This repository has been archived on 2024-11-13. You can view files and clone it, but cannot push or open issues or pull requests.
matrix/synapse/README.md

1.6 KiB

Table of Contents

Installation and configuration of Synapse

Mind you: this an installation on Debian Linux (at least for now).

Start by installing the latest Synapse server, see the upstream documentation.

apt install -y lsb-release wget apt-transport-https build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \
               python3-pip python3-setuptools sqlite3 \
               libssl-dev virtualenv libjpeg-dev libxslt1-dev libicu-dev

wget -O /usr/share/keyrings/matrix-org-archive-keyring.gpg https://packages.matrix.org/debian/matrix-org-archive-keyring.gpg

echo "deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/matrix-org-archive-keyring.gpg] https://packages.matrix.org/debian/ $(lsb_release -cs) main" |
    tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/matrix-org.list

apt update
apt install matrix-synapse-py3

This leaves a very basic configuration in /etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.yaml and two settings under /etc/conf.d. All other configuration items will also be configured with yaml-files in this directory.

Configure the domain you with to use in /etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/server_name.yaml. What you configure here will also be the global part of your Matrix handles (the part after the colon).

You now have a standard Matrix server that uses sqlite. You really don't want to use this in production, so probably want to replace this with PostgreSQL.

There are two different ways to configure Synapse, documented here:

We'll use Synapse, using the workers architecture to make it scalable, flexible and reusable.