#!/bin/sh # Note: template originally generated from synapse's 1.26.0 sample config set -e generate_bind_addresses () { if [ -n "$BIND_ADDRESSES" ]; then echo "bind_addresses:" for addr in $BIND_ADDRESSES; do echo " - '$addr'" done else echo "bind_addresses: []" fi } cat << EOF ############################################################### # THIS FILE HAS BEEN GENERATED BY CDIST. DO NOT EDIT BY HAND. # ############################################################### # Configuration file for Synapse. # # This is a YAML file: see [1] for a quick introduction. Note in particular # that *indentation is important*: all the elements of a list or dictionary # should have the same indentation. # # [1] https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/reference_appendices/YAMLSyntax.html ## Server ## # The public-facing domain of the server # # The server_name name will appear at the end of usernames and room addresses # created on this server. For example if the server_name was example.com, # usernames on this server would be in the format @user:example.com # # In most cases you should avoid using a matrix specific subdomain such as # matrix.example.com or synapse.example.com as the server_name for the same # reasons you wouldn't use user@email.example.com as your email address. # See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/delegate.md # for information on how to host Synapse on a subdomain while preserving # a clean server_name. # # The server_name cannot be changed later so it is important to # configure this correctly before you start Synapse. It should be all # lowercase and may contain an explicit port. # Examples: matrix.org, localhost:8080 # server_name: "${SERVER_NAME:?}" # When running as a daemon, the file to store the pid in # pid_file: "${PIDFILE:?}" # The absolute URL to the web client which /_matrix/client will redirect # to if 'webclient' is configured under the 'listeners' configuration. # # This option can be also set to the filesystem path to the web client # which will be served at /_matrix/client/ if 'webclient' is configured # under the 'listeners' configuration, however this is a security risk: # https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse#security-note # EOF if [ -n "$WEB_CLIENT_URL" ]; then echo "web_client_location: \"$WEB_CLIENT_URL\"" fi cat << EOF # The public-facing base URL that clients use to access this Homeserver (not # including _matrix/...). This is the same URL a user might enter into the # 'Custom Homeserver URL' field on their client. If you use Synapse with a # reverse proxy, this should be the URL to reach Synapse via the proxy. # Otherwise, it should be the URL to reach Synapse's client HTTP listener (see # 'listeners' below). # # If this is left unset, it defaults to 'https:///'. (Note that # that will not work unless you configure Synapse or a reverse-proxy to listen # on port 443.) # public_baseurl: "${BASE_URL:?}" # 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 # Set to false to disable presence tracking on this homeserver. # use_presence: ${USE_PRESENCE:?} # Whether to require authentication to retrieve profile data (avatars, # display names) of other users through the client API. Defaults to # 'false'. Note that profile data is also available via the federation # API, so this setting is of limited value if federation is enabled on # the server. # #require_auth_for_profile_requests: true # Uncomment to require a user to share a room with another user in order # to retrieve their profile information. Only checked on Client-Server # requests. Profile requests from other servers should be checked by the # requesting server. Defaults to 'false'. # #limit_profile_requests_to_users_who_share_rooms: true # If set to 'true', removes the need for authentication to access the server's # public rooms directory through the client API, meaning that anyone can # query the room directory. Defaults to 'false'. # allow_public_rooms_without_auth: ${ALLOW_PUBLIC_ROOMS_WITHOUT_AUTH} # If set to 'true', allows any other homeserver to fetch the server's public # rooms directory via federation. Defaults to 'false'. # allow_public_rooms_over_federation: ${ALLOW_PUBLIC_ROOMS_OVER_FEDERATION:?} # The default room version for newly created rooms. # # Known room versions are listed here: # https://matrix.org/docs/spec/#complete-list-of-room-versions # # For example, for room version 1, default_room_version should be set # to "1". # #default_room_version: "6" # 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 100. -1 means no upper limit. # # Uncomment the following to increase the limit to 5000. # #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 # Room searching # # If disabled, new messages will not be indexed for searching and users # will receive errors when searching for messages. Defaults to enabled. # #enable_search: false # Prevent outgoing requests from being sent to the following blacklisted IP address # CIDR ranges. If this option is not specified then it defaults to private IP # address ranges (see the example below). # # The blacklist applies to the outbound requests for federation, identity servers, # push servers, and for checking key validity for third-party invite events. # # (0.0.0.0 and :: are always blacklisted, whether or not they are explicitly # listed here, since they correspond to unroutable addresses.) # # This option replaces federation_ip_range_blacklist in Synapse v1.25.0. # #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' # - '192.0.0.0/24' # - '169.254.0.0/16' # - '198.18.0.0/15' # - '192.0.2.0/24' # - '198.51.100.0/24' # - '203.0.113.0/24' # - '224.0.0.0/4' # - '::1/128' # - 'fe80::/10' # - 'fc00::/7' # List of IP address CIDR ranges that should be allowed for federation, # identity servers, push servers, and for checking key validity for # third-party invite events. This is useful for specifying exceptions to # wide-ranging blacklisted target IP ranges - e.g. for communication with # a push server only visible in your network. # # This whitelist overrides ip_range_blacklist and defaults to an empty # list. # #ip_range_whitelist: # - '192.168.1.1' # List of ports that Synapse should listen on, their purpose and their # configuration. # # Options for each listener include: # # port: the TCP port to bind to # # bind_addresses: a list of local addresses to listen on. The default is # 'all local interfaces'. # # type: the type of listener. Normally 'http', but other valid options are: # 'manhole' (see docs/manhole.md), # 'metrics' (see docs/metrics-howto.md), # 'replication' (see docs/workers.md). # # tls: set to true to enable TLS for this listener. Will use the TLS # key/cert specified in tls_private_key_path / tls_certificate_path. # # x_forwarded: Only valid for an 'http' listener. Set to true to use the # X-Forwarded-For header as the client IP. Useful when Synapse is # behind a reverse-proxy. # # resources: Only valid for an 'http' listener. A list of resources to host # on this port. Options for each resource are: # # names: a list of names of HTTP resources. See below for a list of # valid resource names. # # compress: set to true to enable HTTP compression for this resource. # # additional_resources: Only valid for an 'http' listener. A map of # additional endpoints which should be loaded via dynamic modules. # # Valid resource names are: # # client: the client-server API (/_matrix/client), and the synapse admin # API (/_synapse/admin). Also implies 'media' and 'static'. # # consent: user consent forms (/_matrix/consent). See # docs/consent_tracking.md. # # federation: the server-server API (/_matrix/federation). Also implies # 'media', 'keys', 'openid' # # keys: the key discovery API (/_matrix/keys). # # media: the media API (/_matrix/media). # # metrics: the metrics interface. See docs/metrics-howto.md. # # openid: OpenID authentication. # # replication: the HTTP replication API (/_synapse/replication). See # docs/workers.md. # # static: static resources under synapse/static (/_matrix/static). (Mostly # useful for 'fallback authentication'.) # # webclient: A web client. Requires web_client_location to be set. # listeners: # TLS-enabled listener: for when matrix traffic is sent directly to synapse. # # Disabled by default. To enable it, uncomment the following. (Note that you # will also need to give Synapse a TLS key and certificate: see the TLS section # below.) # #- port: 8448 # type: http # tls: true # resources: # - names: [client, federation] # Unsecure HTTP listener: for when matrix traffic passes through a reverse proxy # that unwraps TLS. # # If you plan to use a reverse proxy, please see # https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/reverse_proxy.md. # - port: ${MAIN_LISTENER_PORT:?} tls: false type: http x_forwarded: true $(generate_bind_addresses) resources: - names: ${MAIN_LISTENER_RESOURCES:?} compress: false EOF if [ -n "$ENABLE_REPLICATION" ]; then cat << EOF - port: 9093 $(generate_bind_addresses) type: http resources: - names: [replication] EOF fi cat << EOF # example additional_resources: # #additional_resources: # "/_matrix/my/custom/endpoint": # module: my_module.CustomRequestHandler # config: {} # Turn on the twisted ssh manhole service on localhost on the given # port. # #- port: 9000 # bind_addresses: ['::1', '127.0.0.1'] # type: manhole # Forward extremities can build up in a room due to networking delays between # homeservers. Once this happens in a large room, calculation of the state of # that room can become quite expensive. To mitigate this, once the number of # forward extremities reaches a given threshold, Synapse will send an # org.matrix.dummy_event event, which will reduce the forward extremities # in the room. # # This setting defines the threshold (i.e. number of forward extremities in the # room) at which dummy events are sent. The default value is 10. # #dummy_events_threshold: 5 ## Homeserver blocking ## # How to reach the server admin, used in ResourceLimitError # #admin_contact: 'mailto:admin@server.com' # Global blocking # #hs_disabled: false #hs_disabled_message: 'Human readable reason for why the HS is blocked' # Monthly Active User Blocking # # Used in cases where the admin or server owner wants to limit to the # number of monthly active users. # # 'limit_usage_by_mau' disables/enables monthly active user blocking. When # enabled and a limit is reached the server returns a 'ResourceLimitError' # with error type Codes.RESOURCE_LIMIT_EXCEEDED # # 'max_mau_value' is the hard limit of monthly active users above which # the server will start blocking user actions. # # 'mau_trial_days' is a means to add a grace period for active users. It # means that users must be active for this number of days before they # can be considered active and guards against the case where lots of users # sign up in a short space of time never to return after their initial # session. # # 'mau_limit_alerting' is a means of limiting client side alerting # should the mau limit be reached. This is useful for small instances # where the admin has 5 mau seats (say) for 5 specific people and no # interest increasing the mau limit further. Defaults to True, which # means that alerting is enabled # #limit_usage_by_mau: false #max_mau_value: 50 #mau_trial_days: 2 #mau_limit_alerting: false # If enabled, the metrics for the number of monthly active users will # be populated, however no one will be limited. If limit_usage_by_mau # is true, this is implied to be true. # #mau_stats_only: false # Sometimes the server admin will want to ensure certain accounts are # never blocked by mau checking. These accounts are specified here. # #mau_limit_reserved_threepids: # - medium: 'email' # address: 'reserved_user@example.com' # Used by phonehome stats to group together related servers. #server_context: context # Resource-constrained homeserver settings # # When this is enabled, the room "complexity" will be checked before a user # joins a new remote room. If it is above the complexity limit, the server will # disallow joining, or will instantly leave. # # Room complexity is an arbitrary measure based on factors such as the number of # users in the room. # limit_remote_rooms: # Uncomment to enable room complexity checking. # enabled: ${LIMIT_REMOTE_ROOM_COMPLEXITY:?} # the limit above which rooms cannot be joined. The default is 1.0. # complexity: ${REMOTE_ROOM_COMPLEXITY_THRESHOLD:?} # override the error which is returned when the room is too complex. # complexity_error: "This room is too complex - local complexity policy prevents you from joing." # allow server admins to join complex rooms. Default is false. # #admins_can_join: true # Whether to require a user to be in the room to add an alias to it. # Defaults to 'true'. # #require_membership_for_aliases: false # Whether to allow per-room membership profiles through the send of membership # events with profile information that differ from the target's global profile. # Defaults to 'true'. # #allow_per_room_profiles: false # How long to keep redacted events in unredacted form in the database. After # this period redacted events get replaced with their redacted form in the DB. # # Defaults to \`7d\`. Set to \`null\` to disable. # #redaction_retention_period: 28d # How long to track users' last seen time and IPs in the database. # # Defaults to \`28d\`. Set to \`null\` to disable clearing out of old rows. # #user_ips_max_age: 14d # Message retention policy at the server level. # # Room admins and mods can define a retention period for their rooms using the # 'm.room.retention' state event, and server admins can cap this period by setting # the 'allowed_lifetime_min' and 'allowed_lifetime_max' config options. # # If this feature is enabled, Synapse will regularly look for and purge events # which are older than the room's maximum retention period. Synapse will also # filter events received over federation so that events that should have been # purged are ignored and not stored again. # retention: # The message retention policies feature is disabled by default. Uncomment the # following line to enable it. # enabled: ${ENABLE_MESSAGE_RETENTION_POLICY:?} # Default retention policy. If set, Synapse will apply it to rooms that lack the # 'm.room.retention' state event. Currently, the value of 'min_lifetime' doesn't # matter much because Synapse doesn't take it into account yet. # default_policy: min_lifetime: ${MESSAGE_RETENTION_POLICY_MIN_LIFETIME:?} max_lifetime: ${MESSAGE_RETENTION_POLICY_MAX_LIFETIME:?} # Retention policy limits. If set, and the state of a room contains a # 'm.room.retention' event in its state which contains a 'min_lifetime' or a # 'max_lifetime' that's out of these bounds, Synapse will cap the room's policy # to these limits when running purge jobs. # #allowed_lifetime_min: 1d #allowed_lifetime_max: 1y # Server admins can define the settings of the background jobs purging the # events which lifetime has expired under the 'purge_jobs' section. # # If no configuration is provided, a single job will be set up to delete expired # events in every room daily. # # Each job's configuration defines which range of message lifetimes the job # takes care of. For example, if 'shortest_max_lifetime' is '2d' and # 'longest_max_lifetime' is '3d', the job will handle purging expired events in # rooms whose state defines a 'max_lifetime' that's both higher than 2 days, and # lower than or equal to 3 days. Both the minimum and the maximum value of a # range are optional, e.g. a job with no 'shortest_max_lifetime' and a # 'longest_max_lifetime' of '3d' will handle every room with a retention policy # which 'max_lifetime' is lower than or equal to three days. # # The rationale for this per-job configuration is that some rooms might have a # retention policy with a low 'max_lifetime', where history needs to be purged # of outdated messages on a more frequent basis than for the rest of the rooms # (e.g. every 12h), but not want that purge to be performed by a job that's # iterating over every room it knows, which could be heavy on the server. # # If any purge job is configured, it is strongly recommended to have at least # a single job with neither 'shortest_max_lifetime' nor 'longest_max_lifetime' # set, or one job without 'shortest_max_lifetime' and one job without # 'longest_max_lifetime' set. Otherwise some rooms might be ignored, even if # 'allowed_lifetime_min' and 'allowed_lifetime_max' are set, because capping a # room's policy to these values is done after the policies are retrieved from # Synapse's database (which is done using the range specified in a purge job's # configuration). # #purge_jobs: # - longest_max_lifetime: 3d # interval: 12h # - shortest_max_lifetime: 3d # interval: 1d # Inhibits the /requestToken endpoints from returning an error that might leak # information about whether an e-mail address is in use or not on this # homeserver. # Note that for some endpoints the error situation is the e-mail already being # used, and for others the error is entering the e-mail being unused. # If this option is enabled, instead of returning an error, these endpoints will # act as if no error happened and return a fake session ID ('sid') to clients. # #request_token_inhibit_3pid_errors: true # A list of domains that the domain portion of 'next_link' parameters # must match. # # This parameter is optionally provided by clients while requesting # validation of an email or phone number, and maps to a link that # users will be automatically redirected to after validation # succeeds. Clients can make use this parameter to aid the validation # process. # # The whitelist is applied whether the homeserver or an # identity server is handling validation. # # The default value is no whitelist functionality; all domains are # allowed. Setting this value to an empty list will instead disallow # all domains. # #next_link_domain_whitelist: ["matrix.org"] ## TLS ## # PEM-encoded X509 certificate for TLS. # This certificate, as of Synapse 1.0, will need to be a valid and verifiable # certificate, signed by a recognised Certificate Authority. # # See 'ACME support' below to enable auto-provisioning this certificate via # Let's Encrypt. # # If supplying your own, 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\`). EOF if [ -n "$TLS_CERTIFICATE_PATH" ] && [ -n "$TLS_PRIVATE_KEY_PATH" ]; then cat << EOF tls_certificate_path: "$TLS_CERTIFICATE_PATH}" # PEM-encoded private key for TLS # tls_private_key_path: "$TLS_PRIVATE_KEY_PATH" EOF fi cat << EOF # Whether to verify TLS server certificates for outbound federation requests. # # Defaults to \`true\`. To disable certificate verification, uncomment the # following line. # #federation_verify_certificates: false # The minimum TLS version that will be used for outbound federation requests. # # Defaults to \`1\`. Configurable to \`1\`, \`1.1\`, \`1.2\`, or \`1.3\`. Note # that setting this value higher than \`1.2\` will prevent federation to most # of the public Matrix network: only configure it to \`1.3\` if you have an # entirely private federation setup and you can ensure TLS 1.3 support. # #federation_client_minimum_tls_version: 1.2 # Skip federation certificate verification on the following whitelist # of domains. # # This setting should only be used in very specific cases, such as # federation over Tor hidden services and similar. For private networks # of homeservers, you likely want to use a private CA instead. # # Only effective if federation_verify_certicates is \`true\`. # #federation_certificate_verification_whitelist: # - lon.example.com # - *.domain.com # - *.onion # List of custom certificate authorities for federation traffic. # # This setting should only normally be used within a private network of # homeservers. # # Note that this list will replace those that are provided by your # operating environment. Certificates must be in PEM format. # #federation_custom_ca_list: # - myCA1.pem # - myCA2.pem # - myCA3.pem # ACME support: This will configure Synapse to request a valid TLS certificate # for your configured \`server_name\` via Let's Encrypt. # # Note that ACME v1 is now deprecated, and Synapse currently doesn't support # ACME v2. This means that this feature currently won't work with installs set # up after November 2019. For more info, and alternative solutions, see # https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/ACME.md#deprecation-of-acme-v1 # # Note that provisioning a certificate in this way requires port 80 to be # routed to Synapse so that it can complete the http-01 ACME challenge. # By default, if you enable ACME support, Synapse will attempt to listen on # port 80 for incoming http-01 challenges - however, this will likely fail # with 'Permission denied' or a similar error. # # There are a couple of potential solutions to this: # # * If you already have an Apache, Nginx, or similar listening on port 80, # you can configure Synapse to use an alternate port, and have your web # server forward the requests. For example, assuming you set 'port: 8009' # below, on Apache, you would write: # # ProxyPass /.well-known/acme-challenge http://localhost:8009/.well-known/acme-challenge # # * Alternatively, you can use something like \`authbind\` to give Synapse # permission to listen on port 80. # acme: # ACME support is disabled by default. Set this to \`true\` and uncomment # tls_certificate_path and tls_private_key_path above to enable it. # enabled: false # Endpoint to use to request certificates. If you only want to test, # use Let's Encrypt's staging url: # https://acme-staging.api.letsencrypt.org/directory # #url: https://acme-v01.api.letsencrypt.org/directory # Port number to listen on for the HTTP-01 challenge. Change this if # you are forwarding connections through Apache/Nginx/etc. # port: 80 # Local addresses to listen on for incoming connections. # Again, you may want to change this if you are forwarding connections # through Apache/Nginx/etc. # bind_addresses: ['::', '0.0.0.0'] # How many days remaining on a certificate before it is renewed. # reprovision_threshold: 30 # The domain that the certificate should be for. Normally this # should be the same as your Matrix domain (i.e., 'server_name'), but, # by putting a file at 'https:///.well-known/matrix/server', # you can delegate incoming traffic to another server. If you do that, # you should give the target of the delegation here. # # For example: if your 'server_name' is 'example.com', but # 'https://example.com/.well-known/matrix/server' delegates to # 'matrix.example.com', you should put 'matrix.example.com' here. # # If not set, defaults to your 'server_name'. # domain: matrix.example.com # file to use for the account key. This will be generated if it doesn't # exist. # # If unspecified, we will use CONFDIR/client.key. # account_key_file: /etc/synapse/acme_account.key # 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: [{"sha256": ""}] ## Federation ## # 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 EOF if [ -n "$DISABLE_FEDERATION" ]; then echo "federation_domain_whitelist: []" fi cat << EOF # Report prometheus metrics on the age of PDUs being sent to and received from # the following domains. This can be used to give an idea of "delay" on inbound # and outbound federation, though be aware that any delay can be due to problems # at either end or with the intermediate network. # # By default, no domains are monitored in this way. # #federation_metrics_domains: # - matrix.org # - example.com ## Caching ## # Caching can be configured through the following options. # # A cache 'factor' is a multiplier that can be applied to each of # Synapse's caches in order to increase or decrease the maximum # number of entries that can be stored. # The number of events to cache in memory. Not affected by # caches.global_factor. # event_cache_size: ${EVENT_CACHE_SIZE:?} caches: # Controls the global cache factor, which is the default cache factor # for all caches if a specific factor for that cache is not otherwise # set. # # This can also be set by the "SYNAPSE_CACHE_FACTOR" environment # variable. Setting by environment variable takes priority over # setting through the config file. # # Defaults to 0.5, which will half the size of all caches. # global_factor: ${GLOBAL_CACHE_FACTOR:?} # A dictionary of cache name to cache factor for that individual # cache. Overrides the global cache factor for a given cache. # # These can also be set through environment variables comprised # of "SYNAPSE_CACHE_FACTOR_" + the name of the cache in capital # letters and underscores. Setting by environment variable # takes priority over setting through the config file. # Ex. SYNAPSE_CACHE_FACTOR_GET_USERS_WHO_SHARE_ROOM_WITH_USER=2.0 # # Some caches have '*' and other characters that are not # alphanumeric or underscores. These caches can be named with or # without the special characters stripped. For example, to specify # the cache factor for \`*stateGroupCache*\` via an environment # variable would be \`SYNAPSE_CACHE_FACTOR_STATEGROUPCACHE=2.0\`. # per_cache_factors: #get_users_who_share_room_with_user: 2.0 ## Database ## # The 'database' setting defines the database that synapse uses to store all of # its data. # # 'name' gives the database engine to use: either 'sqlite3' (for SQLite) or # 'psycopg2' (for PostgreSQL). # # 'args' gives options which are passed through to the database engine, # except for options starting 'cp_', which are used to configure the Twisted # connection pool. For a reference to valid arguments, see: # * for sqlite: https://docs.python.org/3/library/sqlite3.html#sqlite3.connect # * for postgres: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/libpq-connect.html#LIBPQ-PARAMKEYWORDS # * for the connection pool: https://twistedmatrix.com/documents/current/api/twisted.enterprise.adbapi.ConnectionPool.html#__init__ # # # Example SQLite configuration: # #database: # name: sqlite3 # args: # database: /path/to/homeserver.db # # # Example Postgres configuration: # #database: # name: psycopg2 # args: # user: synapse_user # password: secretpassword # database: synapse # host: localhost # cp_min: 5 # cp_max: 10 # # For more information on using Synapse with Postgres, see \`docs/postgres.md\`. # EOF case "${DATABASE_ENGINE:?}" in sqlite3) cat << EOF database: # The database engine name name: "sqlite3" # Arguments to pass to the engine args: # Path to the database database: "${DATABASE_NAME:?}" EOF ;; psycopg2) cat << EOF database: # The database engine name name: "psycopg2" # Arguments to pass to the engine args: database: "${DATABASE_NAME:?}" host: "${DATABASE_HOST:?}" user: "${DATABASE_USER:?}" password: "$DATABASE_PASSWORD" cp_min: ${DATABASE_CP_MIN:?} cp_min: ${DATABASE_CP_MAX:?} EOF ;; *) echo "Invalid database engine $DATABASE_ENGINE." >&2 exit 1 ;; esac cat << EOF ## Logging ## # A yaml python logging config file as described by # https://docs.python.org/3.7/library/logging.config.html#configuration-dictionary-schema # log_config: "${LOG_CONFIG_PATH:?}" ## Ratelimiting ## # Ratelimiting settings for client actions (registration, login, messaging). # # Each ratelimiting configuration is made of two parameters: # - per_second: number of requests a client can send per second. # - burst_count: number of requests a client can send before being throttled. # # Synapse currently uses the following configurations: # - one for messages that ratelimits sending based on the account the client # is using # - one for registration that ratelimits registration requests based on the # client's IP address. # - one for login that ratelimits login requests based on the client's IP # address. # - one for login that ratelimits login requests based on the account the # client is attempting to log into. # - one for login that ratelimits login requests based on the account the # client is attempting to log into, based on the amount of failed login # attempts for this account. # - one for ratelimiting redactions by room admins. If this is not explicitly # set then it uses the same ratelimiting as per rc_message. This is useful # to allow room admins to deal with abuse quickly. # - two for ratelimiting number of rooms a user can join, "local" for when # users are joining rooms the server is already in (this is cheap) vs # "remote" for when users are trying to join rooms not on the server (which # can be more expensive) # # The defaults are as shown below. # #rc_message: # per_second: 0.2 # burst_count: 10 rc_message: per_second: ${RC_MESSAGE_PER_SECOND:?} burst_count: ${RC_MESSAGE_BURST:?} #rc_registration: # per_second: 0.17 # burst_count: 3 # #rc_login: # address: # per_second: 0.17 # burst_count: 3 # account: # per_second: 0.17 # burst_count: 3 # failed_attempts: # per_second: 0.17 # burst_count: 3 rc_login: address: per_second: ${RC_LOGIN_PER_SECOND:?} burst_count: ${RC_LOGIN_BURST:?} account: per_second: ${RC_LOGIN_PER_SECOND:?} burst_count: ${RC_LOGIN_BURST:?} failed_attempts: per_second: ${RC_LOGIN_PER_SECOND:?} burst_count: ${RC_LOGIN_BURST:?} # #rc_admin_redaction: # per_second: 1 # burst_count: 50 # #rc_joins: # local: # per_second: 0.1 # burst_count: 3 # remote: # per_second: 0.01 # burst_count: 3 # Ratelimiting settings for incoming federation # # The rc_federation configuration is made up of the following settings: # - window_size: window size in milliseconds # - sleep_limit: number of federation requests from a single server in # a window before the server will delay processing the request. # - sleep_delay: duration in milliseconds to delay processing events # from remote servers by if they go over the sleep limit. # - reject_limit: maximum number of concurrent federation requests # allowed from a single server # - concurrent: number of federation requests to concurrently process # from a single server # # The defaults are as shown below. # #rc_federation: # window_size: 1000 # sleep_limit: 10 # sleep_delay: 500 # reject_limit: 50 # concurrent: 3 # Target outgoing federation transaction frequency for sending read-receipts, # per-room. # # If we end up trying to send out more read-receipts, they will get buffered up # into fewer transactions. # #federation_rr_transactions_per_room_per_second: 50 ## Media Store ## # Enable the media store service in the Synapse master. Uncomment the # following if you are using a separate media store worker. # enable_media_repo: ${ENABLE_MEDIA_REPO:?} # Directory where uploaded images and attachments are stored. # media_store_path: "${DATA_DIR:?}/media_store" # Media storage providers allow media to be stored in different # locations. # #media_storage_providers: # - module: file_system # # Whether to store newly uploaded local files # store_local: false # # Whether to store newly downloaded remote files # store_remote: false # # Whether to wait for successful storage for local uploads # store_synchronous: false # config: # directory: /mnt/some/other/directory # The largest allowed upload size in bytes # max_upload_size: "${MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE:?}" # 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 thumbnails 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? # # 'false' by default: uncomment the following to enable it (and specify a # url_preview_ip_range_blacklist blacklist). # url_preview_enabled: ${ENABLE_URL_PREVIEW:?} # 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. # # (0.0.0.0 and :: are always blacklisted, whether or not they are explicitly # listed here, since they correspond to unroutable addresses.) # # This must be specified if url_preview_enabled is set. It is recommended that # you uncomment the following list as a starting point. # #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' # - '192.0.0.0/24' # - '169.254.0.0/16' # - '198.18.0.0/15' # - '192.0.2.0/24' # - '198.51.100.0/24' # - '203.0.113.0/24' # - '224.0.0.0/4' # - '::1/128' # - 'fe80::/10' # - 'fc00::/7' # 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 # A list of values for the Accept-Language HTTP header used when # downloading webpages during URL preview generation. This allows # Synapse to specify the preferred languages that URL previews should # be in when communicating with remote servers. # # Each value is a IETF language tag; a 2-3 letter identifier for a # language, optionally followed by subtags separated by '-', specifying # a country or region variant. # # Multiple values can be provided, and a weight can be added to each by # using quality value syntax (;q=). '*' translates to any language. # # Defaults to "en". # # Example: # # url_preview_accept_language: # - en-UK # - en-US;q=0.9 # - fr;q=0.8 # - *;q=0.7 # url_preview_accept_language: # - en ## Captcha ## # See docs/CAPTCHA_SETUP.md for full details of configuring this. # This homeserver's ReCAPTCHA public key. Must be specified if # enable_registration_captcha is enabled. # #recaptcha_public_key: "YOUR_PUBLIC_KEY" # This homeserver's ReCAPTCHA private key. Must be specified if # enable_registration_captcha is enabled. # #recaptcha_private_key: "YOUR_PRIVATE_KEY" # Uncomment to enable ReCaptcha checks when registering, preventing signup # unless a captcha is answered. Requires a valid ReCaptcha # public/private key. Defaults to 'false'. # #enable_registration_captcha: true # The API endpoint to use for verifying m.login.recaptcha responses. # Defaults to "https://www.recaptcha.net/recaptcha/api/siteverify". # #recaptcha_siteverify_api: "https://my.recaptcha.site" ## TURN ## # The public URIs of the TURN server to give to clients EOF if [ -n "$TURN_URIS" ]; then echo "turn_uris:" for uri in $TURN_URIS; do echo " - '$uri'" done else echo "# turn_uris: []" fi cat << EOF # The shared secret used to compute passwords for the TURN server # EOF if [ -n "$TURN_SHARED_SECRET" ]; then echo "turn_shared_secret: \"$TURN_SHARED_SECRET\"" fi cat << EOF # The Username and password if the TURN server needs them and # does not use a token # EOF if [ -n "$TURN_USERNAME" ] || [ "$TURN_PASSWORD" ]; then cat <<- EOF turn_username: "$TURN_USERNAME" turn_password: "$TURN_PASSWORD" EOF fi cat << EOF # How long generated TURN credentials last # turn_user_lifetime: ${TURN_USER_LIFETIME:?} # 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: true ## Registration ## # # Registration can be rate-limited using the parameters in the "Ratelimiting" # section of this file. # Enable registration for new users. # enable_registration: ${ENABLE_REGISTRATIONS:?} # Optional account validity configuration. This allows for accounts to be denied # any request after a given period. # # Once this feature is enabled, Synapse will look for registered users without an # expiration date at startup and will add one to every account it found using the # current settings at that time. # This means that, if a validity period is set, and Synapse is restarted (it will # then derive an expiration date from the current validity period), and some time # after that the validity period changes and Synapse is restarted, the users' # expiration dates won't be updated unless their account is manually renewed. This # date will be randomly selected within a range [now + period - d ; now + period], # where d is equal to 10% of the validity period. # account_validity: # The account validity feature is disabled by default. Uncomment the # following line to enable it. # #enabled: true # The period after which an account is valid after its registration. When # renewing the account, its validity period will be extended by this amount # of time. This parameter is required when using the account validity # feature. # #period: 6w # The amount of time before an account's expiry date at which Synapse will # send an email to the account's email address with a renewal link. By # default, no such emails are sent. # # If you enable this setting, you will also need to fill out the 'email' # configuration section. You should also check that 'public_baseurl' is set # correctly. # #renew_at: 1w # The subject of the email sent out with the renewal link. '%(app)s' can be # used as a placeholder for the 'app_name' parameter from the 'email' # section. # # Note that the placeholder must be written '%(app)s', including the # trailing 's'. # # If this is not set, a default value is used. # #renew_email_subject: "Renew your %(app)s account" # Directory in which Synapse will try to find templates for the HTML files to # serve to the user when trying to renew an account. If not set, default # templates from within the Synapse package will be used. # #template_dir: "res/templates" # File within 'template_dir' giving the HTML to be displayed to the user after # they successfully renewed their account. If not set, default text is used. # #account_renewed_html_path: "account_renewed.html" # File within 'template_dir' giving the HTML to be displayed when the user # tries to renew an account with an invalid renewal token. If not set, # default text is used. # #invalid_token_html_path: "invalid_token.html" # Time that a user's session remains valid for, after they log in. # # Note that this is not currently compatible with guest logins. # # Note also that this is calculated at login time: changes are not applied # retrospectively to users who have already logged in. # # By default, this is infinite. # #session_lifetime: 24h # The user must provide all of the below types of 3PID when registering. # #registrations_require_3pid: # - email # - msisdn EOF if [ -n "$REGISTRATION_REQUIRES_EMAIL" ]; then echo "registrations_require_3pid: [email]" fi cat << EOF # Explicitly disable asking for MSISDNs from the registration # flow (overrides registrations_require_3pid if MSISDNs are set as required) # #disable_msisdn_registration: true # 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' EOF if [ -n "$RESGISTRATION_ALLOWS_EMAIL_PATTERN" ]; then echo "allowed_local_3pids:" for pattern in $RESGISTRATION_ALLOWS_EMAIL_PATTERN; do cat << EOF - medium: email pattern: $pattern EOF done fi cat << EOF # Enable 3PIDs lookup requests to identity servers from this server. # enable_3pid_lookup: ${ENABLE_3PID_LOOKUPS:?} # If set, allows registration of standard or admin accounts by anyone who # has the shared secret, even if registration is otherwise disabled. EOF if [ -n "$REGISTRATION_SHARED_SECRET" ]; then echo "registration_shared_secret: '$REGISTRATION_SHARED_SECRET'" else echo "# registration_shared_secret: 'secret'" fi cat << EOF # 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: ${ALLOW_GUEST_ACCESS:?} # The identity server which we suggest that clients should use when users log # in on this server. # # (By default, no suggestion is made, so it is left up to the client.) # #default_identity_server: https://matrix.org EOF if [ -n "$DEFAULT_IDENTITY_SERVER" ]; then echo "default_identity_server: \"$DEFAULT_IDENTITY_SERVER\"" fi cat << EOF # Handle threepid (email/phone etc) registration and password resets through a set of # *trusted* identity servers. Note that this allows the configured identity server to # reset passwords for accounts! # # Be aware that if \`email\` is not set, and SMTP options have not been # configured in the email config block, registration and user password resets via # email will be globally disabled. # # Additionally, if \`msisdn\` is not set, registration and password resets via msisdn # will be disabled regardless, and users will not be able to associate an msisdn # identifier to their account. This is due to Synapse currently not supporting # any method of sending SMS messages on its own. # # To enable using an identity server for operations regarding a particular third-party # identifier type, set the value to the URL of that identity server as shown in the # examples below. # # Servers handling the these requests must answer the \`/requestToken\` endpoints defined # by the Matrix Identity Service API specification: # https://matrix.org/docs/spec/identity_service/latest # account_threepid_delegates: #email: https://example.com # Delegate email sending to example.com #msisdn: http://localhost:8090 # Delegate SMS sending to this local process # Whether users are allowed to change their displayname after it has # been initially set. Useful when provisioning users based on the # contents of a third-party directory. # # Does not apply to server administrators. Defaults to 'true' # #enable_set_displayname: false # Whether users are allowed to change their avatar after it has been # initially set. Useful when provisioning users based on the contents # of a third-party directory. # # Does not apply to server administrators. Defaults to 'true' # #enable_set_avatar_url: false # Whether users can change the 3PIDs associated with their accounts # (email address and msisdn). # # Defaults to 'true' # #enable_3pid_changes: false # Users who register on this homeserver will automatically be joined # to these rooms. # # By default, any room aliases included in this list will be created # as a publicly joinable room when the first user registers for the # homeserver. This behaviour can be customised with the settings below. # #auto_join_rooms: # - "#example:example.com" EOF if [ -n "$AUTO_JOIN_ROOMS" ]; then echo "auto_join_rooms:" for room in $AUTO_JOIN_ROOMS; do cat << EOF - "$room" EOF done fi cat << EOF # Where auto_join_rooms are specified, setting this flag ensures that the # the rooms exist by creating them when the first user on the # homeserver registers. # # By default the auto-created rooms are publicly joinable from any federated # server. Use the autocreate_auto_join_rooms_federated and # autocreate_auto_join_room_preset settings below to customise this behaviour. # # Setting to false means that if the rooms are not manually created, # users cannot be auto-joined since they do not exist. # # Defaults to true. Uncomment the following line to disable automatically # creating auto-join rooms. # #autocreate_auto_join_rooms: false # Whether the auto_join_rooms that are auto-created are available via # federation. Only has an effect if autocreate_auto_join_rooms is true. # # Note that whether a room is federated cannot be modified after # creation. # # Defaults to true: the room will be joinable from other servers. # Uncomment the following to prevent users from other homeservers from # joining these rooms. # #autocreate_auto_join_rooms_federated: false # The room preset to use when auto-creating one of auto_join_rooms. Only has an # effect if autocreate_auto_join_rooms is true. # # This can be one of "public_chat", "private_chat", or "trusted_private_chat". # If a value of "private_chat" or "trusted_private_chat" is used then # auto_join_mxid_localpart must also be configured. # # Defaults to "public_chat", meaning that the room is joinable by anyone, including # federated servers if autocreate_auto_join_rooms_federated is true (the default). # Uncomment the following to require an invitation to join these rooms. # #autocreate_auto_join_room_preset: private_chat # The local part of the user id which is used to create auto_join_rooms if # autocreate_auto_join_rooms is true. If this is not provided then the # initial user account that registers will be used to create the rooms. # # The user id is also used to invite new users to any auto-join rooms which # are set to invite-only. # # It *must* be configured if autocreate_auto_join_room_preset is set to # "private_chat" or "trusted_private_chat". # # Note that this must be specified in order for new users to be correctly # invited to any auto-join rooms which have been set to invite-only (either # at the time of creation or subsequently). # # Note that, if the room already exists, this user must be joined and # have the appropriate permissions to invite new members. # #auto_join_mxid_localpart: system # When auto_join_rooms is specified, setting this flag to false prevents # guest accounts from being automatically joined to the rooms. # # Defaults to true. # #auto_join_rooms_for_guests: false ## Metrics ### # Enable collection and rendering of performance metrics # enable_metrics: ${EXPOSE_METRICS:?} # Enable sentry integration # NOTE: While attempts are made to ensure that the logs don't contain # any sensitive information, this cannot be guaranteed. By enabling # this option the sentry server may therefore receive sensitive # information, and it in turn may then diseminate sensitive information # through insecure notification channels if so configured. # #sentry: # dsn: "..." # Flags to enable Prometheus metrics which are not suitable to be # enabled by default, either for performance reasons or limited use. # metrics_flags: # Publish synapse_federation_known_servers, a gauge of the number of # servers this homeserver knows about, including itself. May cause # performance problems on large homeservers. # #known_servers: true # Whether or not to report anonymized homeserver usage statistics. # report_stats: ${REPORT_STATS:?} # The endpoint to report the anonymized homeserver usage statistics to. # Defaults to https://matrix.org/report-usage-stats/push # #report_stats_endpoint: https://example.com/report-usage-stats/push ## API Configuration ## # A list of event types that will be included in the room_invite_state # #room_invite_state_types: # - "m.room.join_rules" # - "m.room.canonical_alias" # - "m.room.avatar" # - "m.room.encryption" # - "m.room.name" # A list of application service config files to use # #app_service_config_files: # - app_service_1.yaml # - app_service_2.yaml EOF if [ -n "$APP_SERVICE_CONFIG_FILES" ]; then echo "app_service_config_files:" for file in $APP_SERVICE_CONFIG_FILES; do echo " - $file" done fi cat << EOF # Uncomment to enable tracking of application service IP addresses. Implicitly # enables MAU tracking for application service users. # #track_appservice_user_ips: true # a secret which is used to sign access tokens. If none is specified, # the registration_shared_secret is used, if one is given; otherwise, # a secret key is derived from the signing key. # # macaroon_secret_key: "JCMj1A@Me_tSnQwS@,LeInKrEPr@..w4Q6reqqeYWLC:k4tFLn" # a secret which is used to calculate HMACs for form values, to stop # falsification of values. Must be specified for the User Consent # forms to work. # # form_secret: "Hfc:voJY1;,L==VSuq^^@D8Dpa8,Lm13YVnLwLA&2wmfnPloy8" ## Signing Keys ## # Path to the signing key to sign messages with # signing_key_path: "${SIGNING_KEY_PATH:?}" # The keys that the server used to sign messages with but won't use # to sign new messages. # old_signing_keys: # For each key, \`key\` should be the base64-encoded public key, and # \`expired_ts\` should be the time (in milliseconds since the unix epoch) that # it was last used. # # It is possible to build an entry from an old signing.key file using the # \`export_signing_key\` script which is provided with synapse. # # For example: # #"ed25519:id": { key: "base64string", 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 # The trusted servers to download signing keys from. # # When we need to fetch a signing key, each server is tried in parallel. # # Normally, the connection to the key server is validated via TLS certificates. # Additional security can be provided by configuring a \`verify key\`, which # will make synapse check that the response is signed by that key. # # This setting supercedes an older setting named \`perspectives\`. The old format # is still supported for backwards-compatibility, but it is deprecated. # # 'trusted_key_servers' defaults to matrix.org, but using it will generate a # warning on start-up. To suppress this warning, set # 'suppress_key_server_warning' to true. # # Options for each entry in the list include: # # server_name: the name of the server. required. # # verify_keys: an optional map from key id to base64-encoded public key. # If specified, we will check that the response is signed by at least # one of the given keys. # # accept_keys_insecurely: a boolean. Normally, if \`verify_keys\` is unset, # and federation_verify_certificates is not \`true\`, synapse will refuse # to start, because this would allow anyone who can spoof DNS responses # to masquerade as the trusted key server. If you know what you are doing # and are sure that your network environment provides a secure connection # to the key server, you can set this to \`true\` to override this # behaviour. # # An example configuration might look like: # #trusted_key_servers: # - server_name: "my_trusted_server.example.com" # verify_keys: # "ed25519:auto": "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmopqr" # - server_name: "my_other_trusted_server.example.com" # trusted_key_servers: - server_name: "matrix.org" # Uncomment the following to disable the warning that is emitted when the # trusted_key_servers include 'matrix.org'. See above. # #suppress_key_server_warning: true # The signing keys to use when acting as a trusted key server. If not specified # defaults to the server signing key. # # Can contain multiple keys, one per line. # #key_server_signing_keys_path: "key_server_signing_keys.key" ## Single sign-on integration ## # The following settings can be used to make Synapse use a single sign-on # provider for authentication, instead of its internal password database. # # You will probably also want to set the following options to \`false\` to # disable the regular login/registration flows: # * enable_registration # * password_config.enabled # # You will also want to investigate the settings under the "sso" configuration # section below. # Enable SAML2 for registration and login. Uses pysaml2. # # At least one of \`sp_config\` or \`config_path\` must be set in this section to # enable SAML login. # # Once SAML support is enabled, a metadata file will be exposed at # https://:/_matrix/saml2/metadata.xml, which you may be able to # use to configure your SAML IdP with. Alternatively, you can manually configure # the IdP to use an ACS location of # https://:/_matrix/saml2/authn_response. # saml2_config: # \`sp_config\` is the configuration for the pysaml2 Service Provider. # See pysaml2 docs for format of config. # # Default values will be used for the 'entityid' and 'service' settings, # so it is not normally necessary to specify them unless you need to # override them. # sp_config: # Point this to the IdP's metadata. You must provide either a local # file via the \`local\` attribute or (preferably) a URL via the # \`remote\` attribute. # #metadata: # local: ["saml2/idp.xml"] # remote: # - url: https://our_idp/metadata.xml EOF if [ -n "$SAML2_IDP_METADATA_URL" ]; then cat << EOF metadata: remote: - url: "$SAML2_IDP_METADATA_URL" EOF fi if [ -n "$SAML2_SP_CERT" ] || [ -n "$SAML2_SP_KEY" ]; then cat << EOF key_file: "$SAML2_SP_KEY" cert_file: "$SAML2_SP_CERT" EOF fi cat << EOF # Allowed clock difference in seconds between the homeserver and IdP. # # Uncomment the below to increase the accepted time difference from 0 to 3 seconds. # #accepted_time_diff: 3 # By default, the user has to go to our login page first. If you'd like # to allow IdP-initiated login, set 'allow_unsolicited: true' in a # 'service.sp' section: # #service: # sp: # allow_unsolicited: true # The examples below are just used to generate our metadata xml, and you # may well not need them, depending on your setup. Alternatively you # may need a whole lot more detail - see the pysaml2 docs! #description: ["My awesome SP", "en"] #name: ["Test SP", "en"] #ui_info: # display_name: # - lang: en # text: "Display Name is the descriptive name of your service." # description: # - lang: en # text: "Description should be a short paragraph explaining the purpose of the service." # information_url: # - lang: en # text: "https://example.com/terms-of-service" # privacy_statement_url: # - lang: en # text: "https://example.com/privacy-policy" # keywords: # - lang: en # text: ["Matrix", "Element"] # logo: # - lang: en # text: "https://example.com/logo.svg" # width: "200" # height: "80" #organization: # name: Example com # display_name: # - ["Example co", "en"] # url: "http://example.com" #contact_person: # - given_name: Bob # sur_name: "the Sysadmin" # email_address": ["admin@example.com"] # contact_type": technical # Instead of putting the config inline as above, you can specify a # separate pysaml2 configuration file: # #config_path: "/etc/synapse/sp_conf.py" # The lifetime of a SAML session. This defines how long a user has to # complete the authentication process, if allow_unsolicited is unset. # The default is 15 minutes. # #saml_session_lifetime: 5m # An external module can be provided here as a custom solution to # mapping attributes returned from a saml provider onto a matrix user. # user_mapping_provider: # The custom module's class. Uncomment to use a custom module. # #module: mapping_provider.SamlMappingProvider EOF if [ -n "$SAML2_MAPPING_PROVIDER_MODULE" ]; then cat << EOF module: "$SAML2_MAPPING_PROVIDER_MODULE" EOF fi cat << EOF # Custom configuration values for the module. Below options are # intended for the built-in provider, they should be changed if # using a custom module. This section will be passed as a Python # dictionary to the module's \`parse_config\` method. # config: # The SAML attribute (after mapping via the attribute maps) to use # to derive the Matrix ID from. 'uid' by default. # # Note: This used to be configured by the # saml2_config.mxid_source_attribute option. If that is still # defined, its value will be used instead. # #mxid_source_attribute: displayName # The mapping system to use for mapping the saml attribute onto a # matrix ID. # # Options include: # * 'hexencode' (which maps unpermitted characters to '=xx') # * 'dotreplace' (which replaces unpermitted characters with # '.'). # The default is 'hexencode'. # # Note: This used to be configured by the # saml2_config.mxid_mapping option. If that is still defined, its # value will be used instead. # #mxid_mapping: dotreplace EOF if [ -n "$SAML2_MAPPING_PROVIDER_EXTRA_CONFIG" ]; then echo "$SAML2_MAPPING_PROVIDER_EXTRA_CONFIG" | while IFS= read -r entry; do cat << EOF $entry EOF done fi cat << EOF # In previous versions of synapse, the mapping from SAML attribute to # MXID was always calculated dynamically rather than stored in a # table. For backwards- compatibility, we will look for user_ids # matching such a pattern before creating a new account. # # This setting controls the SAML attribute which will be used for this # backwards-compatibility lookup. Typically it should be 'uid', but if # the attribute maps are changed, it may be necessary to change it. # # The default is 'uid'. # #grandfathered_mxid_source_attribute: upn # It is possible to configure Synapse to only allow logins if SAML attributes # match particular values. The requirements can be listed under # \`attribute_requirements\` as shown below. All of the listed attributes must # match for the login to be permitted. # #attribute_requirements: # - attribute: userGroup # value: "staff" # - attribute: department # value: "sales" # If the metadata XML contains multiple IdP entities then the \`idp_entityid\` # option must be set to the entity to redirect users to. # # Most deployments only have a single IdP entity and so should omit this # option. # #idp_entityid: 'https://our_idp/entityid' # List of OpenID Connect (OIDC) / OAuth 2.0 identity providers, for registration # and login. # # Options for each entry include: # # idp_id: a unique identifier for this identity provider. Used internally # by Synapse; should be a single word such as 'github'. # # Note that, if this is changed, users authenticating via that provider # will no longer be recognised as the same user! # # idp_name: A user-facing name for this identity provider, which is used to # offer the user a choice of login mechanisms. # # idp_icon: An optional icon for this identity provider, which is presented # by identity picker pages. If given, must be an MXC URI of the format # mxc:///. (An easy way to obtain such an MXC URI # is to upload an image to an (unencrypted) room and then copy the "url" # from the source of the event.) # # discover: set to 'false' to disable the use of the OIDC discovery mechanism # to discover endpoints. Defaults to true. # # issuer: Required. The OIDC issuer. Used to validate tokens and (if discovery # is enabled) to discover the provider's endpoints. # # client_id: Required. oauth2 client id to use. # # client_secret: Required. oauth2 client secret to use. # # client_auth_method: auth method to use when exchanging the token. Valid # values are 'client_secret_basic' (default), 'client_secret_post' and # 'none'. # # scopes: list of scopes to request. This should normally include the "openid" # scope. Defaults to ["openid"]. # # authorization_endpoint: the oauth2 authorization endpoint. Required if # provider discovery is disabled. # # token_endpoint: the oauth2 token endpoint. Required if provider discovery is # disabled. # # userinfo_endpoint: the OIDC userinfo endpoint. Required if discovery is # disabled and the 'openid' scope is not requested. # # jwks_uri: URI where to fetch the JWKS. Required if discovery is disabled and # the 'openid' scope is used. # # skip_verification: set to 'true' to skip metadata verification. Use this if # you are connecting to a provider that is not OpenID Connect compliant. # Defaults to false. Avoid this in production. # # user_profile_method: Whether to fetch the user profile from the userinfo # endpoint. Valid values are: 'auto' or 'userinfo_endpoint'. # # Defaults to 'auto', which fetches the userinfo endpoint if 'openid' is # included in 'scopes'. Set to 'userinfo_endpoint' to always fetch the # userinfo endpoint. # # allow_existing_users: set to 'true' to allow a user logging in via OIDC to # match a pre-existing account instead of failing. This could be used if # switching from password logins to OIDC. Defaults to false. # # user_mapping_provider: Configuration for how attributes returned from a OIDC # provider are mapped onto a matrix user. This setting has the following # sub-properties: # # module: The class name of a custom mapping module. Default is # 'synapse.handlers.oidc_handler.JinjaOidcMappingProvider'. # See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/sso_mapping_providers.md#openid-mapping-providers # for information on implementing a custom mapping provider. # # config: Configuration for the mapping provider module. This section will # be passed as a Python dictionary to the user mapping provider # module's \`parse_config\` method. # # For the default provider, the following settings are available: # # sub: name of the claim containing a unique identifier for the # user. Defaults to 'sub', which OpenID Connect compliant # providers should provide. # # localpart_template: Jinja2 template for the localpart of the MXID. # If this is not set, the user will be prompted to choose their # own username. # # display_name_template: Jinja2 template for the display name to set # on first login. If unset, no displayname will be set. # # extra_attributes: a map of Jinja2 templates for extra attributes # to send back to the client during login. # Note that these are non-standard and clients will ignore them # without modifications. # # When rendering, the Jinja2 templates are given a 'user' variable, # which is set to the claims returned by the UserInfo Endpoint and/or # in the ID Token. # # See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/openid.md # for information on how to configure these options. # # For backwards compatibility, it is also possible to configure a single OIDC # provider via an 'oidc_config' setting. This is now deprecated and admins are # advised to migrate to the 'oidc_providers' format. (When doing that migration, # use 'oidc' for the idp_id to ensure that existing users continue to be # recognised.) # oidc_providers: # Generic example # #- idp_id: my_idp # idp_name: "My OpenID provider" # idp_icon: "mxc://example.com/mediaid" # discover: false # issuer: "https://accounts.example.com/" # client_id: "provided-by-your-issuer" # client_secret: "provided-by-your-issuer" # client_auth_method: client_secret_post # scopes: ["openid", "profile"] # authorization_endpoint: "https://accounts.example.com/oauth2/auth" # token_endpoint: "https://accounts.example.com/oauth2/token" # userinfo_endpoint: "https://accounts.example.com/userinfo" # jwks_uri: "https://accounts.example.com/.well-known/jwks.json" # skip_verification: true # For use with Keycloak # #- idp_id: keycloak # idp_name: Keycloak # issuer: "https://127.0.0.1:8443/auth/realms/my_realm_name" # client_id: "synapse" # client_secret: "copy secret generated in Keycloak UI" # scopes: ["openid", "profile"] # For use with Github # #- idp_id: github # idp_name: Github # discover: false # issuer: "https://github.com/" # client_id: "your-client-id" # TO BE FILLED # client_secret: "your-client-secret" # TO BE FILLED # authorization_endpoint: "https://github.com/login/oauth/authorize" # token_endpoint: "https://github.com/login/oauth/access_token" # userinfo_endpoint: "https://api.github.com/user" # scopes: ["read:user"] # user_mapping_provider: # config: # subject_claim: "id" # localpart_template: "{ user.login }" # display_name_template: "{ user.name }" # Enable Central Authentication Service (CAS) for registration and login. # cas_config: # Uncomment the following to enable authorization against a CAS server. # Defaults to false. # #enabled: true # The URL of the CAS authorization endpoint. # #server_url: "https://cas-server.com" # The public URL of the homeserver. # #service_url: "https://homeserver.domain.com:8448" # The attribute of the CAS response to use as the display name. # # If unset, no displayname will be set. # #displayname_attribute: name # It is possible to configure Synapse to only allow logins if CAS attributes # match particular values. All of the keys in the mapping below must exist # and the values must match the given value. Alternately if the given value # is None then any value is allowed (the attribute just must exist). # All of the listed attributes must match for the login to be permitted. # #required_attributes: # userGroup: "staff" # department: None # Additional settings to use with single-sign on systems such as OpenID Connect, # SAML2 and CAS. # sso: # A list of client URLs which are whitelisted so that the user does not # have to confirm giving access to their account to the URL. Any client # whose URL starts with an entry in the following list will not be subject # to an additional confirmation step after the SSO login is completed. # # WARNING: An entry such as "https://my.client" is insecure, because it # will also match "https://my.client.evil.site", exposing your users to # phishing attacks from evil.site. To avoid this, include a slash after the # hostname: "https://my.client/". # # The login fallback page (used by clients that don't natively support the # required login flows) is automatically whitelisted in addition to any URLs # in this list. # # By default, this list is empty. # #client_whitelist: # - https://riot.im/develop # - https://my.custom.client/ # Directory in which Synapse will try to find the template files below. # If not set, or the files named below are not found within the template # directory, default templates from within the Synapse package will be used. # # Synapse will look for the following templates in this directory: # # * HTML page to prompt the user to choose an Identity Provider during # login: 'sso_login_idp_picker.html'. # # This is only used if multiple SSO Identity Providers are configured. # # When rendering, this template is given the following variables: # * redirect_url: the URL that the user will be redirected to after # login. Needs manual escaping (see # https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/#html-escaping). # # * server_name: the homeserver's name. # # * providers: a list of available Identity Providers. Each element is # an object with the following attributes: # * idp_id: unique identifier for the IdP # * idp_name: user-facing name for the IdP # # The rendered HTML page should contain a form which submits its results # back as a GET request, with the following query parameters: # # * redirectUrl: the client redirect URI (ie, the \`redirect_url\` passed # to the template) # # * idp: the 'idp_id' of the chosen IDP. # # * HTML page for a confirmation step before redirecting back to the client # with the login token: 'sso_redirect_confirm.html'. # # When rendering, this template is given three variables: # * redirect_url: the URL the user is about to be redirected to. Needs # manual escaping (see # https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/#html-escaping). # # * display_url: the same as \`redirect_url\`, but with the query # parameters stripped. The intention is to have a # human-readable URL to show to users, not to use it as # the final address to redirect to. Needs manual escaping # (see https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/#html-escaping). # # * server_name: the homeserver's name. # # * HTML page which notifies the user that they are authenticating to confirm # an operation on their account during the user interactive authentication # process: 'sso_auth_confirm.html'. # # When rendering, this template is given the following variables: # * redirect_url: the URL the user is about to be redirected to. Needs # manual escaping (see # https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/en/2.11.x/templates/#html-escaping). # # * description: the operation which the user is being asked to confirm # # * HTML page shown after a successful user interactive authentication session: # 'sso_auth_success.html'. # # Note that this page must include the JavaScript which notifies of a successful authentication # (see https://matrix.org/docs/spec/client_server/r0.6.0#fallback). # # This template has no additional variables. # # * HTML page shown after a user-interactive authentication session which # does not map correctly onto the expected user: 'sso_auth_bad_user.html'. # # When rendering, this template is given the following variables: # * server_name: the homeserver's name. # * user_id_to_verify: the MXID of the user that we are trying to # validate. # # * HTML page shown during single sign-on if a deactivated user (according to Synapse's database) # attempts to login: 'sso_account_deactivated.html'. # # This template has no additional variables. # # * HTML page to display to users if something goes wrong during the # OpenID Connect authentication process: 'sso_error.html'. # # When rendering, this template is given two variables: # * error: the technical name of the error # * error_description: a human-readable message for the error # # You can see the default templates at: # https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/tree/master/synapse/res/templates # #template_dir: "res/templates" # JSON web token integration. The following settings can be used to make # Synapse JSON web tokens for authentication, instead of its internal # password database. # # Each JSON Web Token needs to contain a "sub" (subject) claim, which is # used as the localpart of the mxid. # # Additionally, the expiration time ("exp"), not before time ("nbf"), # and issued at ("iat") claims are validated if present. # # Note that this is a non-standard login type and client support is # expected to be non-existent. # # See https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/jwt.md. # #jwt_config: # Uncomment the following to enable authorization using JSON web # tokens. Defaults to false. # #enabled: true # This is either the private shared secret or the public key used to # decode the contents of the JSON web token. # # Required if 'enabled' is true. # #secret: "provided-by-your-issuer" # The algorithm used to sign the JSON web token. # # Supported algorithms are listed at # https://pyjwt.readthedocs.io/en/latest/algorithms.html # # Required if 'enabled' is true. # #algorithm: "provided-by-your-issuer" # The issuer to validate the "iss" claim against. # # Optional, if provided the "iss" claim will be required and # validated for all JSON web tokens. # #issuer: "provided-by-your-issuer" # A list of audiences to validate the "aud" claim against. # # Optional, if provided the "aud" claim will be required and # validated for all JSON web tokens. # # Note that if the "aud" claim is included in a JSON web token then # validation will fail without configuring audiences. # #audiences: # - "provided-by-your-issuer" password_config: # Uncomment to disable password login # #enabled: false # Uncomment to disable authentication against the local password # database. This is ignored if \`enabled\` is false, and is only useful # if you have other password_providers. # #localdb_enabled: false # Uncomment and change to a secret random string for extra security. # DO NOT CHANGE THIS AFTER INITIAL SETUP! # #pepper: "EVEN_MORE_SECRET" # Define and enforce a password policy. Each parameter is optional. # This is an implementation of MSC2000. # policy: # Whether to enforce the password policy. # Defaults to 'false'. # #enabled: true # Minimum accepted length for a password. # Defaults to 0. # #minimum_length: 15 # Whether a password must contain at least one digit. # Defaults to 'false'. # #require_digit: true # Whether a password must contain at least one symbol. # A symbol is any character that's not a number or a letter. # Defaults to 'false'. # #require_symbol: true # Whether a password must contain at least one lowercase letter. # Defaults to 'false'. # #require_lowercase: true # Whether a password must contain at least one lowercase letter. # Defaults to 'false'. # #require_uppercase: true ui_auth: # The number of milliseconds to allow a user-interactive authentication # session to be active. # # This defaults to 0, meaning the user is queried for their credentials # before every action, but this can be overridden to alow a single # validation to be re-used. This weakens the protections afforded by # the user-interactive authentication process, by allowing for multiple # (and potentially different) operations to use the same validation session. # # Uncomment below to allow for credential validation to last for 15 # seconds. # #session_timeout: 15000 # Configuration for sending emails from Synapse. # email: # The hostname of the outgoing SMTP server to use. Defaults to 'localhost'. # smtp_host: "${SMTP_HOST:?}" # The port on the mail server for outgoing SMTP. Defaults to 25. # smtp_port: ${SMTP_PORT:?} # Username/password for authentication to the SMTP server. By default, no # authentication is attempted. # smtp_user: "$SMTP_USER" smtp_pass: "$SMTP_PASSWORD" # Uncomment the following to require TLS transport security for SMTP. # By default, Synapse will connect over plain text, and will then switch to # TLS via STARTTLS *if the SMTP server supports it*. If this option is set, # Synapse will refuse to connect unless the server supports STARTTLS. # require_transport_security: ${SMTP_USE_STARTTLS:?} # notif_from defines the "From" address to use when sending emails. # It must be set if email sending is enabled. # # The placeholder '%(app)s' will be replaced by the application name, # which is normally 'app_name' (below), but may be overridden by the # Matrix client application. # # Note that the placeholder must be written '%(app)s', including the # trailing 's'. # notif_from: "${NOTIFICATION_FROM:?}" # app_name defines the default value for '%(app)s' in notif_from and email # subjects. It defaults to 'Matrix'. # #app_name: my_branded_matrix_server # Uncomment the following to enable sending emails for messages that the user # has missed. Disabled by default. # enable_notifs: ${ENABLE_NOTIFICATIONS:?} # Uncomment the following to disable automatic subscription to email # notifications for new users. Enabled by default. # #notif_for_new_users: false # Custom URL for client links within the email notifications. By default # links will be based on "https://matrix.to". # # (This setting used to be called riot_base_url; the old name is still # supported for backwards-compatibility but is now deprecated.) EOF if [ -n "$WEB_CLIENT_URL" ]; then echo " client_base_url: \"$WEB_CLIENT_URL\"" fi cat << EOF # Configure the time that a validation email will expire after sending. # Defaults to 1h. # #validation_token_lifetime: 15m # The web client location to direct users to during an invite. This is passed # to the identity server as the org.matrix.web_client_location key. Defaults # to unset, giving no guidance to the identity server. # #invite_client_location: https://app.element.io # Directory in which Synapse will try to find the template files below. # If not set, or the files named below are not found within the template # directory, default templates from within the Synapse package will be used. # # Synapse will look for the following templates in this directory: # # * The contents of email notifications of missed events: 'notif_mail.html' and # 'notif_mail.txt'. # # * The contents of account expiry notice emails: 'notice_expiry.html' and # 'notice_expiry.txt'. # # * The contents of password reset emails sent by the homeserver: # 'password_reset.html' and 'password_reset.txt' # # * An HTML page that a user will see when they follow the link in the password # reset email. The user will be asked to confirm the action before their # password is reset: 'password_reset_confirmation.html' # # * HTML pages for success and failure that a user will see when they confirm # the password reset flow using the page above: 'password_reset_success.html' # and 'password_reset_failure.html' # # * The contents of address verification emails sent during registration: # 'registration.html' and 'registration.txt' # # * HTML pages for success and failure that a user will see when they follow # the link in an address verification email sent during registration: # 'registration_success.html' and 'registration_failure.html' # # * The contents of address verification emails sent when an address is added # to a Matrix account: 'add_threepid.html' and 'add_threepid.txt' # # * HTML pages for success and failure that a user will see when they follow # the link in an address verification email sent when an address is added # to a Matrix account: 'add_threepid_success.html' and # 'add_threepid_failure.html' # # You can see the default templates at: # https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/tree/master/synapse/res/templates # #template_dir: "res/templates" # Subjects to use when sending emails from Synapse. # # The placeholder '%(app)s' will be replaced with the value of the 'app_name' # setting above, or by a value dictated by the Matrix client application. # # If a subject isn't overridden in this configuration file, the value used as # its example will be used. # #subjects: # Subjects for notification emails. # # On top of the '%(app)s' placeholder, these can use the following # placeholders: # # * '%(person)s', which will be replaced by the display name of the user(s) # that sent the message(s), e.g. "Alice and Bob". # * '%(room)s', which will be replaced by the name of the room the # message(s) have been sent to, e.g. "My super room". # # See the example provided for each setting to see which placeholder can be # used and how to use them. # # Subject to use to notify about one message from one or more user(s) in a # room which has a name. #message_from_person_in_room: "[%(app)s] You have a message on %(app)s from %(person)s in the %(room)s room..." # # Subject to use to notify about one message from one or more user(s) in a # room which doesn't have a name. #message_from_person: "[%(app)s] You have a message on %(app)s from %(person)s..." # # Subject to use to notify about multiple messages from one or more users in # a room which doesn't have a name. #messages_from_person: "[%(app)s] You have messages on %(app)s from %(person)s..." # # Subject to use to notify about multiple messages in a room which has a # name. #messages_in_room: "[%(app)s] You have messages on %(app)s in the %(room)s room..." # # Subject to use to notify about multiple messages in multiple rooms. #messages_in_room_and_others: "[%(app)s] You have messages on %(app)s in the %(room)s room and others..." # # Subject to use to notify about multiple messages from multiple persons in # multiple rooms. This is similar to the setting above except it's used when # the room in which the notification was triggered has no name. #messages_from_person_and_others: "[%(app)s] You have messages on %(app)s from %(person)s and others..." # # Subject to use to notify about an invite to a room which has a name. #invite_from_person_to_room: "[%(app)s] %(person)s has invited you to join the %(room)s room on %(app)s..." # # Subject to use to notify about an invite to a room which doesn't have a # name. #invite_from_person: "[%(app)s] %(person)s has invited you to chat on %(app)s..." # Subject for emails related to account administration. # # On top of the '%(app)s' placeholder, these one can use the # '%(server_name)s' placeholder, which will be replaced by the value of the # 'server_name' setting in your Synapse configuration. # # Subject to use when sending a password reset email. #password_reset: "[%(server_name)s] Password reset" # # Subject to use when sending a verification email to assert an address's # ownership. #email_validation: "[%(server_name)s] Validate your email" # Password providers allow homeserver administrators to integrate # their Synapse installation with existing authentication methods # ex. LDAP, external tokens, etc. # # For more information and known implementations, please see # https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/password_auth_providers.md # # Note: instances wishing to use SAML or CAS authentication should # instead use the \`saml2_config\` or \`cas_config\` options, # respectively. # password_providers: # # Example config for an LDAP auth provider # - 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)" EOF if [ -n "$ENABLE_LDAP_AUTH" ]; then cat <.html') and a success page (success.html). # # 'version' specifies the 'current' version of the policy document. It defines # the version to be served by the consent resource if there is no 'v' # parameter. # # 'server_notice_content', if enabled, will send a user a "Server Notice" # asking them to consent to the privacy policy. The 'server_notices' section # must also be configured for this to work. Notices will *not* be sent to # guest users unless 'send_server_notice_to_guests' is set to true. # # 'block_events_error', if set, will block any attempts to send events # until the user consents to the privacy policy. The value of the setting is # used as the text of the error. # # 'require_at_registration', if enabled, will add a step to the registration # process, similar to how captcha works. Users will be required to accept the # policy before their account is created. # # 'policy_name' is the display name of the policy users will see when registering # for an account. Has no effect unless \`require_at_registration\` is enabled. # Defaults to "Privacy Policy". # #user_consent: # template_dir: res/templates/privacy # version: 1.0 # server_notice_content: # msgtype: m.text # body: >- # To continue using this homeserver you must review and agree to the # terms and conditions at %(consent_uri)s # send_server_notice_to_guests: true # block_events_error: >- # To continue using this homeserver you must review and agree to the # terms and conditions at %(consent_uri)s # require_at_registration: false # policy_name: Privacy Policy # # Local statistics collection. Used in populating the room directory. # # 'bucket_size' controls how large each statistics timeslice is. It can # be defined in a human readable short form -- e.g. "1d", "1y". # # 'retention' controls how long historical statistics will be kept for. # It can be defined in a human readable short form -- e.g. "1d", "1y". # # #stats: # enabled: true # bucket_size: 1d # retention: 1y # Server Notices room configuration # # Uncomment this section to enable a room which can be used to send notices # from the server to users. It is a special room which cannot be left; notices # come from a special "notices" user id. # # If you uncomment this section, you *must* define the system_mxid_localpart # setting, which defines the id of the user which will be used to send the # notices. # # It's also possible to override the room name, the display name of the # "notices" user, and the avatar for the user. # #server_notices: # system_mxid_localpart: notices # system_mxid_display_name: "Server Notices" # system_mxid_avatar_url: "mxc://server.com/oumMVlgDnLYFaPVkExemNVVZ" # room_name: "Server Notices" EOF if [ -n "$ENABLE_SERVER_NOTICES" ]; then cat << EOF server_notices: system_mxid_localpart: notices system_mxid_display_name: "Server Notices" #system_mxid_avatar_url: "mxc://server.com/oumMVlgDnLYFaPVkExemNVVZ" room_name: "Server Notices" EOF fi cat << EOF # Uncomment to disable searching the public room list. When disabled # blocks searching local and remote room lists for local and remote # users by always returning an empty list for all queries. # #enable_room_list_search: false # The \`alias_creation\` option controls who's allowed to create aliases # on this server. # # The format of this option is a list of rules that contain globs that # match against user_id, room_id and the new alias (fully qualified with # server name). The action in the first rule that matches is taken, # which can currently either be "allow" or "deny". # # Missing user_id/room_id/alias fields default to "*". # # If no rules match the request is denied. An empty list means no one # can create aliases. # # Options for the rules include: # # user_id: Matches against the creator of the alias # alias: Matches against the alias being created # room_id: Matches against the room ID the alias is being pointed at # action: Whether to "allow" or "deny" the request if the rule matches # # The default is: # #alias_creation_rules: # - user_id: "*" # alias: "*" # room_id: "*" # action: allow # The \`room_list_publication_rules\` option controls who can publish and # which rooms can be published in the public room list. # # The format of this option is the same as that for # \`alias_creation_rules\`. # # If the room has one or more aliases associated with it, only one of # the aliases needs to match the alias rule. If there are no aliases # then only rules with \`alias: *\` match. # # If no rules match the request is denied. An empty list means no one # can publish rooms. # # Options for the rules include: # # user_id: Matches against the creator of the alias # room_id: Matches against the room ID being published # alias: Matches against any current local or canonical aliases # associated with the room # action: Whether to "allow" or "deny" the request if the rule matches # # The default is: # #room_list_publication_rules: # - user_id: "*" # alias: "*" # room_id: "*" # action: allow # Server admins can define a Python module that implements extra rules for # allowing or denying incoming events. In order to work, this module needs to # override the methods defined in synapse/events/third_party_rules.py. # # This feature is designed to be used in closed federations only, where each # participating server enforces the same rules. # #third_party_event_rules: # module: "my_custom_project.SuperRulesSet" # config: # example_option: 'things' ## Opentracing ## # These settings enable opentracing, which implements distributed tracing. # This allows you to observe the causal chains of events across servers # including requests, key lookups etc., across any server running # synapse or any other other services which supports opentracing # (specifically those implemented with Jaeger). # opentracing: # tracing is disabled by default. Uncomment the following line to enable it. # #enabled: true # The list of homeservers we wish to send and receive span contexts and span baggage. # See docs/opentracing.rst # This is a list of regexes which are matched against the server_name of the # homeserver. # # By default, it is empty, so no servers are matched. # #homeserver_whitelist: # - ".*" # Jaeger can be configured to sample traces at different rates. # All configuration options provided by Jaeger can be set here. # Jaeger's configuration mostly related to trace sampling which # is documented here: # https://www.jaegertracing.io/docs/1.13/sampling/. # #jaeger_config: # sampler: # type: const # param: 1 # Logging whether spans were started and reported # # logging: # false ## Workers ## # Disables sending of outbound federation transactions on the main process. # Uncomment if using a federation sender worker. # send_federation: ${SEND_FEDERATION_FROM_MAIN_PROCESS:?} # It is possible to run multiple federation sender workers, in which case the # work is balanced across them. # # This configuration must be shared between all federation sender workers, and if # changed all federation sender workers must be stopped at the same time and then # started, to ensure that all instances are running with the same config (otherwise # events may be dropped). # #federation_sender_instances: # - federation_sender1 EOF if [ -n "$FEDERATION_SENDER_INSTANCES" ]; then echo "federation_sender_instances:" for instance in $FEDERATION_SENDER_INSTANCES; do echo " - $instance" done fi cat << EOF # When using workers this should be a map from \`worker_name\` to the # HTTP replication listener of the worker, if configured. # #instance_map: # worker1: # host: localhost # port: 8034 # Experimental: When using workers you can define which workers should # handle event persistence and typing notifications. Any worker # specified here must also be in the \`instance_map\`. # #stream_writers: # events: worker1 # typing: worker1 # The worker that is used to run background tasks (e.g. cleaning up expired # data). If not provided this defaults to the main process. # EOF if [ -n "$BACKGROUND_TASKS_WORKER" ]; then echo "run_background_tasks_on: ${BACKGROUND_TASKS_WORKER:?}" fi cat << EOF # A shared secret used by the replication APIs to authenticate HTTP requests # from workers. # # By default this is unused and traffic is not authenticated. # worker_replication_secret: "$WORKER_REPLICATION_SECRET" # Configuration for Redis when using workers. This *must* be enabled when # using workers (unless using old style direct TCP configuration). # redis: # Uncomment the below to enable Redis support. # enabled: ${ENABLE_REDIS_SUPPORT:?} # Optional host and port to use to connect to redis. Defaults to # localhost and 6379 # #host: localhost #port: 6379 # Optional password if configured on the Redis instance # EOF