapse[all]
In case of problems, please see the _`Troubleshooting` section below.
There is an offical synapse image available at
https://hub.docker.com/r/matrixdotorg/synapse/tags/ which can be used with
the docker-compose file available at `contrib/docker <contrib/docker>`_. Further information on
this including configuration options is available in the README on
hub.docker.com.
Alternatively, Andreas Peters (previously Silvio Fricke) has contributed a
Dockerfile to automate a synapse server in a single Docker image, at
https://hub.docker.com/r/avhost/docker-matrix/tags/
Slavi Pantaleev has created an Ansible playbook,
which installs the offical Docker image of Matrix Synapse
along with many other Matrix-related services (Postgres database, riot-web, coturn, mxisd, SSL support, etc.).
For more details, see
https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy
Configuring Synapse
-------------------
Before you can start Synapse, you will need to generate a configuration
file. To do this, run (in your virtualenv, as before)::
cd ~/.synapse
python -m synapse.app.homeserver \
--server-name my.domain.name \
--config-path homeserver.yaml \
--generate-config \
--report-stats=[yes|no]
... substituting an appropriate value for ``--server-name``. The server name
determines the "domain" part of user-ids for users on your server: these will
all be of the format ``@user:my.domain.name``. It also determines how other
matrix servers will reach yours for `Federation`_. For a test configuration,
set this to the hostname of your server. For a more production-ready setup, you
will probably want to specify your domain (``example.com``) rather than a
matrix-specific hostname here (in the same way that your email address is
probably ``user@example.com`` rather than ``user@email.example.com``) - but
doing so may require more advanced setup - see `Setting up
Federation`_. Beware that the server name cannot be changed later.
This command will generate you a config file that you can then customise, but it will
also generate a set of keys for you. These keys will allow your Home Server to
identify itself to other Home Servers, so don't lose or delete them. It would be
wise to back them up somewhere safe. (If, for whatever reason, you do need to
change your Home Server's keys, you may find that other Home Servers have the
old key cached. If you update the signing key, you should change the name of the
key in the ``<server name>.signing.key`` file (the second word) to something
different. See `the spec`__ for more information on key management.)
.. __: `key_management`_
The default configuration exposes two HTTP ports: 8008 and 8448. Port 8008 is
configured without TLS; it should be behind a reverse proxy for TLS/SSL
termination on port 443 which in turn should be used for clients. Port 8448
is configured to use TLS with a self-signed certificate. If you would like
to do initial test with a client without having to setup a reverse proxy,
you can temporarly use another certificate. (Note that a self-signed
certificate is fine for `Federation`_). You can do so by changing
``tls_certificate_path``, ``tls_private_key_path`` and ``tls_dh_params_path``
in ``homeserver.yaml``; alternatively, you can use a reverse-proxy, but be sure
to read `Using a reverse proxy with Synapse`_ when doing so.
Apart from port 8448 using TLS, both ports are the same in the default
configuration.
Registering a user
------------------
You will need at least one user on your server in order to use a Matrix
client. Users can be registered either `via a Matrix client`__, or via a
commandline script.
.. __: `client-user-reg`_
To get started, it is easiest to use the command line to register new users::
$ source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
$ synctl start # if not already running
$ register_new_matrix_user -c homeserver.yaml https://localhost:8448
New user localpart: erikj
Password:
Confirm password:
Make admin [no]:
Success!
This process uses a setting ``registration_shared_secret`` in
``homeserver.yaml``, which is shared between Synapse itself and the
``register_new_matrix_user`` script. It doesn't matter what it is (a random
value is generated by ``--generate-config``), but it should be kept secret, as
anyone with knowledge of it can register users on your server even if
``enable_registration`` is ``false``.
Setting up a TURN server
------------------------
For reliable VoIP calls to be routed via this homeserver, you MUST configure
a TURN server. See `<docs/turn-howto.rst>`_ for details.
Running Synapse
===============
To actually run your new homeserver, pick a working directory for Synapse to
run (e.g. ``~/synapse``), and::
cd ~/synapse
source env/bin/activate
synctl start
Connecting to Synapse from a client
===================================
The easiest way to try out your new Synapse installation is by connecting to it
from a web client.
from a web client. The easiest option is probably the one at
https://riot.im/app. You will need to specify a "Custom server" when you log on
or register: set this to ``https://domain.tld`` if you setup a reverse proxy
following the recommended setup, or ``https://localhost:8448`` - remember to specify the
port (``:8448``) if not ``:443`` unless you changed the configuration. (Leave the identity
server as the default - see `Identity servers`_.)
Unless you are running a test instance of Synapse on your local machine, in
general, you will need to enable TLS support before you can successfully
connect from a client: see `<INSTALL.md#tls-certificates>`_.
An easy way to get started is to login or register via Riot at
https://riot.im/app/#/login or https://riot.im/app/#/register respectively.
You will need to change the server you are logging into from ``matrix.org``
and instead specify a Homeserver URL of ``https://<server_name>:8448``
(or just ``https://<server_name>`` if you are using a reverse proxy).
(Leave the identity server as the default - see `Identity servers`_.)
If you prefer to use another client, refer to our
`client breakdown <https://matrix.org/docs/projects/clients-matrix>`_.
If using port 8448 you will run into errors until you accept the self-signed
certificate. You can easily do this by going to ``https://localhost:8448``
directly with your browser and accept the presented certificate. You can then
go back in your web client and proceed further.
If all goes well you should at least be able to log in, create a room, and
start sending messages.
@@ -120,9 +301,9 @@ recommended to also set up CAPTCHA - see `<docs/CAPTCHA_SETUP.rst>`_.)
Once ``enable_registration`` is set to ``true``, it is possible to register a
user via `riot.im <https://riot.im/app/#/register>`_ or other Matrix clients.
Your new user name will be formed partly from the ``server_name``, and partly
from a localpart you specify when you create the account. Your name will take
the form of::
Your new user name will be formed partly from the ``server_name`` (see
`Configuring synapse`_), and partly from a localpart you specify when you
create the account. Your name will take the form of::
@localpart:my.domain.name
@@ -131,12 +312,6 @@ the form of::
As when logging in, you will need to specify a "Custom server". Specify your
desired ``localpart`` in the 'User name' box.
ACME setup
==========
For details on having Synapse manage your federation TLS certificates
automatically, please see `<docs/ACME.md>`_.
Security Note
=============
@@ -155,6 +330,173 @@ See https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/1977 and
https://developer.github.com/changes/2014-04-25-user-content-security for more details.
Platform-Specific Instructions
==============================
Debian
------
Matrix provides official Debian packages via apt from https://matrix.org/packages/debian/.
Note that these packages do not include a client - choose one from
https://matrix.org/docs/projects/try-matrix-now.html (or build your own with one of our SDKs :)
Fedora
------
Synapse is in the Fedora repositories as ``matrix-synapse``::
sudo dnf install matrix-synapse
Oleg Girko provides Fedora RPMs at
https://obs.infoserver.lv/project/monitor/matrix-synapse
OpenSUSE
--------
Synapse is in the OpenSUSE repositories as ``matrix-synapse``::
sudo zypper install matrix-synapse
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
----------------------------
Unofficial package are built for SLES 15 in the openSUSE:Backports:SLE-15 repository at
https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Backports:/SLE-15/standard/
ArchLinux
---------
The quickest way to get up and running with ArchLinux is probably with the community package
https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/any/matrix-synapse/, which should pull in most of
the necessary dependencies.
pip may be outdated (6.0.7-1 and needs to be upgraded to 6.0.8-1 )::
sudo pip install --upgrade pip
If you encounter an error with lib bcrypt causing an Wrong ELF Class:
ELFCLASS32 (x64 Systems), you may need to reinstall py-bcrypt to correctly
compile it under the right architecture. (This should not be needed if
installing under virtualenv)::
sudo pip uninstall py-bcrypt
sudo pip install py-bcrypt
FreeBSD
-------
Synapse can be installed via FreeBSD Ports or Packages contributed by Brendan Molloy from:
- Ports: ``cd /usr/ports/net-im/py-matrix-synapse && make install clean``
- Packages: ``pkg install py27-matrix-synapse``
OpenBSD
-------
There is currently no port for OpenBSD. Additionally, OpenBSD's security
settings require a slightly more difficult installation process.
1) Create a new directory in ``/usr/local`` called ``_synapse``. Also, create a
new user called ``_synapse`` and set that directory as the new user's home.
This is required because, by default, OpenBSD only allows binaries which need
write and execute permissions on the same memory space to be run from
``/usr/local``.
2) ``su`` to the new ``_synapse`` user and change to their home directory.
3) Create a new virtualenv: ``virtualenv -p python2.7 ~/.synapse``
4) Source the virtualenv configuration located at
``/usr/local/_synapse/.synapse/bin/activate``. This is done in ``ksh`` by
using the ``.`` command, rather than ``bash``'s ``source``.
5) Optionally, use ``pip`` to install ``lxml``, which Synapse needs to parse
webpages for their titles.
6) Use ``pip`` to install this repository: ``pip install matrix-synapse``
7) Optionally, change ``_synapse``'s shell to ``/bin/false`` to reduce the
chance of a compromised Synapse server being used to take over your box.
After this, you may proceed with the rest of the install directions.
NixOS
-----
Robin Lambertz has packaged Synapse for NixOS at:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/nixos/modules/services/misc/matrix-synapse.nix
Windows Install
---------------
If you wish to run or develop Synapse on Windows, the Windows Subsystem For
Linux provides a Linux environment on Windows 10 which is capable of using the
Debian, Fedora, or source installation methods. More information about WSL can
be found at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10 for
Windows 10 and https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-on-server
for Windows Server.
Troubleshooting
===============
Troubleshooting Installation
----------------------------
Synapse requires pip 8 or later, so if your OS provides too old a version you
may need to manually upgrade it::
sudo pip install --upgrade pip
Installing may fail with ``Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement pymacaroons-pynacl (from matrix-synapse==0.12.0)``.
You can fix this by manually upgrading pip and virtualenv::
sudo pip install --upgrade virtualenv
You can next rerun ``virtualenv -p python3 synapse`` to update the virtual env.
Installing may fail during installing virtualenv with ``InsecurePlatformWarning: A true SSLContext object is not available. This prevents urllib3 from configuring SSL appropriately and may cause certain SSL connections to fail. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.org/en/latest/security.html#insecureplatformwarning.``
You can fix this by manually installing ndg-httpsclient::
pip install --upgrade ndg-httpsclient
Installing may fail with ``mock requires setuptools>=17.1. Aborting installation``.
You can fix this by upgrading setuptools::
pip install --upgrade setuptools
If pip crashes mid-installation for reason (e.g. lost terminal), pip may
refuse to run until you remove the temporary installation directory it
created. To reset the installation::
rm -rf /tmp/pip_install_matrix
pip seems to leak *lots* of memory during installation. For instance, a Linux
host with 512MB of RAM may run out of memory whilst installing Twisted. If this
happens, you will have to individually install the dependencies which are
failing, e.g.::
pip install twisted
Running out of File Handles
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If synapse runs out of filehandles, it typically fails badly - live-locking
at 100% CPU, and/or failing to accept new TCP connections (blocking the
connecting client). Matrix currently can legitimately use a lot of file handles,
thanks to busy rooms like #matrix:matrix.org containing hundreds of participating
servers. The first time a server talks in a room it will try to connect
simultaneously to all participating servers, which could exhaust the available
file descriptors between DNS queries & HTTPS sockets, especially if DNS is slow
to respond. (We need to improve the routing algorithm used to be better than
full mesh, but as of June 2017 this hasn't happened yet).
If you hit this failure mode, we recommend increasing the maximum number of
open file handles to be at least 4096 (assuming a default of 1024 or 256).
This is typically done by editing ``/etc/security/limits.conf``
Separately, Synapse may leak file handles if inbound HTTP requests get stuck
during processing - e.g. blocked behind a lock or talking to a remote server etc.
This is best diagnosed by matching up the 'Received request' and 'Processed request'
log lines and looking for any 'Processed request' lines which take more than
a few seconds to execute. Please let us know at #matrix-dev:matrix.org if
you see this failure mode so we can help debug it, however.
Upgrading an existing Synapse
=============================
@@ -164,19 +506,100 @@ versions of synapse.
.. _UPGRADE.rst: UPGRADE.rst
.. _federation:
Setting up Federation
=====================
Federation is the process by which users on different servers can participate
in the same room. For this to work, those other servers must be able to contact
yours to send messages.
As explained in `Configuring synapse`_, the ``server_name`` in your
``homeserver.yaml`` file determines the way that other servers will reach
yours. By default, they will treat it as a hostname and try to connect to
port 8448. This is easy to set up and will work with the default configuration,
provided you set the ``server_name`` to match your machine's public DNS
hostname.
For a more flexible configuration, you can set up a DNS SRV record. This allows
you to run your server on a machine that might not have the same name as your
domain name. For example, you might want to run your server at
``synapse.example.com``, but have your Matrix user-ids look like
``@user:example.com``. (A SRV record also allows you to change the port from
the default 8448. However, if you are thinking of using a reverse-proxy on the
federation port, which is not recommended, be sure to read
`Reverse-proxying the federation port`_ first.)
To use a SRV record, first create your SRV record and publish it in DNS. This
should have the format ``_matrix._tcp.<yourdomain.com> <ttl> IN SRV 10 0 <port>
<synapse.server.name>``. The DNS record should then look something like::
$ dig -t srv _matrix._tcp.example.com
_matrix._tcp.example.com. 3600 IN SRV 10 0 8448 synapse.example.com.
Note that the server hostname cannot be an alias (CNAME record): it has to point
directly to the server hosting the synapse instance.
You can then configure your homeserver to use ``<yourdomain.com>`` as the domain in
its user-ids, by setting ``server_name``::
python -m synapse.app.homeserver \
--server-name <yourdomain.com> \
--config-path homeserver.yaml \
--generate-config
python -m synapse.app.homeserver --config-path homeserver.yaml
If you've already generated the config file, you need to edit the ``server_name``
in your ``homeserver.yaml`` file. If you've already started Synapse and a
database has been created, you will have to recreate the database.
If all goes well, you should be able to `connect to your server with a client`__,
and then join a room via federation. (Try ``#matrix-dev:matrix.org`` as a first
step. "Matrix HQ"'s sheer size and activity level tends to make even the
largest boxes pause for thought.)
.. __: `Connecting to Synapse from a client`_
Troubleshooting
---------------
You can use the federation tester to check if your homeserver is all set:
``https://matrix.org/federationtester/api/report?server_name=<your_server_name>``
If any of the attributes under "checks" is false, federation won't work.
The typical failure mode with federation is that when you try to join a room,
it is rejected with "401: Unauthorized". Generally this means that other
servers in the room couldn't access yours. (Joining a room over federation is a
complicated dance which requires connections in both directions).
So, things to check are:
* If you are trying to use a reverse-proxy, read `Reverse-proxying the
federation port`_.
* If you are not using a SRV record, check that your ``server_name`` (the part
of your user-id after the ``:``) matches your hostname, and that port 8448 on
that hostname is reachable from outside your network.
* If you *are* using a SRV record, check that it matches your ``server_name``
(it should be ``_matrix._tcp.<server_name>``), and that the port and hostname
it specifies are reachable from outside your network.
Running a Demo Federation of Synapses
-------------------------------------
If you want to get up and running quickly with a trio of homeservers in a
private federation, there is a script in the ``demo`` directory. This is mainly
useful just for development purposes. See `<demo/README>`_.
Using PostgreSQL
================
Synapse offers two database engines:
* `SQLite <https://sqlite.org/>`_
* `PostgreSQL <https://www.postgresql.org>`_
As of Synapse 0.9, `PostgreSQL <https://www.postgresql.org>`_ is supported as an
alternative to the `SQLite <https://sqlite.org/>`_ database that Synapse has
traditionally used for convenience and simplicity.
By default Synapse uses SQLite in and doing so trades performance for convenience.
SQLite is only recommended in Synapse for testing purposes or for servers with
light workloads.
Almost all installations should opt to use PostreSQL. Advantages include:
The advantages of Postgres include:
* significant performance improvements due to the superior threading and
caching model, smarter query optimiser
@@ -188,6 +611,7 @@ Almost all installations should opt to use PostreSQL. Advantages include:
For information on how to install and use PostgreSQL, please see
`docs/postgres.rst <docs/postgres.rst>`_.
.. _reverse-proxy:
Using a reverse proxy with Synapse
@@ -201,7 +625,118 @@ It is recommended to put a reverse proxy such as
doing so is that it means that you can expose the default https port (443) to
Matrix clients without needing to run Synapse with root privileges.
For information on configuring one, see `<docs/reverse_proxy.rst>`_.
The most important thing to know here is that Matrix clients and other Matrix
servers do not necessarily need to connect to your server via the same
port. Indeed, clients will use port 443 by default, whereas servers default to
port 8448. Where these are different, we refer to the 'client port' and the
'federation port'.
The next most important thing to know is that using a reverse-proxy on the
federation port has a number of pitfalls. It is possible, but be sure to read
`Reverse-proxying the federation port`_.
The recommended setup is therefore to configure your reverse-proxy on port 443
to port 8008 of synapse for client connections, but to also directly expose port
8448 for server-server connections. All the Matrix endpoints begin ``/_matrix``,
so an example nginx configuration might look like::
server {
listen 443 ssl;
listen [::]:443 ssl;
server_name matrix.example.com;
location /_matrix {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8008;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
}
}
an example Caddy configuration might look like::
matrix.example.com {
proxy /_matrix http://localhost:8008 {
transparent
}
}
and an example Apache configuration might look like::
<VirtualHost *:443>
SSLEngine on
ServerName matrix.example.com;
<Location /_matrix>
ProxyPass http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix nocanon
ProxyPassReverse http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix
</Location>
</VirtualHost>
You will also want to set ``bind_addresses: ['127.0.0.1']`` and ``x_forwarded: true``
for port 8008 in ``homeserver.yaml`` to ensure that client IP addresses are
recorded correctly.
Having done so, you can then use ``https://matrix.example.com`` (instead of
``https://matrix.example.com:8448``) as the "Custom server" when `Connecting to
Synapse from a client`_.
Reverse-proxying the federation port
------------------------------------
There are two issues to consider before using a reverse-proxy on the federation
port:
* Due to the way SSL certificates are managed in the Matrix federation protocol
(see `spec`__), Synapse needs to be configured with the path to the SSL
certificate, *even if you do not terminate SSL at Synapse*.
.. __: `key_management`_
* Until v0.33.3, Synapse did not support SNI on the federation port
(`bug #1491 <https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/1491>`_). This bug
is now fixed, but means that federating with older servers can be unreliable
when using name-based virtual hosting.
Furthermore, a number of the normal reasons for using a reverse-proxy do not
apply:
* Other servers will connect on port 8448 by default, so there is no need to
listen on port 443 (for federation, at least), which avoids the need for root
privileges and virtual hosting.
* A self-signed SSL certificate is fine for federation, so there is no need to
automate renewals. (The certificate generated by ``--generate-config`` is
valid for 10 years.)
If you want to set up a reverse-proxy on the federation port despite these
caveats, you will need to do the following:
* In ``homeserver.yaml``, set ``tls_certificate_path`` to the path to the SSL
certificate file used by your reverse-proxy, and set ``no_tls`` to ``True``.
(``tls_private_key_path`` will be ignored if ``no_tls`` is ``True``.)
* In your reverse-proxy configuration:
* If there are other virtual hosts on the same port, make sure that the
*default* one uses the certificate configured above.
* Forward ``/_matrix`` to Synapse.
* If your reverse-proxy is not listening on port 8448, publish a SRV record to
tell other servers how to find you. See `Setting up Federation`_.
When updating the SSL certificate, just update the file pointed to by
``tls_certificate_path`` and then restart Synapse. (You may like to use a symbolic link
to help make this process atomic.)
The most common mistake when setting up federation is not to tell Synapse about
your SSL certificate. To check it, you can visit
``https://matrix.org/federationtester/api/report?server_name=<your_server_name>``.
Unfortunately, there is no UI for this yet, but, you should see
``"MatchingTLSFingerprint": true``. If not, check that
``Certificates[0].SHA256Fingerprint`` (the fingerprint of the certificate
presented by your reverse-proxy) matches ``Keys.tls_fingerprints[0].sha256``
(the fingerprint of the certificate Synapse is using).
Identity Servers
================
@@ -233,6 +768,24 @@ an email address with your account, or send an invite to another user via their
email address.
URL Previews
============
Synapse 0.15.0 introduces a new API for previewing URLs at
``/_matrix/media/r0/preview_url``. This is disabled by default. To turn it on
you must enable the ``url_preview_enabled: True`` config parameter and
explicitly specify the IP ranges that Synapse is not allowed to spider for
previewing in the ``url_preview_ip_range_blacklist`` configuration parameter.
This is critical from a security perspective to stop arbitrary Matrix users
spidering 'internal' URLs on your network. At the very least we recommend that
your loopback and RFC1918 IP addresses are blacklisted.
This also requires the optional lxml and netaddr python dependencies to be
installed. This in turn requires the libxml2 library to be available - on
Debian/Ubuntu this means ``apt-get install libxml2-dev``, or equivalent for
your OS.
Password reset
==============
@@ -243,7 +796,8 @@ A manual password reset can be done via direct database access as follows.
First calculate the hash of the new password::
$ ~/synapse/env/bin/hash_password
$ source ~/.synapse/bin/activate
$ ./scripts/hash_password
Password:
Confirm password:
$2a$12$xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
@@ -259,7 +813,7 @@ Synapse Development
Before setting up a development environment for synapse, make sure you have the
system dependencies (such as the python header files) installed - see
`Installing from source <INSTALL.md#installing-from-source>`_.
`Installing from source`_.
To check out a synapse for development, clone the git repo into a working
directory of your choice::
@@ -270,7 +824,7 @@ directory of your choice::
Synapse has a number of external dependencies, that are easiest
to install using pip and a virtualenv::
virtualenv -p python3 env
virtualenv -p python2.7 env
source env/bin/activate
python -m pip install -e .[all]
@@ -313,42 +867,16 @@ Building internal API documentation::
python setup.py build_sphinx
Troubleshooting
===============
Running out of File Handles
---------------------------
If synapse runs out of file handles, it typically fails badly - live-locking
at 100% CPU, and/or failing to accept new TCP connections (blocking the
connecting client). Matrix currently can legitimately use a lot of file handles,
thanks to busy rooms like #matrix:matrix.org containing hundreds of participating
servers. The first time a server talks in a room it will try to connect
simultaneously to all participating servers, which could exhaust the available
file descriptors between DNS queries & HTTPS sockets, especially if DNS is slow
to respond. (We need to improve the routing algorithm used to be better than
full mesh, but as of March 2019 this hasn't happened yet).
If you hit this failure mode, we recommend increasing the maximum number of
open file handles to be at least 4096 (assuming a default of 1024 or 256).
This is typically done by editing ``/etc/security/limits.conf``
Separately, Synapse may leak file handles if inbound HTTP requests get stuck
during processing - e.g. blocked behind a lock or talking to a remote server etc.
This is best diagnosed by matching up the 'Received request' and 'Processed request'
log lines and looking for any 'Processed request' lines which take more than
a few seconds to execute. Please let us know at #synapse:matrix.org if
you see this failure mode so we can help debug it, however.
Help!! Synapse eats all my RAM!
-------------------------------
===============================
Synapse's architecture is quite RAM hungry currently - we deliberately
cache a lot of recent room data and metadata in RAM in order to speed up
common requests. We'll improve this in the future, but for now the easiest
common requests. We'll improve this in future, but for now the easiest
way to either reduce the RAM usage (at the risk of slowing things down)
is to set the almost-undocumented ``SYNAPSE_CACHE_FACTOR`` environment
variable. The default is 0.5, which can be decreased to reduce RAM usage
variable. The default is 0.5, which can be decreased to reduce RAM usage
in memory constrained enviroments, or increased if performance starts to
degrade.
@@ -361,5 +889,4 @@ by installing the ``libjemalloc1`` package and adding this line to
LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libjemalloc.so.1
This can make a significant difference on Python 2.7 - it's unclear how
much of an improvement it provides on Python 3.x.
.. _`key_management`: https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/unstable.html#retrieving-server-keys

View File

@@ -5,20 +5,20 @@ Before upgrading check if any special steps are required to upgrade from the
what you currently have installed to current version of synapse. The extra
instructions that may be required are listed later in this document.
1. If synapse was installed in a virtualenv then activate that virtualenv before
upgrading. If synapse is installed in a virtualenv in ``~/synapse/env`` then
1. If synapse was installed in a virtualenv then active that virtualenv before
upgrading. If synapse is installed in a virtualenv in ``~/.synapse/`` then
run:
.. code:: bash
source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate
source ~/.synapse/bin/activate
2. If synapse was installed using pip then upgrade to the latest version by
running:
.. code:: bash
pip install --upgrade matrix-synapse[all]
pip install --upgrade --process-dependency-links matrix-synapse
# restart synapse
synctl restart
@@ -31,15 +31,14 @@ instructions that may be required are listed later in this document.
# Pull the latest version of the master branch.
git pull
# Update synapse and its python dependencies.
pip install --upgrade .[all]
# Update the versions of synapse's python dependencies.
python synapse/python_dependencies.py | xargs pip install --upgrade
# restart synapse
./synctl restart
To check whether your update was successful, you can check the Server header
To check whether your update was sucessful, you can check the Server header
returned by the Client-Server API:
.. code:: bash
@@ -49,16 +48,6 @@ returned by the Client-Server API:
# configured on port 443.
curl -kv https://<host.name>/_matrix/client/versions 2>&1 | grep "Server:"
Upgrading to v0.99.0
====================
Please be aware that, before Synapse v1.0 is released around March 2019, you
will need to replace any self-signed certificates with those verified by a
root CA. Information on how to do so can be found at `the ACME docs
<docs/ACME.md>`_.
For more information on configuring TLS certificates see the `FAQ <docs/MSC1711_certificates_FAQ.md>`_.
Upgrading to v0.34.0
====================

1
changelog.d/4406.feature Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
Add a simple HTTP proxy option for Synapse to send federation traffic through before reaching other servers.

View File

@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Add test to verify threepid auth check added in #4435.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Avoid redundant URL encoding of redirect URL for SSO login in the fallback login page. Fixes a regression introduced in [#4220](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/pull/4220). Contributed by Marcel Fabian Krüger ("[zaugin](https://github.com/zauguin)").

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Fix bug where presence updates were sent to all servers in a room when a new server joined, rather than to just the new server.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Add ability for password provider modules to bind email addresses to users upon registration.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Fix/improve some docstrings in the replication code.

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@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
Split synapse.replication.tcp.streams into smaller files.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Refactor replication row generation/parsing.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Fix sync bug which made accepting invites unreliable in worker-mode synapses.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Fix sync bug which made accepting invites unreliable in worker-mode synapses.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Run `black` to clean up formatting on `synapse/storage/roommember.py` and `synapse/storage/events.py`.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Remove log line for password via the admin API.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Fix typo in TLS filenames in docker/README.md. Also add the '-p' commandline option to the 'docker run' example. Contributed by Jurrie Overgoor.

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@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
Refactor room version definitions.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Add `config.signing_key_path` that can be read by `synapse.config` utility.

View File

@@ -1 +0,0 @@
start.sh: Fix the --no-rate-limit option for messages and make it bypass rate limit on registration and login too.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Track which identity server is used when binding a threepid and use that for unbinding, as per MSC1915.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Rewrite KeyringTestCase as a HomeserverTestCase.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
README updates: Corrected the default POSTGRES_USER. Added port forwarding hint in TLS section.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Remove presence list support as per MSC 1819.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Transfer related groups on room upgrade.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Reduce CPU usage starting pushers during start up.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Run `black` on the remainder of `synapse/storage/`.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Fix grammar in get_current_users_in_room and give it a docstring.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Prevent the ability to kick users from a room they aren't in.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Add a delete group admin API.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Fix issue #4596 so synapse_port_db script works with --curses option on Python 3. Contributed by Anders Jensen-Waud <anders@jensenwaud.com>.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Refactor synapse.storage._base._simple_select_list_paginate.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Add config option to block users from looking up 3PIDs.

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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
Add context to phonehome stats.

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@@ -19,7 +19,6 @@ handlers:
# example output to console
console:
class: logging.StreamHandler
formatter: fmt
filters: [context]
# example output to file - to enable, edit 'root' config below.
@@ -30,7 +29,7 @@ handlers:
maxBytes: 100000000
backupCount: 3
filters: [context]
encoding: utf8
root:
level: INFO

View File

@@ -6,10 +6,8 @@ To use it, first install prometheus by following the instructions at
http://prometheus.io/
### for Prometheus v1
Add a new job to the main prometheus.conf file:
```yaml
job: {
name: "synapse"
@@ -17,12 +15,10 @@ Add a new job to the main prometheus.conf file:
target: "http://SERVER.LOCATION.HERE:PORT/_synapse/metrics"
}
}
```
### for Prometheus v2
Add a new job to the main prometheus.yml file:
```yaml
- job_name: "synapse"
metrics_path: "/_synapse/metrics"
# when endpoint uses https:
@@ -30,14 +26,11 @@ Add a new job to the main prometheus.yml file:
static_configs:
- targets: ['SERVER.LOCATION:PORT']
```
To use `synapse.rules` add
```yaml
rule_files:
- "/PATH/TO/synapse-v2.rules"
```
Metrics are disabled by default when running synapse; they must be enabled
with the 'enable-metrics' option, either in the synapse config file or as a

View File

@@ -1,150 +0,0 @@
# Setup Synapse with Workers and Systemd
This is a setup for managing synapse with systemd including support for
managing workers. It provides a `matrix-synapse`, as well as a
`matrix-synapse-worker@` service for any workers you require. Additionally to
group the required services it sets up a `matrix.target`. You can use this to
automatically start any bot- or bridge-services. More on this in
[Bots and Bridges](#bots-and-bridges).
See the folder [system](system) for any service and target files.
The folder [workers](workers) contains an example configuration for the
`federation_reader` worker. Pay special attention to the name of the
configuration file. In order to work with the `matrix-synapse-worker@.service`
service, it needs to have the exact same name as the worker app.
This setup expects neither the homeserver nor any workers to fork. Forking is
handled by systemd.
## Setup
1. Adjust your matrix configs. Make sure that the worker config files have the
exact same name as the worker app. Compare `matrix-synapse-worker@.service` for
why. You can find an example worker config in the [workers](workers) folder. See
below for relevant settings in the `homeserver.yaml`.
2. Copy the `*.service` and `*.target` files in [system](system) to
`/etc/systemd/system`.
3. `systemctl enable matrix-synapse.service` this adds the homeserver
app to the `matrix.target`
4. *Optional.* `systemctl enable
matrix-synapse-worker@federation_reader.service` this adds the federation_reader
app to the `matrix-synapse.service`
5. *Optional.* Repeat step 4 for any additional workers you require.
6. *Optional.* Add any bots or bridges by enabling them.
7. Start all matrix related services via `systemctl start matrix.target`
8. *Optional.* Enable autostart of all matrix related services on system boot
via `systemctl enable matrix.target`
## Usage
After you have setup you can use the following commands to manage your synapse
installation:
```
# Start matrix-synapse, all workers and any enabled bots or bridges.
systemctl start matrix.target
# Restart matrix-synapse and all workers (not necessarily restarting bots
# or bridges, see "Bots and Bridges")
systemctl restart matrix-synapse.service
# Stop matrix-synapse and all workers (not necessarily restarting bots
# or bridges, see "Bots and Bridges")
systemctl stop matrix-synapse.service
# Restart a specific worker (i. e. federation_reader), the homeserver is
# unaffected by this.
systemctl restart matrix-synapse-worker@federation_reader.service
# Add a new worker (assuming all configs are setup already)
systemctl enable matrix-synapse-worker@federation_writer.service
systemctl restart matrix-synapse.service
```
## The Configs
Make sure the `worker_app` is set in the `homeserver.yaml` and it does not fork.
```
worker_app: synapse.app.homeserver
daemonize: false
```
None of the workers should fork, as forking is handled by systemd. Hence make
sure this is present in all worker config files.
```
worker_daemonize: false
```
The config files of all workers are expected to be located in
`/etc/matrix-synapse/workers`. If you want to use a different location you have
to edit the provided `*.service` files accordingly.
## Bots and Bridges
Most bots and bridges do not care if the homeserver goes down or is restarted.
Depending on the implementation this may crash them though. So look up the docs
or ask the community of the specific bridge or bot you want to run to make sure
you choose the correct setup.
Whichever configuration you choose, after the setup the following will enable
automatically starting (and potentially restarting) your bot/bridge with the
`matrix.target`.
```
systemctl enable <yourBotOrBridgeName>.service
```
**Note** that from an inactive synapse the bots/bridges will only be started with
synapse if you start the `matrix.target`, not if you start the
`matrix-synapse.service`. This is on purpose. Think of `matrix-synapse.service`
as *just* synapse, but `matrix.target` being anything matrix related, including
synapse and any and all enabled bots and bridges.
### Start with synapse but ignore synapse going down
If the bridge can handle shutdowns of the homeserver you'll want to install the
service in the `matrix.target` and optionally add a
`After=matrix-synapse.service` dependency to have the bot/bridge start after
synapse on starting everything.
In this case the service file should look like this.
```
[Unit]
# ...
# Optional, this will only ensure that if you start everything, synapse will
# be started before the bot/bridge will be started.
After=matrix-synapse.service
[Service]
# ...
[Install]
WantedBy=matrix.target
```
### Stop/restart when synapse stops/restarts
If the bridge can't handle shutdowns of the homeserver you'll still want to
install the service in the `matrix.target` but also have to specify the
`After=matrix-synapse.service` *and* `BindsTo=matrix-synapse.service`
dependencies to have the bot/bridge stop/restart with synapse.
In this case the service file should look like this.
```
[Unit]
# ...
# Mandatory
After=matrix-synapse.service
BindsTo=matrix-synapse.service
[Service]
# ...
[Install]
WantedBy=matrix.target
```

View File

@@ -1,17 +0,0 @@
[Unit]
Description=Synapse Matrix Worker
After=matrix-synapse.service
BindsTo=matrix-synapse.service
[Service]
Type=simple
User=matrix-synapse
WorkingDirectory=/var/lib/matrix-synapse
EnvironmentFile=/etc/default/matrix-synapse
ExecStart=/opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/bin/python -m synapse.app.%i --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/ --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/workers/%i.yaml
ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID
Restart=always
RestartSec=3
[Install]
WantedBy=matrix-synapse.service

View File

@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
[Unit]
Description=Synapse Matrix Homeserver
[Service]
Type=simple
User=matrix-synapse
WorkingDirectory=/var/lib/matrix-synapse
EnvironmentFile=/etc/default/matrix-synapse
ExecStartPre=/opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/bin/python -m synapse.app.homeserver --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/ --generate-keys
ExecStart=/opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/bin/python -m synapse.app.homeserver --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/
ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID
Restart=always
RestartSec=3
[Install]
WantedBy=matrix.target

View File

@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
[Unit]
Description=Contains matrix services like synapse, bridges and bots
After=network.target
AllowIsolate=no
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

View File

@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
worker_app: synapse.app.federation_reader
worker_replication_host: 127.0.0.1
worker_replication_port: 9092
worker_replication_http_port: 9093
worker_listeners:
- type: http
port: 8011
resources:
- names: [federation]
worker_daemonize: false
worker_log_config: /etc/matrix-synapse/federation-reader-log.yaml

View File

@@ -6,16 +6,7 @@
set -e
export DH_VIRTUALENV_INSTALL_ROOT=/opt/venvs
# make sure that the virtualenv links to the specific version of python, by
# dereferencing the python3 symlink.
#
# Otherwise, if somebody tries to install (say) the stretch package on buster,
# they will get a confusing error about "No module named 'synapse'", because
# python won't look in the right directory. At least this way, the error will
# be a *bit* more obvious.
#
SNAKE=`readlink -e /usr/bin/python3`
SNAKE=/usr/bin/python3
# try to set the CFLAGS so any compiled C extensions are compiled with the most
# generic as possible x64 instructions, so that compiling it on a new Intel chip
@@ -45,10 +36,6 @@ dh_virtualenv \
--extra-pip-arg="--compile" \
--extras="all"
PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR="debian/matrix-synapse-py3"
VIRTUALENV_DIR="${PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR}${DH_VIRTUALENV_INSTALL_ROOT}/matrix-synapse"
TARGET_PYTHON="${VIRTUALENV_DIR}/bin/python"
# we copy the tests to a temporary directory so that we can put them on the
# PYTHONPATH without putting the uninstalled synapse on the pythonpath.
tmpdir=`mktemp -d`
@@ -57,35 +44,5 @@ trap "rm -r $tmpdir" EXIT
cp -r tests "$tmpdir"
PYTHONPATH="$tmpdir" \
"${TARGET_PYTHON}" -B -m twisted.trial --reporter=text -j2 tests
# build the config file
"${TARGET_PYTHON}" -B "${VIRTUALENV_DIR}/bin/generate_config" \
--config-dir="/etc/matrix-synapse" \
--data-dir="/var/lib/matrix-synapse" |
perl -pe '
# tweak the paths to the tls certs and signing keys
/^tls_.*_path:/ and s/SERVERNAME/homeserver/;
/^signing_key_path:/ and s/SERVERNAME/homeserver/;
# tweak the pid file location
/^pid_file:/ and s#:.*#: "/var/run/matrix-synapse.pid"#;
# tweak the path to the log config
/^log_config:/ and s/SERVERNAME\.log\.config/log.yaml/;
# tweak the path to the media store
/^media_store_path:/ and s#/media_store#/media#;
# remove the server_name setting, which is set in a separate file
/^server_name:/ and $_ = "#\n# This is set in /etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/server_name.yaml for Debian installations.\n# $_";
# remove the report_stats setting, which is set in a separate file
/^# report_stats:/ and $_ = "";
' > "${PACKAGE_BUILD_DIR}/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml"
# add a dependency on the right version of python to substvars.
PYPKG=`basename $SNAKE`
echo "synapse:pydepends=$PYPKG" >> debian/matrix-synapse-py3.substvars
debian/matrix-synapse-py3/opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/bin/python \
-B -m twisted.trial --reporter=text -j2 tests

45
debian/changelog vendored
View File

@@ -1,48 +1,3 @@
matrix-synapse-py3 (0.99.3) stable; urgency=medium
[ Richard van der Hoff ]
* Fix warning during preconfiguration. (Fixes: #4819)
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 0.99.3.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Mon, 01 Apr 2019 12:48:21 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (0.99.2) stable; urgency=medium
* Fix overwriting of config settings on upgrade.
* New synapse release 0.99.2.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Fri, 01 Mar 2019 10:55:08 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (0.99.1.1) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 0.99.1.1
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Thu, 14 Feb 2019 17:19:44 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (0.99.1) stable; urgency=medium
[ Damjan Georgievski ]
* Added ExecReload= in service unit file to send a HUP signal
[ Synapse Packaging team ]
* New synapse release 0.99.1
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Thu, 14 Feb 2019 14:12:26 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (0.99.0) stable; urgency=medium
* New synapse release 0.99.0
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Tue, 5 Feb 2019 18:25:00 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (0.34.1.1++1) stable; urgency=medium
* Update conflicts specifications to allow smoother transition from matrix-synapse.
-- Synapse Packaging team <packages@matrix.org> Sat, 12 Jan 2019 12:58:35 +0000
matrix-synapse-py3 (0.34.1.1) stable; urgency=high
* New synapse release 0.34.1.1

9
debian/config vendored Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
#!/bin/sh
set -e
. /usr/share/debconf/confmodule
db_input high matrix-synapse/server-name || true
db_input high matrix-synapse/report-stats || true
db_go

8
debian/control vendored
View File

@@ -19,16 +19,16 @@ Homepage: https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse
Package: matrix-synapse-py3
Architecture: amd64
Provides: matrix-synapse
Conflicts:
matrix-synapse (<< 0.34.0.1-0matrix2),
matrix-synapse (>= 0.34.0.1-1),
Breaks:
matrix-synapse (<< 0.34.0-0matrix2),
matrix-synapse (>= 0.34.0-1),
Pre-Depends: dpkg (>= 1.16.1)
Depends:
adduser,
debconf,
python3-distutils|libpython3-stdlib (<< 3.6),
python3,
${misc:Depends},
${synapse:pydepends},
# some of our scripts use perl, but none of them are important,
# so we put perl:Depends in Suggests rather than Depends.
Suggests:

617
debian/homeserver.yaml vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,617 @@
# vim:ft=yaml
# PEM encoded X509 certificate for TLS.
# You can replace the self-signed certificate that synapse
# autogenerates on launch with your own SSL certificate + key pair
# if you like. Any required intermediary certificates can be
# appended after the primary certificate in hierarchical order.
tls_certificate_path: "/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.tls.crt"
# PEM encoded private key for TLS
tls_private_key_path: "/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.tls.key"
# PEM dh parameters for ephemeral keys
tls_dh_params_path: "/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.tls.dh"
# Don't bind to the https port
no_tls: False
# List of allowed TLS fingerprints for this server to publish along
# with the signing keys for this server. Other matrix servers that
# make HTTPS requests to this server will check that the TLS
# certificates returned by this server match one of the fingerprints.
#
# Synapse automatically adds the fingerprint of its own certificate
# to the list. So if federation traffic is handled directly by synapse
# then no modification to the list is required.
#
# If synapse is run behind a load balancer that handles the TLS then it
# will be necessary to add the fingerprints of the certificates used by
# the loadbalancers to this list if they are different to the one
# synapse is using.
#
# Homeservers are permitted to cache the list of TLS fingerprints
# returned in the key responses up to the "valid_until_ts" returned in
# key. It may be necessary to publish the fingerprints of a new
# certificate and wait until the "valid_until_ts" of the previous key
# responses have passed before deploying it.
#
# You can calculate a fingerprint from a given TLS listener via:
# openssl s_client -connect $host:$port < /dev/null 2> /dev/null |
# openssl x509 -outform DER | openssl sha256 -binary | base64 | tr -d '='
# or by checking matrix.org/federationtester/api/report?server_name=$host
#
tls_fingerprints: []
# tls_fingerprints: [{"sha256": "<base64_encoded_sha256_fingerprint>"}]
## Server ##
# When running as a daemon, the file to store the pid in
pid_file: "/var/run/matrix-synapse.pid"
# CPU affinity mask. Setting this restricts the CPUs on which the
# process will be scheduled. It is represented as a bitmask, with the
# lowest order bit corresponding to the first logical CPU and the
# highest order bit corresponding to the last logical CPU. Not all CPUs
# may exist on a given system but a mask may specify more CPUs than are
# present.
#
# For example:
# 0x00000001 is processor #0,
# 0x00000003 is processors #0 and #1,
# 0xFFFFFFFF is all processors (#0 through #31).
#
# Pinning a Python process to a single CPU is desirable, because Python
# is inherently single-threaded due to the GIL, and can suffer a
# 30-40% slowdown due to cache blow-out and thread context switching
# if the scheduler happens to schedule the underlying threads across
# different cores. See
# https://www.mirantis.com/blog/improve-performance-python-programs-restricting-single-cpu/.
#
# cpu_affinity: 0xFFFFFFFF
# The path to the web client which will be served at /_matrix/client/
# if 'webclient' is configured under the 'listeners' configuration.
#
# web_client_location: "/path/to/web/root"
# The public-facing base URL for the client API (not including _matrix/...)
# public_baseurl: https://example.com:8448/
# Set the soft limit on the number of file descriptors synapse can use
# Zero is used to indicate synapse should set the soft limit to the
# hard limit.
soft_file_limit: 0
# The GC threshold parameters to pass to `gc.set_threshold`, if defined
# gc_thresholds: [700, 10, 10]
# Set the limit on the returned events in the timeline in the get
# and sync operations. The default value is -1, means no upper limit.
# filter_timeline_limit: 5000
# Whether room invites to users on this server should be blocked
# (except those sent by local server admins). The default is False.
# block_non_admin_invites: True
# Restrict federation to the following whitelist of domains.
# N.B. we recommend also firewalling your federation listener to limit
# inbound federation traffic as early as possible, rather than relying
# purely on this application-layer restriction. If not specified, the
# default is to whitelist everything.
#
# federation_domain_whitelist:
# - lon.example.com
# - nyc.example.com
# - syd.example.com
# List of ports that Synapse should listen on, their purpose and their
# configuration.
listeners:
# Main HTTPS listener
# For when matrix traffic is sent directly to synapse.
-
# The port to listen for HTTPS requests on.
port: 8448
# Local addresses to listen on.
# On Linux and Mac OS, `::` will listen on all IPv4 and IPv6
# addresses by default. For most other OSes, this will only listen
# on IPv6.
bind_addresses:
- '::'
- '0.0.0.0'
# This is a 'http' listener, allows us to specify 'resources'.
type: http
tls: true
# Use the X-Forwarded-For (XFF) header as the client IP and not the
# actual client IP.
x_forwarded: false
# List of HTTP resources to serve on this listener.
resources:
-
# List of resources to host on this listener.
names:
- client # The client-server APIs, both v1 and v2
- webclient # The bundled webclient.
# Should synapse compress HTTP responses to clients that support it?
# This should be disabled if running synapse behind a load balancer
# that can do automatic compression.
compress: true
- names: [federation] # Federation APIs
compress: false
# optional list of additional endpoints which can be loaded via
# dynamic modules
# additional_resources:
# "/_matrix/my/custom/endpoint":
# module: my_module.CustomRequestHandler
# config: {}
# Unsecure HTTP listener,
# For when matrix traffic passes through loadbalancer that unwraps TLS.
- port: 8008
tls: false
bind_addresses: ['::', '0.0.0.0']
type: http
x_forwarded: false
resources:
- names: [client, webclient]
compress: true
- names: [federation]
compress: false
# Turn on the twisted ssh manhole service on localhost on the given
# port.
# - port: 9000
# bind_addresses: ['::1', '127.0.0.1']
# type: manhole
# Database configuration
database:
# The database engine name
name: "sqlite3"
# Arguments to pass to the engine
args:
# Path to the database
database: "/var/lib/matrix-synapse/homeserver.db"
# Number of events to cache in memory.
event_cache_size: "10K"
# A yaml python logging config file
log_config: "/etc/matrix-synapse/log.yaml"
## Ratelimiting ##
# Number of messages a client can send per second
rc_messages_per_second: 0.2
# Number of message a client can send before being throttled
rc_message_burst_count: 10.0
# The federation window size in milliseconds
federation_rc_window_size: 1000
# The number of federation requests from a single server in a window
# before the server will delay processing the request.
federation_rc_sleep_limit: 10
# The duration in milliseconds to delay processing events from
# remote servers by if they go over the sleep limit.
federation_rc_sleep_delay: 500
# The maximum number of concurrent federation requests allowed
# from a single server
federation_rc_reject_limit: 50
# The number of federation requests to concurrently process from a
# single server
federation_rc_concurrent: 3
# Directory where uploaded images and attachments are stored.
media_store_path: "/var/lib/matrix-synapse/media"
# Media storage providers allow media to be stored in different
# locations.
# media_storage_providers:
# - module: file_system
# # Whether to write new local files.
# store_local: false
# # Whether to write new remote media
# store_remote: false
# # Whether to block upload requests waiting for write to this
# # provider to complete
# store_synchronous: false
# config:
# directory: /mnt/some/other/directory
# Directory where in-progress uploads are stored.
uploads_path: "/var/lib/matrix-synapse/uploads"
# The largest allowed upload size in bytes
max_upload_size: "10M"
# Maximum number of pixels that will be thumbnailed
max_image_pixels: "32M"
# Whether to generate new thumbnails on the fly to precisely match
# the resolution requested by the client. If true then whenever
# a new resolution is requested by the client the server will
# generate a new thumbnail. If false the server will pick a thumbnail
# from a precalculated list.
dynamic_thumbnails: false
# List of thumbnail to precalculate when an image is uploaded.
thumbnail_sizes:
- width: 32
height: 32
method: crop
- width: 96
height: 96
method: crop
- width: 320
height: 240
method: scale
- width: 640
height: 480
method: scale
- width: 800
height: 600
method: scale
# Is the preview URL API enabled? If enabled, you *must* specify
# an explicit url_preview_ip_range_blacklist of IPs that the spider is
# denied from accessing.
url_preview_enabled: False
# List of IP address CIDR ranges that the URL preview spider is denied
# from accessing. There are no defaults: you must explicitly
# specify a list for URL previewing to work. You should specify any
# internal services in your network that you do not want synapse to try
# to connect to, otherwise anyone in any Matrix room could cause your
# synapse to issue arbitrary GET requests to your internal services,
# causing serious security issues.
#
# url_preview_ip_range_blacklist:
# - '127.0.0.0/8'
# - '10.0.0.0/8'
# - '172.16.0.0/12'
# - '192.168.0.0/16'
# - '100.64.0.0/10'
# - '169.254.0.0/16'
#
# List of IP address CIDR ranges that the URL preview spider is allowed
# to access even if they are specified in url_preview_ip_range_blacklist.
# This is useful for specifying exceptions to wide-ranging blacklisted
# target IP ranges - e.g. for enabling URL previews for a specific private
# website only visible in your network.
#
# url_preview_ip_range_whitelist:
# - '192.168.1.1'
# Optional list of URL matches that the URL preview spider is
# denied from accessing. You should use url_preview_ip_range_blacklist
# in preference to this, otherwise someone could define a public DNS
# entry that points to a private IP address and circumvent the blacklist.
# This is more useful if you know there is an entire shape of URL that
# you know that will never want synapse to try to spider.
#
# Each list entry is a dictionary of url component attributes as returned
# by urlparse.urlsplit as applied to the absolute form of the URL. See
# https://docs.python.org/2/library/urlparse.html#urlparse.urlsplit
# The values of the dictionary are treated as an filename match pattern
# applied to that component of URLs, unless they start with a ^ in which
# case they are treated as a regular expression match. If all the
# specified component matches for a given list item succeed, the URL is
# blacklisted.
#
# url_preview_url_blacklist:
# # blacklist any URL with a username in its URI
# - username: '*'
#
# # blacklist all *.google.com URLs
# - netloc: 'google.com'
# - netloc: '*.google.com'
#
# # blacklist all plain HTTP URLs
# - scheme: 'http'
#
# # blacklist http(s)://www.acme.com/foo
# - netloc: 'www.acme.com'
# path: '/foo'
#
# # blacklist any URL with a literal IPv4 address
# - netloc: '^[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+$'
# The largest allowed URL preview spidering size in bytes
max_spider_size: "10M"
## Captcha ##
# See docs/CAPTCHA_SETUP for full details of configuring this.
# This Home Server's ReCAPTCHA public key.
recaptcha_public_key: "YOUR_PUBLIC_KEY"
# This Home Server's ReCAPTCHA private key.
recaptcha_private_key: "YOUR_PRIVATE_KEY"
# Enables ReCaptcha checks when registering, preventing signup
# unless a captcha is answered. Requires a valid ReCaptcha
# public/private key.
enable_registration_captcha: False
# A secret key used to bypass the captcha test entirely.
#captcha_bypass_secret: "YOUR_SECRET_HERE"
# The API endpoint to use for verifying m.login.recaptcha responses.
recaptcha_siteverify_api: "https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/siteverify"
## Turn ##
# The public URIs of the TURN server to give to clients
turn_uris: []
# The shared secret used to compute passwords for the TURN server
turn_shared_secret: "YOUR_SHARED_SECRET"
# The Username and password if the TURN server needs them and
# does not use a token
#turn_username: "TURNSERVER_USERNAME"
#turn_password: "TURNSERVER_PASSWORD"
# How long generated TURN credentials last
turn_user_lifetime: "1h"
# Whether guests should be allowed to use the TURN server.
# This defaults to True, otherwise VoIP will be unreliable for guests.
# However, it does introduce a slight security risk as it allows users to
# connect to arbitrary endpoints without having first signed up for a
# valid account (e.g. by passing a CAPTCHA).
turn_allow_guests: False
## Registration ##
# Enable registration for new users.
enable_registration: False
# The user must provide all of the below types of 3PID when registering.
#
# registrations_require_3pid:
# - email
# - msisdn
# Mandate that users are only allowed to associate certain formats of
# 3PIDs with accounts on this server.
#
# allowed_local_3pids:
# - medium: email
# pattern: ".*@matrix\.org"
# - medium: email
# pattern: ".*@vector\.im"
# - medium: msisdn
# pattern: "\+44"
# If set, allows registration by anyone who also has the shared
# secret, even if registration is otherwise disabled.
# registration_shared_secret: <PRIVATE STRING>
# Set the number of bcrypt rounds used to generate password hash.
# Larger numbers increase the work factor needed to generate the hash.
# The default number is 12 (which equates to 2^12 rounds).
# N.B. that increasing this will exponentially increase the time required
# to register or login - e.g. 24 => 2^24 rounds which will take >20 mins.
bcrypt_rounds: 12
# Allows users to register as guests without a password/email/etc, and
# participate in rooms hosted on this server which have been made
# accessible to anonymous users.
allow_guest_access: False
# The list of identity servers trusted to verify third party
# identifiers by this server.
trusted_third_party_id_servers:
- matrix.org
- vector.im
- riot.im
# Users who register on this homeserver will automatically be joined
# to these rooms
#auto_join_rooms:
# - "#example:example.com"
## Metrics ###
# Enable collection and rendering of performance metrics
enable_metrics: False
## API Configuration ##
# A list of event types that will be included in the room_invite_state
room_invite_state_types:
- "m.room.join_rules"
- "m.room.canonical_alias"
- "m.room.avatar"
- "m.room.name"
# A list of application service config file to use
app_service_config_files: []
# macaroon_secret_key: <PRIVATE STRING>
# Used to enable access token expiration.
expire_access_token: False
## Signing Keys ##
# Path to the signing key to sign messages with
signing_key_path: "/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.signing.key"
# The keys that the server used to sign messages with but won't use
# to sign new messages. E.g. it has lost its private key
old_signing_keys: {}
# "ed25519:auto":
# # Base64 encoded public key
# key: "The public part of your old signing key."
# # Millisecond POSIX timestamp when the key expired.
# expired_ts: 123456789123
# How long key response published by this server is valid for.
# Used to set the valid_until_ts in /key/v2 APIs.
# Determines how quickly servers will query to check which keys
# are still valid.
key_refresh_interval: "1d" # 1 Day.
# The trusted servers to download signing keys from.
perspectives:
servers:
"matrix.org":
verify_keys:
"ed25519:auto":
key: "Noi6WqcDj0QmPxCNQqgezwTlBKrfqehY1u2FyWP9uYw"
# Enable SAML2 for registration and login. Uses pysaml2
# config_path: Path to the sp_conf.py configuration file
# idp_redirect_url: Identity provider URL which will redirect
# the user back to /login/saml2 with proper info.
# See pysaml2 docs for format of config.
#saml2_config:
# enabled: true
# config_path: "/home/erikj/git/synapse/sp_conf.py"
# idp_redirect_url: "http://test/idp"
# Enable CAS for registration and login.
#cas_config:
# enabled: true
# server_url: "https://cas-server.com"
# service_url: "https://homeserver.domain.com:8448"
# #required_attributes:
# # name: value
# The JWT needs to contain a globally unique "sub" (subject) claim.
#
# jwt_config:
# enabled: true
# secret: "a secret"
# algorithm: "HS256"
# Enable password for login.
password_config:
enabled: true
# Uncomment and change to a secret random string for extra security.
# DO NOT CHANGE THIS AFTER INITIAL SETUP!
#pepper: ""
# Enable sending emails for notification events
# Defining a custom URL for Riot is only needed if email notifications
# should contain links to a self-hosted installation of Riot; when set
# the "app_name" setting is ignored.
#
# If your SMTP server requires authentication, the optional smtp_user &
# smtp_pass variables should be used
#
#email:
# enable_notifs: false
# smtp_host: "localhost"
# smtp_port: 25
# smtp_user: "exampleusername"
# smtp_pass: "examplepassword"
# require_transport_security: False
# notif_from: "Your Friendly %(app)s Home Server <noreply@example.com>"
# app_name: Matrix
# template_dir: res/templates
# notif_template_html: notif_mail.html
# notif_template_text: notif_mail.txt
# notif_for_new_users: True
# riot_base_url: "http://localhost/riot"
# password_providers:
# - module: "ldap_auth_provider.LdapAuthProvider"
# config:
# enabled: true
# uri: "ldap://ldap.example.com:389"
# start_tls: true
# base: "ou=users,dc=example,dc=com"
# attributes:
# uid: "cn"
# mail: "email"
# name: "givenName"
# #bind_dn:
# #bind_password:
# #filter: "(objectClass=posixAccount)"
# Clients requesting push notifications can either have the body of
# the message sent in the notification poke along with other details
# like the sender, or just the event ID and room ID (`event_id_only`).
# If clients choose the former, this option controls whether the
# notification request includes the content of the event (other details
# like the sender are still included). For `event_id_only` push, it
# has no effect.
# For modern android devices the notification content will still appear
# because it is loaded by the app. iPhone, however will send a
# notification saying only that a message arrived and who it came from.
#
#push:
# include_content: true
# spam_checker:
# module: "my_custom_project.SuperSpamChecker"
# config:
# example_option: 'things'
# Whether to allow non server admins to create groups on this server
enable_group_creation: false
# If enabled, non server admins can only create groups with local parts
# starting with this prefix
# group_creation_prefix: "unofficial/"
# User Directory configuration
#
# 'search_all_users' defines whether to search all users visible to your HS
# when searching the user directory, rather than limiting to users visible
# in public rooms. Defaults to false. If you set it True, you'll have to run
# UPDATE user_directory_stream_pos SET stream_id = NULL;
# on your database to tell it to rebuild the user_directory search indexes.
#
#user_directory:
# search_all_users: false

2
debian/install vendored
View File

@@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
debian/homeserver.yaml etc/matrix-synapse
debian/log.yaml etc/matrix-synapse
debian/manage_debconf.pl /opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/lib/

View File

@@ -1,130 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/perl
#
# Interface between our config files and the debconf database.
#
# Usage:
#
# manage_debconf.pl <action>
#
# where <action> can be:
#
# read: read the configuration from the yaml into debconf
# update: update the yaml config according to the debconf database
use strict;
use warnings;
use Debconf::Client::ConfModule (qw/get set/);
# map from the name of a setting in our .yaml file to the relevant debconf
# setting.
my %MAPPINGS=(
server_name => 'matrix-synapse/server-name',
report_stats => 'matrix-synapse/report-stats',
);
# enable debug if dpkg --debug
my $DEBUG = $ENV{DPKG_MAINTSCRIPT_DEBUG};
sub read_config {
my @files = @_;
foreach my $file (@files) {
print STDERR "reading $file\n" if $DEBUG;
open my $FH, "<", $file or next;
# rudimentary parsing which (a) avoids having to depend on a yaml library,
# and (b) is tolerant of yaml errors
while($_ = <$FH>) {
while (my ($setting, $debconf) = each %MAPPINGS) {
$setting = quotemeta $setting;
if(/^${setting}\s*:(.*)$/) {
my $val = $1;
# remove leading/trailing whitespace
$val =~ s/^\s*//;
$val =~ s/\s*$//;
# remove surrounding quotes
if ($val =~ /^"(.*)"$/ || $val =~ /^'(.*)'$/) {
$val = $1;
}
print STDERR ">> $debconf = $val\n" if $DEBUG;
set($debconf, $val);
}
}
}
close $FH;
}
}
sub update_config {
my @files = @_;
my %substs = ();
while (my ($setting, $debconf) = each %MAPPINGS) {
my @res = get($debconf);
$substs{$setting} = $res[1] if $res[0] == 0;
}
foreach my $file (@files) {
print STDERR "checking $file\n" if $DEBUG;
open my $FH, "<", $file or next;
my $updated = 0;
# read the whole file into memory
my @lines = <$FH>;
while (my ($setting, $val) = each %substs) {
$setting = quotemeta $setting;
map {
if (/^${setting}\s*:\s*(.*)\s*$/) {
my $current = $1;
if ($val ne $current) {
$_ = "${setting}: $val\n";
$updated = 1;
}
}
} @lines;
}
close $FH;
next unless $updated;
print STDERR "updating $file\n" if $DEBUG;
open $FH, ">", $file or die "unable to update $file";
print $FH @lines;
close $FH;
}
}
my $cmd = $ARGV[0];
my $read = 0;
my $update = 0;
if (not $cmd) {
die "must specify a command to perform\n";
} elsif ($cmd eq 'read') {
$read = 1;
} elsif ($cmd eq 'update') {
$update = 1;
} else {
die "unknown command '$cmd'\n";
}
my @files = (
"/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml",
glob("/etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/*.yaml"),
);
if ($read) {
read_config(@files);
} elsif ($update) {
update_config(@files);
}

View File

@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
set -e
. /usr/share/debconf/confmodule
# try to update the debconf db according to whatever is in the config files
#
# note that we may get run during preconfiguration, in which case the script
# will not yet be installed.
[ -x /opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/lib/manage_debconf.pl ] && \
/opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/lib/manage_debconf.pl read
db_input high matrix-synapse/server-name || true
db_input high matrix-synapse/report-stats || true
db_go

View File

@@ -8,36 +8,19 @@ USER="matrix-synapse"
case "$1" in
configure|reconfigure)
# generate template config files if they don't exist
# Set server name in config file
mkdir -p "/etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/"
if [ ! -e "$CONFIGFILE_SERVERNAME" ]; then
cat > "$CONFIGFILE_SERVERNAME" <<EOF
# This file is autogenerated, and will be recreated on upgrade if it is deleted.
# Any changes you make will be preserved.
db_get matrix-synapse/server-name
# The domain name of the server, with optional explicit port.
# This is used by remote servers to connect to this server,
# e.g. matrix.org, localhost:8080, etc.
# This is also the last part of your UserID.
#
server_name: ''
EOF
if [ "$RET" ]; then
echo "server_name: $RET" > $CONFIGFILE_SERVERNAME
fi
if [ ! -e "$CONFIGFILE_REPORTSTATS" ]; then
cat > "$CONFIGFILE_REPORTSTATS" <<EOF
# This file is autogenerated, and will be recreated on upgrade if it is deleted.
# Any changes you make will be preserved.
# Whether to report anonymized homeserver usage statistics.
report_stats: false
EOF
db_get matrix-synapse/report-stats
if [ "$RET" ]; then
echo "report_stats: $RET" > $CONFIGFILE_REPORTSTATS
fi
# update the config files according to whatever is in the debconf database
/opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/lib/manage_debconf.pl update
if ! getent passwd $USER >/dev/null; then
adduser --quiet --system --no-create-home --home /var/lib/matrix-synapse $USER
fi

View File

@@ -8,7 +8,6 @@ WorkingDirectory=/var/lib/matrix-synapse
EnvironmentFile=/etc/default/matrix-synapse
ExecStartPre=/opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/bin/python -m synapse.app.homeserver --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/ --generate-keys
ExecStart=/opt/venvs/matrix-synapse/bin/python -m synapse.app.homeserver --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml --config-path=/etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/
ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID
Restart=always
RestartSec=3

7
demo/.gitignore vendored
View File

@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
*.db
*.log
*.log.*
*.pid
/media_store.*
/etc

9
demo/demo.tls.dh Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
2048-bit DH parameters taken from rfc3526
-----BEGIN DH PARAMETERS-----
MIIBCAKCAQEA///////////JD9qiIWjCNMTGYouA3BzRKQJOCIpnzHQCC76mOxOb
IlFKCHmONATd75UZs806QxswKwpt8l8UN0/hNW1tUcJF5IW1dmJefsb0TELppjft
awv/XLb0Brft7jhr+1qJn6WunyQRfEsf5kkoZlHs5Fs9wgB8uKFjvwWY2kg2HFXT
mmkWP6j9JM9fg2VdI9yjrZYcYvNWIIVSu57VKQdwlpZtZww1Tkq8mATxdGwIyhgh
fDKQXkYuNs474553LBgOhgObJ4Oi7Aeij7XFXfBvTFLJ3ivL9pVYFxg5lUl86pVq
5RXSJhiY+gUQFXKOWoqsqmj//////////wIBAg==
-----END DH PARAMETERS-----

View File

@@ -27,27 +27,17 @@ for port in 8080 8081 8082; do
--config-path "$DIR/etc/$port.config" \
--report-stats no
printf '\n\n# Customisation made by demo/start.sh\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
echo 'enable_registration: true' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
# Check script parameters
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then
if [ $1 = "--no-rate-limit" ]; then
# messages rate limit
echo 'rc_messages_per_second: 1000' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
echo 'rc_message_burst_count: 1000' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
# registration rate limit
printf 'rc_registration:\n per_second: 1000\n burst_count: 1000\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
# login rate limit
echo 'rc_login:' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
printf ' address:\n per_second: 1000\n burst_count: 1000\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
printf ' account:\n per_second: 1000\n burst_count: 1000\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
printf ' failed_attempts:\n per_second: 1000\n burst_count: 1000\n' >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
# Set high limits in config file to disable rate limiting
perl -p -i -e 's/rc_messages_per_second.*/rc_messages_per_second: 1000/g' $DIR/etc/$port.config
perl -p -i -e 's/rc_message_burst_count.*/rc_message_burst_count: 1000/g' $DIR/etc/$port.config
fi
fi
perl -p -i -e 's/^enable_registration:.*/enable_registration: true/g' $DIR/etc/$port.config
if ! grep -F "full_twisted_stacktraces" -q $DIR/etc/$port.config; then
echo "full_twisted_stacktraces: true" >> $DIR/etc/$port.config
fi

View File

@@ -1,16 +1,3 @@
# Dockerfile to build the matrixdotorg/synapse docker images.
#
# To build the image, run `docker build` command from the root of the
# synapse repository:
#
# docker build -f docker/Dockerfile .
#
# There is an optional PYTHON_VERSION build argument which sets the
# version of python to build against: for example:
#
# docker build -f docker/Dockerfile --build-arg PYTHON_VERSION=3.6 .
#
ARG PYTHON_VERSION=2
###
@@ -44,10 +31,7 @@ RUN pip install --prefix="/install" --no-warn-script-location \
# now install synapse and all of the python deps to /install.
COPY synapse /synapse/synapse/
COPY scripts /synapse/scripts/
COPY MANIFEST.in README.rst setup.py synctl /synapse/
COPY . /synapse
RUN pip install --prefix="/install" --no-warn-script-location \
/synapse[all]
@@ -72,6 +56,6 @@ COPY ./docker/conf /conf
VOLUME ["/data"]
EXPOSE 8008/tcp 8009/tcp 8448/tcp
EXPOSE 8008/tcp 8448/tcp
ENTRYPOINT ["/start.py"]

View File

@@ -58,11 +58,7 @@ RUN apt-get update -qq -o Acquire::Languages=none \
sqlite3
COPY --from=builder /dh-virtualenv_1.1-1_all.deb /
# install dhvirtualenv. Update the apt cache again first, in case we got a
# cached cache from docker the first time.
RUN apt-get update -qq -o Acquire::Languages=none \
&& apt-get install -yq /dh-virtualenv_1.1-1_all.deb
RUN apt-get install -yq /dh-virtualenv_1.1-1_all.deb
WORKDIR /synapse/source
ENTRYPOINT ["bash","/synapse/source/docker/build_debian.sh"]

View File

@@ -1,21 +1,22 @@
# Synapse Docker
This Docker image will run Synapse as a single process. By default it uses a
sqlite database; for production use you should connect it to a separate
postgres database.
The image also does *not* provide a TURN server.
This Docker image will run Synapse as a single process. It does not provide a database
server or a TURN server, you should run these separately.
## Run
We do not currently offer a `latest` image, as this has somewhat undefined semantics.
We instead release only tagged versions so upgrading between releases is entirely
within your control.
### Using docker-compose (easier)
This image is designed to run either with an automatically generated
configuration file or with a custom configuration that requires manual editing.
This image is designed to run either with an automatically generated configuration
file or with a custom configuration that requires manual editing.
An easy way to make use of this image is via docker-compose. See the
[contrib/docker](../contrib/docker) section of the synapse project for
examples.
[contrib/docker](../contrib/docker)
section of the synapse project for examples.
### Without Compose (harder)
@@ -28,11 +29,10 @@ with your postgres database.
docker run \
-d \
--name synapse \
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-v ${DATA_PATH}:/data \
-e SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME=my.matrix.host \
-e SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS=yes \
-p 8448:8448 \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
docker.io/matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
```
## Volumes
@@ -53,29 +53,6 @@ In order to setup an application service, simply create an ``appservices``
directory in the data volume and write the application service Yaml
configuration file there. Multiple application services are supported.
## TLS certificates
Synapse requires a valid TLS certificate. You can do one of the following:
* Provide your own certificate and key (as
`${DATA_PATH}/${SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME}.tls.crt` and
`${DATA_PATH}/${SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME}.tls.key`, or elsewhere by providing an
entire config as `${SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH}`). In this case, you should forward
traffic to port 8448 in the container, for example with `-p 443:8448`.
* Use a reverse proxy to terminate incoming TLS, and forward the plain http
traffic to port 8008 in the container. In this case you should set `-e
SYNAPSE_NO_TLS=1`.
* Use the ACME (Let's Encrypt) support built into Synapse. This requires
`${SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME}` port 80 to be forwarded to port 8009 in the
container, for example with `-p 80:8009`. To enable it in the docker
container, set `-e SYNAPSE_ACME=1`.
If you don't do any of these, Synapse will fail to start with an error similar to:
synapse.config._base.ConfigError: Error accessing file '/data/<server_name>.tls.crt' (config for tls_certificate): No such file or directory
## Environment
Unless you specify a custom path for the configuration file, a very generic
@@ -89,17 +66,12 @@ Global settings:
* ``SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH``, path to a custom config file
If ``SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH`` is set, you should generate a configuration file
then customize it manually: see [Generating a config
file](#generating-a-config-file).
then customize it manually. No other environment variable is required.
Otherwise, a dynamic configuration file will be used.
Otherwise, a dynamic configuration file will be used. The following environment
variables are available for configuration:
### Environment variables used to build a dynamic configuration file
The following environment variables are used to build the configuration file
when ``SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH`` is not set.
* ``SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME`` (mandatory), the server public hostname.
* ``SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME`` (mandatory), the current server public hostname.
* ``SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS``, (mandatory, ``yes`` or ``no``), enable anonymous
statistics reporting back to the Matrix project which helps us to get funding.
* ``SYNAPSE_NO_TLS``, set this variable to disable TLS in Synapse (use this if
@@ -108,6 +80,7 @@ when ``SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH`` is not set.
the Synapse instance.
* ``SYNAPSE_ALLOW_GUEST``, set this variable to allow guest joining this server.
* ``SYNAPSE_EVENT_CACHE_SIZE``, the event cache size [default `10K`].
* ``SYNAPSE_CACHE_FACTOR``, the cache factor [default `0.5`].
* ``SYNAPSE_RECAPTCHA_PUBLIC_KEY``, set this variable to the recaptcha public
key in order to enable recaptcha upon registration.
* ``SYNAPSE_RECAPTCHA_PRIVATE_KEY``, set this variable to the recaptcha private
@@ -115,9 +88,7 @@ when ``SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH`` is not set.
* ``SYNAPSE_TURN_URIS``, set this variable to the coma-separated list of TURN
uris to enable TURN for this homeserver.
* ``SYNAPSE_TURN_SECRET``, set this to the TURN shared secret if required.
* ``SYNAPSE_MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE``, set this variable to change the max upload size
[default `10M`].
* ``SYNAPSE_ACME``: set this to enable the ACME certificate renewal support.
* ``SYNAPSE_MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE``, set this variable to change the max upload size [default `10M`].
Shared secrets, that will be initialized to random values if not set:
@@ -128,53 +99,27 @@ Shared secrets, that will be initialized to random values if not set:
Database specific values (will use SQLite if not set):
* `POSTGRES_DB` - The database name for the synapse postgres
database. [default: `synapse`]
* `POSTGRES_HOST` - The host of the postgres database if you wish to use
postgresql instead of sqlite3. [default: `db` which is useful when using a
container on the same docker network in a compose file where the postgres
service is called `db`]
* `POSTGRES_PASSWORD` - The password for the synapse postgres database. **If
this is set then postgres will be used instead of sqlite3.** [default: none]
**NOTE**: You are highly encouraged to use postgresql! Please use the compose
file to make it easier to deploy.
* `POSTGRES_USER` - The user for the synapse postgres database. [default:
`synapse`]
* `POSTGRES_DB` - The database name for the synapse postgres database. [default: `synapse`]
* `POSTGRES_HOST` - The host of the postgres database if you wish to use postgresql instead of sqlite3. [default: `db` which is useful when using a container on the same docker network in a compose file where the postgres service is called `db`]
* `POSTGRES_PASSWORD` - The password for the synapse postgres database. **If this is set then postgres will be used instead of sqlite3.** [default: none] **NOTE**: You are highly encouraged to use postgresql! Please use the compose file to make it easier to deploy.
* `POSTGRES_USER` - The user for the synapse postgres database. [default: `matrix`]
Mail server specific values (will not send emails if not set):
* ``SYNAPSE_SMTP_HOST``, hostname to the mail server.
* ``SYNAPSE_SMTP_PORT``, TCP port for accessing the mail server [default
``25``].
* ``SYNAPSE_SMTP_USER``, username for authenticating against the mail server if
any.
* ``SYNAPSE_SMTP_PASSWORD``, password for authenticating against the mail
server if any.
* ``SYNAPSE_SMTP_PORT``, TCP port for accessing the mail server [default ``25``].
* ``SYNAPSE_SMTP_USER``, username for authenticating against the mail server if any.
* ``SYNAPSE_SMTP_PASSWORD``, password for authenticating against the mail server if any.
### Generating a config file
## Build
It is possible to generate a basic configuration file for use with
`SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH` using the `generate` commandline option. You will need to
specify values for `SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH`, `SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME` and
`SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS`, and mount a docker volume to store the data on. For
example:
Build the docker image with the `docker build` command from the root of the synapse repository.
```
docker run -it --rm
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-e SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH=/data/homeserver.yaml \
-e SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME=my.matrix.host \
-e SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS=yes \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest generate
docker build -t docker.io/matrixdotorg/synapse . -f docker/Dockerfile
```
This will generate a `homeserver.yaml` in (typically)
`/var/lib/docker/volumes/synapse-data/_data`, which you can then customise and
use with:
The `-t` option sets the image tag. Official images are tagged `matrixdotorg/synapse:<version>` where `<version>` is the same as the release tag in the synapse git repository.
```
docker run -d --name synapse \
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-e SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH=/data/homeserver.yaml \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
```
You may have a local Python wheel cache available, in which case copy the relevant
packages in the ``cache/`` directory at the root of the project.

46
docker/build_debian_packages.sh Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
#!/bin/bash
# Build the Debian packages using Docker images.
#
# This script builds the Docker images and then executes them sequentially, each
# one building a Debian package for the targeted operating system. It is
# designed to be a "single command" to produce all the images.
#
# By default, builds for all known distributions, but a list of distributions
# can be passed on the commandline for debugging.
set -ex
cd `dirname $0`
if [ $# -lt 1 ]; then
DISTS=(
debian:stretch
debian:buster
debian:sid
ubuntu:xenial
ubuntu:bionic
ubuntu:cosmic
)
else
DISTS=("$@")
fi
# Make the dir where the debs will live.
#
# Note that we deliberately put this outside the source tree, otherwise we tend
# to get source packages which are full of debs. (We could hack around that
# with more magic in the build_debian.sh script, but that doesn't solve the
# problem for natively-run dpkg-buildpakage).
mkdir -p ../../debs
# Build each OS image;
for i in "${DISTS[@]}"; do
TAG=$(echo ${i} | cut -d ":" -f 2)
docker build --tag dh-venv-builder:${TAG} --build-arg distro=${i} -f Dockerfile-dhvirtualenv .
docker run -it --rm --volume=$(pwd)/../\:/synapse/source:ro --volume=$(pwd)/../../debs:/debs \
-e TARGET_USERID=$(id -u) \
-e TARGET_GROUPID=$(id -g) \
dh-venv-builder:${TAG}
done

View File

@@ -2,18 +2,11 @@
## TLS ##
{% if not SYNAPSE_NO_TLS %}
tls_certificate_path: "/data/{{ SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME }}.tls.crt"
tls_private_key_path: "/data/{{ SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME }}.tls.key"
{% if SYNAPSE_ACME %}
acme:
enabled: true
port: 8009
{% endif %}
{% endif %}
tls_dh_params_path: "/data/{{ SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME }}.tls.dh"
no_tls: {{ "True" if SYNAPSE_NO_TLS else "False" }}
tls_fingerprints: []
## Server ##

View File

@@ -47,8 +47,9 @@ if mode == "generate":
# In normal mode, generate missing keys if any, then run synapse
else:
# Parse the configuration file
if "SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH" in environ:
config_path = environ["SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH"]
args += ["--config-path", environ["SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH"]]
else:
check_arguments(environ, ("SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME", "SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS"))
generate_secrets(environ, {
@@ -57,21 +58,10 @@ else:
})
environ["SYNAPSE_APPSERVICES"] = glob.glob("/data/appservices/*.yaml")
if not os.path.exists("/compiled"): os.mkdir("/compiled")
config_path = "/compiled/homeserver.yaml"
convert("/conf/homeserver.yaml", config_path, environ)
convert("/conf/homeserver.yaml", "/compiled/homeserver.yaml", environ)
convert("/conf/log.config", "/compiled/log.config", environ)
subprocess.check_output(["chown", "-R", ownership, "/data"])
args += [
"--config-path", config_path,
# tell synapse to put any generated keys in /data rather than /compiled
"--keys-directory", "/data",
]
args += ["--config-path", "/compiled/homeserver.yaml"]
# Generate missing keys and start synapse
subprocess.check_output(args + ["--generate-keys"])
os.execv("/sbin/su-exec", ["su-exec", ownership] + args)

View File

@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
# The config is maintained as an up-to-date snapshot of the default
# homeserver.yaml configuration generated by Synapse.
#
# It is intended to act as a reference for the default configuration,
# helping admins keep track of new options and other changes, and compare
# their configs with the current default. As such, many of the actual
# config values shown are placeholders.
#
# It is *not* intended to be copied and used as the basis for a real
# homeserver.yaml. Instead, if you are starting from scratch, please generate
# a fresh config using Synapse by following the instructions in INSTALL.md.

View File

@@ -1,129 +0,0 @@
# ACME
Synapse v1.0 will require valid TLS certificates for communication between
servers (port `8448` by default) in addition to those that are client-facing
(port `443`). If you do not already have a valid certificate for your domain,
the easiest way to get one is with Synapse's new ACME support, which will use
the ACME protocol to provision a certificate automatically. Synapse v0.99.0+
will provision server-to-server certificates automatically for you for free
through [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/) if you tell it to.
In the case that your `server_name` config variable is the same as
the hostname that the client connects to, then the same certificate can be
used between client and federation ports without issue.
If your configuration file does not already have an `acme` section, you can
generate an example config by running the `generate_config` executable. For
example:
```
~/synapse/env3/bin/generate_config
```
You will need to provide Let's Encrypt (or another ACME provider) access to
your Synapse ACME challenge responder on port 80, at the domain of your
homeserver. This requires you to either change the port of the ACME listener
provided by Synapse to a high port and reverse proxy to it, or use a tool
like `authbind` to allow Synapse to listen on port 80 without root access.
(Do not run Synapse with root permissions!) Detailed instructions are
available under "ACME setup" below.
If you already have certificates, you will need to back up or delete them
(files `example.com.tls.crt` and `example.com.tls.key` in Synapse's root
directory), Synapse's ACME implementation will not overwrite them.
You may wish to use alternate methods such as Certbot to obtain a certificate
from Let's Encrypt, depending on your server configuration. Of course, if you
already have a valid certificate for your homeserver's domain, that can be
placed in Synapse's config directory without the need for any ACME setup.
## ACME setup
The main steps for enabling ACME support in short summary are:
1. Allow Synapse to listen for incoming ACME challenges.
1. Enable ACME support in `homeserver.yaml`.
1. Move your old certificates (files `example.com.tls.crt` and `example.com.tls.key` out of the way if they currently exist at the paths specified in `homeserver.yaml`.
1. Restart Synapse.
Detailed instructions for each step are provided below.
### Listening on port 80
In order for Synapse to complete the ACME challenge to provision a
certificate, it needs access to port 80. Typically listening on port 80 is
only granted to applications running as root. There are thus two solutions to
this problem.
#### Using a reverse proxy
A reverse proxy such as Apache or nginx allows a single process (the web
server) to listen on port 80 and proxy traffic to the appropriate program
running on your server. It is the recommended method for setting up ACME as
it allows you to use your existing webserver while also allowing Synapse to
provision certificates as needed.
For nginx users, add the following line to your existing `server` block:
```
location /.well-known/acme-challenge {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8009;
}
```
For Apache, add the following to your existing webserver config:
```
ProxyPass /.well-known/acme-challenge http://localhost:8009/.well-known/acme-challenge
```
Make sure to restart/reload your webserver after making changes.
Now make the relevant changes in `homeserver.yaml` to enable ACME support:
```
acme:
enabled: true
port: 8009
```
#### Authbind
`authbind` allows a program which does not run as root to bind to
low-numbered ports in a controlled way. The setup is simpler, but requires a
webserver not to already be running on port 80. **This includes every time
Synapse renews a certificate**, which may be cumbersome if you usually run a
web server on port 80. Nevertheless, if you're sure port 80 is not being used
for any other purpose then all that is necessary is the following:
Install `authbind`. For example, on Debian/Ubuntu:
```
sudo apt-get install authbind
```
Allow `authbind` to bind port 80:
```
sudo touch /etc/authbind/byport/80
sudo chmod 777 /etc/authbind/byport/80
```
When Synapse is started, use the following syntax:
```
authbind --deep <synapse start command>
```
Make the relevant changes in `homeserver.yaml` to enable ACME support:
```
acme:
enabled: true
```
### (Re)starting synapse
Ensure that the certificate paths specified in `homeserver.yaml` (`tls_certificate_path` and `tls_private_key_path`) do not currently point to any files. Synapse will not provision certificates if files exist, as it does not want to overwrite existing certificates.
Finally, start/restart Synapse.

View File

@@ -1,338 +0,0 @@
# MSC1711 Certificates FAQ
The goal of Synapse 0.99.0 is to act as a stepping stone to Synapse 1.0.0. It
supports the r0.1 release of the server to server specification, but is
compatible with both the legacy Matrix federation behaviour (pre-r0.1) as well
as post-r0.1 behaviour, in order to allow for a smooth upgrade across the
federation.
The most important thing to know is that Synapse 1.0.0 will require a valid TLS
certificate on federation endpoints. Self signed certificates will not be
sufficient.
Synapse 0.99.0 makes it easy to configure TLS certificates and will
interoperate with both >= 1.0.0 servers as well as existing servers yet to
upgrade.
**It is critical that all admins upgrade to 0.99.0 and configure a valid TLS
certificate.** Admins will have 1 month to do so, after which 1.0.0 will be
released and those servers without a valid certificate will not longer be able
to federate with >= 1.0.0 servers.
Full details on how to carry out this configuration change is given
[below](#configuring-certificates-for-compatibility-with-synapse-100). A
timeline and some frequently asked questions are also given below.
For more details and context on the release of the r0.1 Server/Server API and
imminent Matrix 1.0 release, you can also see our
[main talk from FOSDEM 2019](https://matrix.org/blog/2019/02/04/matrix-at-fosdem-2019/).
## Contents
* Timeline
* Configuring certificates for compatibility with Synapse 1.0
* FAQ
* Synapse 0.99.0 has just been released, what do I need to do right now?
* How do I upgrade?
* What will happen if I do not set up a valid federation certificate
immediately?
* What will happen if I do nothing at all?
* When do I need a SRV record or .well-known URI?
* Can I still use an SRV record?
* I have created a .well-known URI. Do I still need an SRV record?
* It used to work just fine, why are you breaking everything?
* Can I manage my own certificates rather than having Synapse renew
certificates itself?
* Do you still recommend against using a reverse proxy on the federation port?
* Do I still need to give my TLS certificates to Synapse if I am using a
reverse proxy?
* Do I need the same certificate for the client and federation port?
* How do I tell Synapse to reload my keys/certificates after I replace them?
## Timeline
**5th Feb 2019 - Synapse 0.99.0 is released.**
All server admins are encouraged to upgrade.
0.99.0:
- provides support for ACME to make setting up Let's Encrypt certs easy, as
well as .well-known support.
- does not enforce that a valid CA cert is present on the federation API, but
rather makes it easy to set one up.
- provides support for .well-known
Admins should upgrade and configure a valid CA cert. Homeservers that require a
.well-known entry (see below), should retain their SRV record and use it
alongside their .well-known record.
**>= 5th March 2019 - Synapse 1.0.0 is released**
1.0.0 will land no sooner than 1 month after 0.99.0, leaving server admins one
month after 5th February to upgrade to 0.99.0 and deploy their certificates. In
accordance with the the [S2S spec](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/r0.1.0.html)
1.0.0 will enforce certificate validity. This means that any homeserver without a
valid certificate after this point will no longer be able to federate with
1.0.0 servers.
## Configuring certificates for compatibility with Synapse 1.0.0
### If you do not currently have an SRV record
In this case, your `server_name` points to the host where your Synapse is
running. There is no need to create a `.well-known` URI or an SRV record, but
you will need to give Synapse a valid, signed, certificate.
The easiest way to do that is with Synapse's built-in ACME (Let's Encrypt)
support. Full details are in [ACME.md](./ACME.md) but, in a nutshell:
1. Allow Synapse to listen on port 80 with `authbind`, or forward it from a
reverse proxy.
2. Enable acme support in `homeserver.yaml`.
3. Move your old certificates out of the way.
4. Restart Synapse.
### If you do have an SRV record currently
If you are using an SRV record, your matrix domain (`server_name`) may not
point to the same host that your Synapse is running on (the 'target
domain'). (If it does, you can follow the recommendation above; otherwise, read
on.)
Let's assume that your `server_name` is `example.com`, and your Synapse is
hosted at a target domain of `customer.example.net`. Currently you should have
an SRV record which looks like:
```
_matrix._tcp.example.com. IN SRV 10 5 8000 customer.example.net.
```
In this situation, you have three choices for how to proceed:
#### Option 1: give Synapse a certificate for your matrix domain
Synapse 1.0 will expect your server to present a TLS certificate for your
`server_name` (`example.com` in the above example). You can achieve this by
doing one of the following:
* Acquire a certificate for the `server_name` yourself (for example, using
`certbot`), and give it and the key to Synapse via `tls_certificate_path`
and `tls_private_key_path`, or:
* Use Synapse's [ACME support](./ACME.md), and forward port 80 on the
`server_name` domain to your Synapse instance.
#### Option 2: run Synapse behind a reverse proxy
If you have an existing reverse proxy set up with correct TLS certificates for
your domain, you can simply route all traffic through the reverse proxy by
updating the SRV record appropriately (or removing it, if the proxy listens on
8448).
See [reverse_proxy.rst](reverse_proxy.rst) for information on setting up a
reverse proxy.
#### Option 3: add a .well-known file to delegate your matrix traffic
This will allow you to keep Synapse on a separate domain, without having to
give it a certificate for the matrix domain.
You can do this with a `.well-known` file as follows:
1. Keep the SRV record in place - it is needed for backwards compatibility
with Synapse 0.34 and earlier.
2. Give synapse a certificate corresponding to the target domain
(`customer.example.net` in the above example). Currently Synapse's ACME
support [does not support
this](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4552), so you will have
to acquire a certificate yourself and give it to Synapse via
`tls_certificate_path` and `tls_private_key_path`.
3. Restart Synapse to ensure the new certificate is loaded.
4. Arrange for a `.well-known` file at
`https://<server_name>/.well-known/matrix/server` with contents:
```json
{"m.server": "<target server name>"}
```
where the target server name is resolved as usual (i.e. SRV lookup, falling
back to talking to port 8448).
In the above example, where synapse is listening on port 8000,
`https://example.com/.well-known/matrix/server` should have `m.server` set to one of:
1. `customer.example.net` ─ with a SRV record on
`_matrix._tcp.customer.example.com` pointing to port 8000, or:
2. `customer.example.net` ─ updating synapse to listen on the default port
8448, or:
3. `customer.example.net:8000` ─ ensuring that if there is a reverse proxy
on `customer.example.net:8000` it correctly handles HTTP requests with
Host header set to `customer.example.net:8000`.
## FAQ
### Synapse 0.99.0 has just been released, what do I need to do right now?
Upgrade as soon as you can in preparation for Synapse 1.0.0, and update your
TLS certificates as [above](#configuring-certificates-for-compatibility-with-synapse-100).
### What will happen if I do not set up a valid federation certificate immediately?
Nothing initially, but once 1.0.0 is in the wild it will not be possible to
federate with 1.0.0 servers.
### What will happen if I do nothing at all?
If the admin takes no action at all, and remains on a Synapse < 0.99.0 then the
homeserver will be unable to federate with those who have implemented
.well-known. Then, as above, once the month upgrade window has expired the
homeserver will not be able to federate with any Synapse >= 1.0.0
### When do I need a SRV record or .well-known URI?
If your homeserver listens on the default federation port (8448), and your
`server_name` points to the host that your homeserver runs on, you do not need an
SRV record or `.well-known/matrix/server` URI.
For instance, if you registered `example.com` and pointed its DNS A record at a
fresh Upcloud VPS or similar, you could install Synapse 0.99 on that host,
giving it a server_name of `example.com`, and it would automatically generate a
valid TLS certificate for you via Let's Encrypt and no SRV record or
`.well-known` URI would be needed.
This is the common case, although you can add an SRV record or
`.well-known/matrix/server` URI for completeness if you wish.
**However**, if your server does not listen on port 8448, or if your `server_name`
does not point to the host that your homeserver runs on, you will need to let
other servers know how to find it.
In this case, you should see ["If you do have an SRV record
currently"](#if-you-do-have-an-srv-record-currently) above.
### Can I still use an SRV record?
Firstly, if you didn't need an SRV record before (because your server is
listening on port 8448 of your server_name), you certainly don't need one now:
the defaults are still the same.
If you previously had an SRV record, you can keep using it provided you are
able to give Synapse a TLS certificate corresponding to your server name. For
example, suppose you had the following SRV record, which directs matrix traffic
for example.com to matrix.example.com:443:
```
_matrix._tcp.example.com. IN SRV 10 5 443 matrix.example.com
```
In this case, Synapse must be given a certificate for example.com - or be
configured to acquire one from Let's Encrypt.
If you are unable to give Synapse a certificate for your server_name, you will
also need to use a .well-known URI instead. However, see also "I have created a
.well-known URI. Do I still need an SRV record?".
### I have created a .well-known URI. Do I still need an SRV record?
As of Synapse 0.99, Synapse will first check for the existence of a `.well-known`
URI and follow any delegation it suggests. It will only then check for the
existence of an SRV record.
That means that the SRV record will often be redundant. However, you should
remember that there may still be older versions of Synapse in the federation
which do not understand `.well-known` URIs, so if you removed your SRV record you
would no longer be able to federate with them.
It is therefore best to leave the SRV record in place for now. Synapse 0.34 and
earlier will follow the SRV record (and not care about the invalid
certificate). Synapse 0.99 and later will follow the .well-known URI, with the
correct certificate chain.
### It used to work just fine, why are you breaking everything?
We have always wanted Matrix servers to be as easy to set up as possible, and
so back when we started federation in 2014 we didn't want admins to have to go
through the cumbersome process of buying a valid TLS certificate to run a
server. This was before Let's Encrypt came along and made getting a free and
valid TLS certificate straightforward. So instead, we adopted a system based on
[Perspectives](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convergence_(SSL)): an approach
where you check a set of "notary servers" (in practice, homeservers) to vouch
for the validity of a certificate rather than having it signed by a CA. As long
as enough different notaries agree on the certificate's validity, then it is
trusted.
However, in practice this has never worked properly. Most people only use the
default notary server (matrix.org), leading to inadvertent centralisation which
we want to eliminate. Meanwhile, we never implemented the full consensus
algorithm to query the servers participating in a room to determine consensus
on whether a given certificate is valid. This is fiddly to get right
(especially in face of sybil attacks), and we found ourselves questioning
whether it was worth the effort to finish the work and commit to maintaining a
secure certificate validation system as opposed to focusing on core Matrix
development.
Meanwhile, Let's Encrypt came along in 2016, and put the final nail in the
coffin of the Perspectives project (which was already pretty dead). So, the
Spec Core Team decided that a better approach would be to mandate valid TLS
certificates for federation alongside the rest of the Web. More details can be
found in
[MSC1711](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-doc/blob/master/proposals/1711-x509-for-federation.md#background-the-failure-of-the-perspectives-approach).
This results in a breaking change, which is disruptive, but absolutely critical
for the security model. However, the existence of Let's Encrypt as a trivial
way to replace the old self-signed certificates with valid CA-signed ones helps
smooth things over massively, especially as Synapse can now automate Let's
Encrypt certificate generation if needed.
### Can I manage my own certificates rather than having Synapse renew certificates itself?
Yes, you are welcome to manage your certificates yourself. Synapse will only
attempt to obtain certificates from Let's Encrypt if you configure it to do
so.The only requirement is that there is a valid TLS cert present for
federation end points.
### Do you still recommend against using a reverse proxy on the federation port?
We no longer actively recommend against using a reverse proxy. Many admins will
find it easier to direct federation traffic to a reverse proxy and manage their
own TLS certificates, and this is a supported configuration.
See [reverse_proxy.rst](reverse_proxy.rst) for information on setting up a
reverse proxy.
### Do I still need to give my TLS certificates to Synapse if I am using a reverse proxy?
Practically speaking, this is no longer necessary.
If you are using a reverse proxy for all of your TLS traffic, then you can set
`no_tls: True`. In that case, the only reason Synapse needs the certificate is
to populate a legacy 'tls_fingerprints' field in the federation API. This is
ignored by Synapse 0.99.0 and later, and the only time pre-0.99 Synapses will
check it is when attempting to fetch the server keys - and generally this is
delegated via `matrix.org`, which is on 0.99.0.
However, there is a bug in Synapse 0.99.0
[4554](<https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/4554>) which prevents
Synapse from starting if you do not give it a TLS certificate. To work around
this, you can give it any TLS certificate at all. This will be fixed soon.
### Do I need the same certificate for the client and federation port?
No. There is nothing stopping you from using different certificates,
particularly if you are using a reverse proxy. However, Synapse will use the
same certificate on any ports where TLS is configured.
### How do I tell Synapse to reload my keys/certificates after I replace them?
Synapse will reload the keys and certificates when it receives a SIGHUP - for
example `kill -HUP $(cat homeserver.pid)`. Alternatively, simply restart
Synapse, though this will result in downtime while it restarts.

View File

@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
# Delete a local group
This API lets a server admin delete a local group. Doing so will kick all
users out of the group so that their clients will correctly handle the group
being deleted.
The API is:
```
POST /_matrix/client/r0/admin/delete_group/<group_id>
```
including an `access_token` of a server admin.

View File

@@ -1,22 +0,0 @@
Version API
===========
This API returns the running Synapse version and the Python version
on which Synapse is being run. This is useful when a Synapse instance
is behind a proxy that does not forward the 'Server' header (which also
contains Synapse version information).
The api is::
GET /_matrix/client/r0/admin/server_version
including an ``access_token`` of a server admin.
It returns a JSON body like the following:
.. code:: json
{
"server_version": "0.99.2rc1 (b=develop, abcdef123)",
"python_version": "3.6.8"
}

View File

@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
Setting up Federation
=====================
Federation is the process by which users on different servers can participate
in the same room. For this to work, those other servers must be able to contact
yours to send messages.
The ``server_name`` configured in the Synapse configuration file (often
``homeserver.yaml``) defines how resources (users, rooms, etc.) will be
identified (eg: ``@user:example.com``, ``#room:example.com``). By
default, it is also the domain that other servers will use to
try to reach your server (via port 8448). This is easy to set
up and will work provided you set the ``server_name`` to match your
machine's public DNS hostname, and provide Synapse with a TLS certificate
which is valid for your ``server_name``.
Once you have completed the steps necessary to federate, you should be able to
join a room via federation. (A good place to start is ``#synapse:matrix.org`` - a
room for Synapse admins.)
## Delegation
For a more flexible configuration, you can have ``server_name``
resources (eg: ``@user:example.com``) served by a different host and
port (eg: ``synapse.example.com:443``). There are two ways to do this:
- adding a ``/.well-known/matrix/server`` URL served on ``https://example.com``.
- adding a DNS ``SRV`` record in the DNS zone of domain
``example.com``.
Without configuring delegation, the matrix federation will
expect to find your server via ``example.com:8448``. The following methods
allow you retain a `server_name` of `example.com` so that your user IDs, room
aliases, etc continue to look like `*:example.com`, whilst having your
federation traffic routed to a different server.
### .well-known delegation
To use this method, you need to be able to alter the
``server_name`` 's https server to serve the ``/.well-known/matrix/server``
URL. Having an active server (with a valid TLS certificate) serving your
``server_name`` domain is out of the scope of this documentation.
The URL ``https://<server_name>/.well-known/matrix/server`` should
return a JSON structure containing the key ``m.server`` like so:
{
"m.server": "<synapse.server.name>[:<yourport>]"
}
In our example, this would mean that URL ``https://example.com/.well-known/matrix/server``
should return:
{
"m.server": "synapse.example.com:443"
}
Note, specifying a port is optional. If a port is not specified an SRV lookup
is performed, as described below. If the target of the
delegation does not have an SRV record, then the port defaults to 8448.
Most installations will not need to configure .well-known. However, it can be
useful in cases where the admin is hosting on behalf of someone else and
therefore cannot gain access to the necessary certificate. With .well-known,
federation servers will check for a valid TLS certificate for the delegated
hostname (in our example: ``synapse.example.com``).
.well-known support first appeared in Synapse v0.99.0. To federate with older
servers you may need to additionally configure SRV delegation. Alternatively,
encourage the server admin in question to upgrade :).
### DNS SRV delegation
To use this delegation method, you need to have write access to your
``server_name`` 's domain zone DNS records (in our example it would be
``example.com`` DNS zone).
This method requires the target server to provide a
valid TLS certificate for the original ``server_name``.
You need to add a SRV record in your ``server_name`` 's DNS zone with
this format:
_matrix._tcp.<yourdomain.com> <ttl> IN SRV <priority> <weight> <port> <synapse.server.name>
In our example, we would need to add this SRV record in the
``example.com`` DNS zone:
_matrix._tcp.example.com. 3600 IN SRV 10 5 443 synapse.example.com.
Once done and set up, you can check the DNS record with ``dig -t srv
_matrix._tcp.<server_name>``. In our example, we would expect this:
$ dig -t srv _matrix._tcp.example.com
_matrix._tcp.example.com. 3600 IN SRV 10 0 443 synapse.example.com.
Note that the target of a SRV record cannot be an alias (CNAME record): it has to point
directly to the server hosting the synapse instance.
## Troubleshooting
You can use the [federation tester](
<https://matrix.org/federationtester>) to check if your homeserver is
configured correctly. Alternatively try the [JSON API used by the federation tester](https://matrix.org/federationtester/api/report?server_name=DOMAIN).
Note that you'll have to modify this URL to replace ``DOMAIN`` with your
``server_name``. Hitting the API directly provides extra detail.
The typical failure mode for federation is that when the server tries to join
a room, it is rejected with "401: Unauthorized". Generally this means that other
servers in the room could not access yours. (Joining a room over federation is
a complicated dance which requires connections in both directions).
Another common problem is that people on other servers can't join rooms that
you invite them to. This can be caused by an incorrectly-configured reverse
proxy: see [reverse_proxy.rst](<reverse_proxy.rst>) for instructions on how to correctly
configure a reverse proxy.
## Running a Demo Federation of Synapses
If you want to get up and running quickly with a trio of homeservers in a
private federation, there is a script in the ``demo`` directory. This is mainly
useful just for development purposes. See [demo/README](<../demo/README>).

View File

@@ -75,20 +75,6 @@ Password auth provider classes may optionally provide the following methods.
result from the ``/login`` call (including ``access_token``, ``device_id``,
etc.)
``someprovider.check_3pid_auth``\(*medium*, *address*, *password*)
This method, if implemented, is called when a user attempts to register or
log in with a third party identifier, such as email. It is passed the
medium (ex. "email"), an address (ex. "jdoe@example.com") and the user's
password.
The method should return a Twisted ``Deferred`` object, which resolves to
a ``str`` containing the user's (canonical) User ID if authentication was
successful, and ``None`` if not.
As with ``check_auth``, the ``Deferred`` may alternatively resolve to a
``(user_id, callback)`` tuple.
``someprovider.check_password``\(*user_id*, *password*)
This method provides a simpler interface than ``get_supported_login_types``

View File

@@ -49,24 +49,6 @@ As with Debian/Ubuntu, postgres support depends on the postgres python connector
export PATH=/usr/pgsql-9.4/bin/:$PATH
pip install psycopg2
Tuning Postgres
===============
The default settings should be fine for most deployments. For larger scale
deployments tuning some of the settings is recommended, details of which can be
found at https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Tuning_Your_PostgreSQL_Server.
In particular, we've found tuning the following values helpful for performance:
- ``shared_buffers``
- ``effective_cache_size``
- ``work_mem``
- ``maintenance_work_mem``
- ``autovacuum_work_mem``
Note that the appropriate values for those fields depend on the amount of free
memory the database host has available.
Synapse config
==============
@@ -147,8 +129,8 @@ Once that has completed, change the synapse config to point at the PostgreSQL
database configuration file ``homeserver-postgres.yaml``::
./synctl stop
mv homeserver.yaml homeserver-old-sqlite.yaml
mv homeserver-postgres.yaml homeserver.yaml
mv homeserver.yaml homeserver-old-sqlite.yaml
mv homeserver-postgres.yaml homeserver.yaml
./synctl start
Synapse should now be running against PostgreSQL.

View File

@@ -1,106 +0,0 @@
Using a reverse proxy with Synapse
==================================
It is recommended to put a reverse proxy such as
`nginx <https://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_proxy_module.html>`_,
`Apache <https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_proxy_http.html>`_,
`Caddy <https://caddyserver.com/docs/proxy>`_ or
`HAProxy <https://www.haproxy.org/>`_ in front of Synapse. One advantage of
doing so is that it means that you can expose the default https port (443) to
Matrix clients without needing to run Synapse with root privileges.
**NOTE**: Your reverse proxy must not 'canonicalise' or 'normalise' the
requested URI in any way (for example, by decoding ``%xx`` escapes). Beware
that Apache *will* canonicalise URIs unless you specifify ``nocanon``.
When setting up a reverse proxy, remember that Matrix clients and other Matrix
servers do not necessarily need to connect to your server via the same server
name or port. Indeed, clients will use port 443 by default, whereas servers
default to port 8448. Where these are different, we refer to the 'client port'
and the 'federation port'. See `Setting up federation
<federate.md>`_ for more details of the algorithm used for
federation connections.
Let's assume that we expect clients to connect to our server at
``https://matrix.example.com``, and other servers to connect at
``https://example.com:8448``. Here are some example configurations:
* nginx::
server {
listen 443 ssl;
listen [::]:443 ssl;
server_name matrix.example.com;
location /_matrix {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8008;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
}
}
server {
listen 8448 ssl default_server;
listen [::]:8448 ssl default_server;
server_name example.com;
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8008;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
}
}
* Caddy::
matrix.example.com {
proxy /_matrix http://localhost:8008 {
transparent
}
}
example.com:8448 {
proxy / http://localhost:8008 {
transparent
}
}
* Apache (note the ``nocanon`` options here!)::
<VirtualHost *:443>
SSLEngine on
ServerName matrix.example.com;
ProxyPass /_matrix http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix nocanon
ProxyPassReverse /_matrix http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:8448>
SSLEngine on
ServerName example.com;
ProxyPass /_matrix http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix nocanon
ProxyPassReverse /_matrix http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix
</VirtualHost>
* HAProxy::
frontend https
bind :::443 v4v6 ssl crt /etc/ssl/haproxy/ strict-sni alpn h2,http/1.1
# Matrix client traffic
acl matrix hdr(host) -i matrix.example.com
use_backend matrix if matrix
frontend matrix-federation
bind :::8448 v4v6 ssl crt /etc/ssl/haproxy/synapse.pem alpn h2,http/1.1
default_backend matrix
backend matrix
server matrix 127.0.0.1:8008
You will also want to set ``bind_addresses: ['127.0.0.1']`` and ``x_forwarded: true``
for port 8008 in ``homeserver.yaml`` to ensure that client IP addresses are
recorded correctly.
Having done so, you can then use ``https://matrix.example.com`` (instead of
``https://matrix.example.com:8448``) as the "Custom server" when connecting to
Synapse from a client.

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -137,6 +137,7 @@ for each stream so that on reconneciton it can start streaming from the correct
place. Note: not all RDATA have valid tokens due to batching. See
``RdataCommand`` for more details.
Example
~~~~~~~
@@ -188,9 +189,7 @@ RDATA (S)
A single update in a stream
POSITION (S)
The position of the stream has been updated. Sent to the client after all
missing updates for a stream have been sent to the client and they're now
up to date.
The position of the stream has been updated
ERROR (S, C)
There was an error
@@ -222,28 +221,3 @@ SYNC (S, C)
See ``synapse/replication/tcp/commands.py`` for a detailed description and the
format of each command.
Cache Invalidation Stream
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The cache invalidation stream is used to inform workers when they need to
invalidate any of their caches in the data store. This is done by streaming all
cache invalidations done on master down to the workers, assuming that any caches
on the workers also exist on the master.
Each individual cache invalidation results in a row being sent down replication,
which includes the cache name (the name of the function) and they key to
invalidate. For example::
> RDATA caches 550953771 ["get_user_by_id", ["@bob:example.com"], 1550574873251]
However, there are times when a number of caches need to be invalidated at the
same time with the same key. To reduce traffic we batch those invalidations into
a single poke by defining a special cache name that workers understand to mean
to expand to invalidate the correct caches.
Currently the special cache names are declared in ``synapse/storage/_base.py``
and are:
1. ``cs_cache_fake`` ─ invalidates caches that depend on the current state

View File

@@ -26,8 +26,9 @@ Configuration
To make effective use of the workers, you will need to configure an HTTP
reverse-proxy such as nginx or haproxy, which will direct incoming requests to
the correct worker, or to the main synapse instance. Note that this includes
requests made to the federation port. See `<reverse_proxy.rst>`_ for
information on setting up a reverse proxy.
requests made to the federation port. The caveats regarding running a
reverse-proxy on the federation port still apply (see
https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/README.rst#reverse-proxying-the-federation-port).
To enable workers, you need to add two replication listeners to the master
synapse, e.g.::
@@ -182,7 +183,6 @@ endpoints matching the following regular expressions::
^/_matrix/federation/v1/event_auth/
^/_matrix/federation/v1/exchange_third_party_invite/
^/_matrix/federation/v1/send/
^/_matrix/key/v2/query
The above endpoints should all be routed to the federation_reader worker by the
reverse-proxy configuration.
@@ -223,16 +223,6 @@ following regular expressions::
^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/rooms/.*/context/.*$
^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/rooms/.*/members$
^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/rooms/.*/state$
^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/login$
^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/account/3pid$
^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/keys/query$
^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/keys/changes$
Additionally, the following REST endpoints can be handled, but all requests must
be routed to the same instance::
^/_matrix/client/(r0|unstable)/register$
``synapse.app.user_dir``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

View File

@@ -1,154 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python3
# Build the Debian packages using Docker images.
#
# This script builds the Docker images and then executes them sequentially, each
# one building a Debian package for the targeted operating system. It is
# designed to be a "single command" to produce all the images.
#
# By default, builds for all known distributions, but a list of distributions
# can be passed on the commandline for debugging.
import argparse
import os
import signal
import subprocess
import sys
import threading
from concurrent.futures import ThreadPoolExecutor
DISTS = (
"debian:stretch",
"debian:buster",
"debian:sid",
"ubuntu:xenial",
"ubuntu:bionic",
"ubuntu:cosmic",
)
DESC = '''\
Builds .debs for synapse, using a Docker image for the build environment.
By default, builds for all known distributions, but a list of distributions
can be passed on the commandline for debugging.
'''
class Builder(object):
def __init__(self, redirect_stdout=False):
self.redirect_stdout = redirect_stdout
self.active_containers = set()
self._lock = threading.Lock()
self._failed = False
def run_build(self, dist):
"""Build deb for a single distribution"""
if self._failed:
print("not building %s due to earlier failure" % (dist, ))
raise Exception("failed")
try:
self._inner_build(dist)
except Exception as e:
print("build of %s failed: %s" % (dist, e), file=sys.stderr)
self._failed = True
raise
def _inner_build(self, dist):
projdir = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)))
os.chdir(projdir)
tag = dist.split(":", 1)[1]
# Make the dir where the debs will live.
#
# Note that we deliberately put this outside the source tree, otherwise
# we tend to get source packages which are full of debs. (We could hack
# around that with more magic in the build_debian.sh script, but that
# doesn't solve the problem for natively-run dpkg-buildpakage).
debsdir = os.path.join(projdir, '../debs')
os.makedirs(debsdir, exist_ok=True)
if self.redirect_stdout:
logfile = os.path.join(debsdir, "%s.buildlog" % (tag, ))
print("building %s: directing output to %s" % (dist, logfile))
stdout = open(logfile, "w")
else:
stdout = None
# first build a docker image for the build environment
subprocess.check_call([
"docker", "build",
"--tag", "dh-venv-builder:" + tag,
"--build-arg", "distro=" + dist,
"-f", "docker/Dockerfile-dhvirtualenv",
"docker",
], stdout=stdout, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
container_name = "synapse_build_" + tag
with self._lock:
self.active_containers.add(container_name)
# then run the build itself
subprocess.check_call([
"docker", "run",
"--rm",
"--name", container_name,
"--volume=" + projdir + ":/synapse/source:ro",
"--volume=" + debsdir + ":/debs",
"-e", "TARGET_USERID=%i" % (os.getuid(), ),
"-e", "TARGET_GROUPID=%i" % (os.getgid(), ),
"dh-venv-builder:" + tag,
], stdout=stdout, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
with self._lock:
self.active_containers.remove(container_name)
if stdout is not None:
stdout.close()
print("Completed build of %s" % (dist, ))
def kill_containers(self):
with self._lock:
active = list(self.active_containers)
for c in active:
print("killing container %s" % (c,))
subprocess.run([
"docker", "kill", c,
], stdout=subprocess.DEVNULL)
with self._lock:
self.active_containers.remove(c)
def run_builds(dists, jobs=1):
builder = Builder(redirect_stdout=(jobs > 1))
def sig(signum, _frame):
print("Caught SIGINT")
builder.kill_containers()
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, sig)
with ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=jobs) as e:
res = e.map(builder.run_build, dists)
# make sure we consume the iterable so that exceptions are raised.
for r in res:
pass
if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description=DESC,
)
parser.add_argument(
'-j', '--jobs', type=int, default=1,
help='specify the number of builds to run in parallel',
)
parser.add_argument(
'dist', nargs='*', default=DISTS,
help='a list of distributions to build for. Default: %(default)s',
)
args = parser.parse_args()
run_builds(dists=args.dist, jobs=args.jobs)

View File

@@ -1,39 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
#
# A script which checks that an appropriate news file has been added on this
# branch.
set -e
# make sure that origin/develop is up to date
git remote set-branches --add origin develop
git fetch origin develop
# if there are changes in the debian directory, check that the debian changelog
# has been updated
if ! git diff --quiet FETCH_HEAD... -- debian; then
if git diff --quiet FETCH_HEAD... -- debian/changelog; then
echo "Updates to debian directory, but no update to the changelog." >&2
exit 1
fi
fi
# if there are changes *outside* the debian directory, check that the
# newsfragments have been updated.
if git diff --name-only FETCH_HEAD... | grep -qv '^debian/'; then
tox -e check-newsfragment
fi
echo
echo "--------------------------"
echo
# check that any new newsfiles on this branch end with a full stop.
for f in `git diff --name-only FETCH_HEAD... -- changelog.d`; do
lastchar=`tr -d '\n' < $f | tail -c 1`
if [ $lastchar != '.' -a $lastchar != '!' ]; then
echo -e "\e[31mERROR: newsfragment $f does not end with a '.' or '!'\e[39m" >&2
exit 1
fi
done

View File

@@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ def rows_v2(server, json):
def main():
config = yaml.safe_load(open(sys.argv[1]))
config = yaml.load(open(sys.argv[1]))
valid_until = int(time.time() / (3600 * 24)) * 1000 * 3600 * 24
server_name = config["server_name"]

View File

@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
#
# Update/check the docs/sample_config.yaml
set -e
cd `dirname $0`/..
SAMPLE_CONFIG="docs/sample_config.yaml"
if [ "$1" == "--check" ]; then
diff -u "$SAMPLE_CONFIG" <(./scripts/generate_config --header-file docs/.sample_config_header.yaml) >/dev/null || {
echo -e "\e[1m\e[31m$SAMPLE_CONFIG is not up-to-date. Regenerate it with \`scripts-dev/generate_sample_config\`.\e[0m" >&2
exit 1
}
else
./scripts/generate_config --header-file docs/.sample_config_header.yaml -o "$SAMPLE_CONFIG"
fi

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
#!/usr/bin/env python
import argparse
import shutil
import sys
from synapse.config.homeserver import HomeServerConfig
@@ -51,13 +50,6 @@ if __name__ == "__main__":
help="File to write the configuration to. Default: stdout",
)
parser.add_argument(
"--header-file",
type=argparse.FileType('r'),
help="File from which to read a header, which will be printed before the "
"generated config.",
)
args = parser.parse_args()
report_stats = args.report_stats
@@ -72,7 +64,4 @@ if __name__ == "__main__":
report_stats=report_stats,
)
if args.header_file:
shutil.copyfileobj(args.header_file, args.output_file)
args.output_file.write(conf)

View File

@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ BOOLEAN_COLUMNS = {
"group_summary_users": ["is_public"],
"group_roles": ["is_public"],
"local_group_membership": ["is_publicised", "is_admin"],
"e2e_room_keys": ["is_verified"],
}
@@ -811,7 +810,7 @@ class CursesProgress(Progress):
middle_space = 1
items = self.tables.items()
items = sorted(items, key=lambda i: (i[1]["perc"], i[0]))
items.sort(key=lambda i: (i[1]["perc"], i[0]))
for i, (table, data) in enumerate(items):
if i + 2 >= rows:

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Copyright 2014-2016 OpenMarket Ltd
# Copyright 2018-9 New Vector Ltd
# Copyright 2018 New Vector Ltd
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
@@ -27,4 +27,4 @@ try:
except ImportError:
pass
__version__ = "0.99.3"
__version__ = "0.34.1.1"

View File

@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ def request_registration(
# Get the nonce
r = requests.get(url, verify=False)
if r.status_code != 200:
if r.status_code is not 200:
_print("ERROR! Received %d %s" % (r.status_code, r.reason))
if 400 <= r.status_code < 500:
try:
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ def request_registration(
_print("Sending registration request...")
r = requests.post(url, json=data, verify=False)
if r.status_code != 200:
if r.status_code is not 200:
_print("ERROR! Received %d %s" % (r.status_code, r.reason))
if 400 <= r.status_code < 500:
try:

View File

@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ class Auth(object):
register_cache("cache", "token_cache", self.token_cache)
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def check_from_context(self, room_version, event, context, do_sig_check=True):
def check_from_context(self, event, context, do_sig_check=True):
prev_state_ids = yield context.get_prev_state_ids(self.store)
auth_events_ids = yield self.compute_auth_events(
event, prev_state_ids, for_verification=True,
@@ -74,16 +74,12 @@ class Auth(object):
auth_events = {
(e.type, e.state_key): e for e in itervalues(auth_events)
}
self.check(
room_version, event,
auth_events=auth_events, do_sig_check=do_sig_check,
)
self.check(event, auth_events=auth_events, do_sig_check=do_sig_check)
def check(self, room_version, event, auth_events, do_sig_check=True):
def check(self, event, auth_events, do_sig_check=True):
""" Checks if this event is correctly authed.
Args:
room_version (str): version of the room
event: the event being checked.
auth_events (dict: event-key -> event): the existing room state.
@@ -92,9 +88,7 @@ class Auth(object):
True if the auth checks pass.
"""
with Measure(self.clock, "auth.check"):
event_auth.check(
room_version, event, auth_events, do_sig_check=do_sig_check
)
event_auth.check(event, auth_events, do_sig_check=do_sig_check)
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def check_joined_room(self, room_id, user_id, current_state=None):
@@ -550,6 +544,17 @@ class Auth(object):
"""
return self.store.is_server_admin(user)
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def add_auth_events(self, builder, context):
prev_state_ids = yield context.get_prev_state_ids(self.store)
auth_ids = yield self.compute_auth_events(builder, prev_state_ids)
auth_events_entries = yield self.store.add_event_hashes(
auth_ids
)
builder.auth_events = auth_events_entries
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def compute_auth_events(self, event, current_state_ids, for_verification=False):
if event.type == EventTypes.Create:
@@ -566,7 +571,7 @@ class Auth(object):
key = (EventTypes.JoinRules, "", )
join_rule_event_id = current_state_ids.get(key)
key = (EventTypes.Member, event.sender, )
key = (EventTypes.Member, event.user_id, )
member_event_id = current_state_ids.get(key)
key = (EventTypes.Create, "", )
@@ -616,20 +621,20 @@ class Auth(object):
defer.returnValue(auth_ids)
def check_redaction(self, room_version, event, auth_events):
def check_redaction(self, event, auth_events):
"""Check whether the event sender is allowed to redact the target event.
Returns:
True if the the sender is allowed to redact the target event if the
target event was created by them.
target event was created by them.
False if the sender is allowed to redact the target event with no
further checks.
further checks.
Raises:
AuthError if the event sender is definitely not allowed to redact
the target event.
the target event.
"""
return event_auth.check_redaction(room_version, event, auth_events)
return event_auth.check_redaction(event, auth_events)
@defer.inlineCallbacks
def check_can_change_room_list(self, room_id, user):
@@ -743,9 +748,9 @@ class Auth(object):
Returns:
Deferred[tuple[str, str|None]]: Resolves to the current membership of
the user in the room and the membership event ID of the user. If
the user is not in the room and never has been, then
`(Membership.JOIN, None)` is returned.
the user in the room and the membership event ID of the user. If
the user is not in the room and never has been, then
`(Membership.JOIN, None)` is returned.
"""
try:
@@ -777,22 +782,20 @@ class Auth(object):
Args:
user_id(str|None): If present, checks for presence against existing
MAU cohort
MAU cohort
threepid(dict|None): If present, checks for presence against configured
reserved threepid. Used in cases where the user is trying register
with a MAU blocked server, normally they would be rejected but their
threepid is on the reserved list. user_id and
threepid should never be set at the same time.
reserved threepid. Used in cases where the user is trying register
with a MAU blocked server, normally they would be rejected but their
threepid is on the reserved list. user_id and
threepid should never be set at the same time.
"""
# Never fail an auth check for the server notices users or support user
# This can be a problem where event creation is prohibited due to blocking
if user_id is not None:
if user_id == self.hs.config.server_notices_mxid:
return
if (yield self.store.is_support_user(user_id)):
return
is_support = yield self.store.is_support_user(user_id)
if user_id == self.hs.config.server_notices_mxid or is_support:
return
if self.hs.config.hs_disabled:
raise ResourceLimitError(
@@ -816,9 +819,7 @@ class Auth(object):
elif threepid:
# If the user does not exist yet, but is signing up with a
# reserved threepid then pass auth check
if is_threepid_reserved(
self.hs.config.mau_limits_reserved_threepids, threepid
):
if is_threepid_reserved(self.hs.config, threepid):
return
# Else if there is no room in the MAU bucket, bail
current_mau = yield self.store.get_monthly_active_count()

View File

@@ -68,13 +68,10 @@ class EventTypes(object):
Aliases = "m.room.aliases"
Redaction = "m.room.redaction"
ThirdPartyInvite = "m.room.third_party_invite"
Encryption = "m.room.encryption"
RelatedGroups = "m.room.related_groups"
RoomHistoryVisibility = "m.room.history_visibility"
CanonicalAlias = "m.room.canonical_alias"
RoomAvatar = "m.room.avatar"
RoomEncryption = "m.room.encryption"
GuestAccess = "m.room.guest_access"
# These are used for validation
@@ -103,6 +100,25 @@ class ThirdPartyEntityKind(object):
LOCATION = "location"
class RoomVersions(object):
V1 = "1"
V2 = "2"
VDH_TEST = "vdh-test-version"
STATE_V2_TEST = "state-v2-test"
# the version we will give rooms which are created on this server
DEFAULT_ROOM_VERSION = RoomVersions.V1
# vdh-test-version is a placeholder to get room versioning support working and tested
# until we have a working v2.
KNOWN_ROOM_VERSIONS = {
RoomVersions.V1,
RoomVersions.V2,
RoomVersions.VDH_TEST,
RoomVersions.STATE_V2_TEST,
}
ServerNoticeMsgType = "m.server_notice"
ServerNoticeLimitReached = "m.server_notice.usage_limit_reached"
@@ -112,4 +128,4 @@ class UserTypes(object):
'admin' and 'guest' users should also be UserTypes. Normal users are type None
"""
SUPPORT = "support"
ALL_USER_TYPES = (SUPPORT,)
ALL_USER_TYPES = (SUPPORT)

View File

@@ -444,20 +444,6 @@ class Filter(object):
def include_redundant_members(self):
return self.filter_json.get("include_redundant_members", False)
def with_room_ids(self, room_ids):
"""Returns a new filter with the given room IDs appended.
Args:
room_ids (iterable[unicode]): The room_ids to add
Returns:
filter: A new filter including the given rooms and the old
filter's rooms.
"""
newFilter = Filter(self.filter_json)
newFilter.rooms += room_ids
return newFilter
def _matches_wildcard(actual_value, filter_value):
if filter_value.endswith("*"):

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