personal fork of matrix docker ansible deploy.
Go to file
Slavi Pantaleev f08700adbe
Merge pull request #2181 from array-in-a-matrix/master
add if hostname is not availble for SRV record
2022-10-20 07:39:45 +03:00
.config Fix some ansible-lint-reported warnings 2022-09-27 11:38:33 +03:00
.github Bump frenck/action-yamllint from 1.2.0 to 1.3.0 2022-09-14 17:19:47 +00:00
collections
docs add if hostname is not availble for SRV record 2022-10-20 00:34:30 -04:00
examples Caddyfile example : enable Content-Security-Policy by default instead of having the line commented 2022-10-11 07:32:02 -04:00
group_vars fix(goofys): fix synapse systemd unit file to correctly require goofys 2022-10-11 00:43:22 +01:00
inventory
roles Update grafana 9.2.0 -> 9.2.1 2022-10-18 12:43:13 +00:00
.editorconfig
.gitignore
.yamllint
ansible.cfg
CHANGELOG.md Add warnings to synapse-s3-storage-provider support feature 2022-10-14 17:58:47 +03:00
LICENSE
Makefile
README.md Update README to mention synapse-s3-storage-provider 2022-10-14 18:49:27 +03:00
setup.yml Add role to setup.yml 2022-09-13 16:39:15 +00:00

Support room on Matrix donate

Matrix (An open network for secure, decentralized communication) server setup using Ansible and Docker

Purpose

This Ansible playbook is meant to help you run your own Matrix homeserver, along with the various services related to that.

That is, it lets you join the Matrix network using your own @<username>:<your-domain> identifier, all hosted on your own server (see prerequisites).

We run all services in Docker containers (see the container images we use), which lets us have a predictable and up-to-date setup, across multiple supported distros (see prerequisites) and architectures (x86/amd64 being recommended).

Installation (upgrades) and some maintenance tasks are automated using Ansible (see our Ansible guide).

Supported services

Using this playbook, you can get the following services configured on your server:

Basically, this playbook aims to get you up-and-running with all the necessities around Matrix, without you having to do anything else.

Note: the list above is exhaustive. It includes optional or even some advanced components that you will most likely not need. Sticking with the defaults (which install a subset of the above components) is the best choice, especially for a new installation. You can always re-run the playbook later to add or remove components.

Installation

To configure and install Matrix on your own server, follow the README in the docs/ directory.

Changes

This playbook evolves over time, sometimes with backward-incompatible changes.

When updating the playbook, refer to the changelog to catch up with what's new.

Support

Services by the community

  • etke.cc - matrix-docker-ansible-deploy and system stuff "as a service". That service will create your matrix homeserver on your domain and server (doesn't matter if it's cloud provider or on an old laptop in the corner of your room), (optional) maintains it (server's system updates, cleanup, security adjustments, tuning, etc.; matrix homeserver updates & maintenance) and (optional) provide full-featured email service for your domain