On Debian 10 (buster) at least, while the Synapse systemd service unit
was referring to Goofys as "matrix-goofys" without a ".service" suffix,
systemd was ignoring the goofys dependency, starting Synapse before
Goofys. All other dependant units which work are using the ".service"
suffix.
This generally leads to the mount path goofys using having been
populated by Synapse before Goofys starts, causing it to fail due to the
mount target not being empty.
The fix seems to be to ensure that the Synapse service unit refers to
Goofys as "matrix-goofys.service".
This change causes the following two lines in
"/etc/systemd/system/matrix-synapse.service":
Requires=matrix-goofys
After=matrix-goofys
To be changed to:
Requires=matrix-goofys.service
After=matrix-goofys.service
* Make registration proxy independent of other roles, document
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Fix yml issues
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Remove undefined variable (as service HAS to be exposed
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Add registration endpint
Defines the registration endpoint that should be intercepted/forwarded to the proxy
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Add image name
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
Using `matrix_synapse_*` variables within the `matrix-grafana` role
is not a good practice.
We now have a `matrix_grafana_default_home_dashboard_path` variable
with a good universal default value and we override it via
`group_vars/matrix_servers` based on enabled components, etc.
This is a better fix for https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/2133
As stream writer workers are also powered by the `generic_worker`
Synapse app, this necessitated that we provide means for distinguishing
between them and regular `generic_workers`.
I've also taken the time to optimize nginx configuration generation
(more Jinja2 macro usage, less duplication).
Worker names have also changed.
Workers are now named sequentially like this:
- `matrix-synapse-worker-0-generic`
- `matrix-synapse-worker-1-stream-writer-typing`
- `matrix-synapse-worker-2-pusher`
instead of `matrix-synapse-worker_generic_worker-18111` (indexed with a
port number).
People who modify `matrix_synapse_workers_enabled_list` directly will
need to adjust their configuration.
* Add construct for cactus comments role
* Adjust config files
* Add docker self build to defaults
* Adjust tasks
* Fix smaller syntax errors
* Fix env argument
* Add tmp path to allow container writing there
Background why I did this: https://docs.gunicorn.org/en/stable/settings.html#worker-tmp-dir
* Change port back to 5000 as not configurable in container
* Try to add appservice config file for synapse to use
* Inject appservice file
* Correct copied variable name
* Comment out unused app service file injection
would need mounting the appservice file to the synapse container i guess
* Move role before synapse to be able to inject during runtime
* Remove unused parts
* Change default user id to mirror official docs
* Add docs
* Update roles/matrix-cactus-comments/tasks/setup_install.yml
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
* Update roles/matrix-cactus-comments/templates/cactus_appservice.yaml.j2
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
* Generate secrets if necessary, adjust docs
* Rename cactusbot userid
* Shorten salt strings
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
* Use tmpfs instead of persistent mount
* Remove proxy option as it is nonsense
* Add download and serving of cc-client files
* Add documentation on client
* Clarify docs a bit
* Add nginx proxy to required services
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Use container address
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Correct comment of user id
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Use releases or local distributed client
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Move homeserver url to defaults
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Correct truth value
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Add documentation of variables
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
* Tabs vs. spaces
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
* Make nginx root configurable
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Complete ake nginx root configurable
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Fix file permission
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
* Fix lint errors
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
Signed-off-by: Julian-Samuel Gebühr <julian-samuel@gebuehr.net>
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
* appservice: add and use matrix_homeserver_* vars
* appservice: use the new vars
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
* Fix bug that prevented user with external nginx from launch
The backslash was missing and prevented users from starting the bot
* Add necessary config for ext nginx to docs
* Add automatic config for ext nginx, adjust docs
* Remove unneeded and possibly puzzeling documentation
Adds support for: https://src.miscworks.net/fair/matrix-appservice-kakaotalk
This is pretty similar to
https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/1977
which just appeared, but has mostly been done independently.
I've taken some inspiration and did some fixups based on that PR.
Thanks to https://github.com/hnarjis for taking the time to contribute!
Notable differences between this branch compared to that PR:
- better naming and documentation around the "configuration" variables
- no unnecessary (5 sec.) intentional delay when starting `matrix-appservice-kakaotalk-node.service`
- stores configuration in `config/`, not in `data/`
- passes configuration as read-only and starts the bridge with (`--no-update`) to ensure no changes are made to it
- starts containers more securely - with `matrix:matrix` user:group (not `root`) and
reduced capabilities (`--cap-drop=ALL`)
- uses `tcp` for communication between the "node" and the appservice (simpler than sharing unix sockets)
- `registration.yaml` which is closer to the one generated by `matrix-appservice-kakaotalk` (no `de.sorunome.msc2409.push_ephemeral` stuff, etc.)
- `registration.yaml` which is more customizable (customizable bot username and prefix for puppets - see `matrix_appservice_kakaotalk_appservice_bot_username` and `matrix_appservice_kakaotalk_user_prefix`)
- less fragile and more extensible bridge permissions configuration via `matrix_appservice_kakaotalk_bridge_permissions`. Doing `{% if matrix_admin %}` in the bridge configuration sometimes causes syntax problems (I hit some myself) and is not ideal. Other bridges should be redone as well.
- configurable command prefix for the bridge, instead of hardcoding `!kt` (see `matrix_appservice_kakaotalk_command_prefix`)
- logging that is more consistent with the rest of the playbook (console / journald only, no logging to files), as well as configurable log level (via `matrix_appservice_kakaotalk_logging_level`)
- somewhat more detailed documentation (`docs/configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-kakaotalk.md`)
- removed some dead code (data relocation tasks from `tasks/setup_install.yml`, as well as likely unnecessary SQLite -> Postgres migration)
This commit adds a 'matrix-ntfy' role that runs Ntfy server in Docker with
simple configuration, and plumbing to add the role to the playbook.
TODO: documentation, self-check, database persistence.
`localhost` may resolve to `::1` on some IPv6-enabled systems, which will
not work, because we only potentially expose container ports on
`127.0.0.1` when nginx is disabled (`matrix_nginx_proxy_enabled: false`),
not on `::1`.
Fixes https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/1914
* Add matrix-registration-bot
This adds an install and uninstall task plus helpers. The bot is disabled by default.
This commit does not include documentation, yet. In short, the bot can be enabled by adding
matrix_bot_matrix_registration_bot_enabled: true
matrix_bot_matrix_registration_bot_matrix_user_password: "verysecret"
matrix_bot_matrix_registration_bot_matrix_admin_token: "supersecret"
to the host_vars
* Change bot username to bot.matrix-registration-bot following convention
* Address smaller remarks, fix local docker build
* Switch to an env file
* Add environment variables extension for additional config
* Add documentation for the matrix-registration-bot
* Add screenshot on how to obtain admin access token
* Use bot as admin to only have one access token (bot and admin api)
* Use cleaner setting of matrix_synapse_registration_requires_token
* Use config file for cleaner more secure usage
* Delete unneeded env
* Rename vars to make usage clear
* Fix typos/wording and add notice about logging out
* Convert configuration to use |to_json
* Reorder role includes
Nothing should be after `matrix-common-after`.
`matrix-bot-matrix-registration-bot` can probably be anywhere, but it makes sense to put it next to the other `matrix-bot-*` roles.
* Minor group_vars/matrix_servers touchups
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
The `halfshot/matrix-hookshot` container images published to Docker Hub
(as of 2022-04-05, at least) are only available for `amd64`, not for
`arm64`. Self-building on arm64 is necessary.
Related to https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/1728
It should be noted that a `roiarthurb/matrix-hookshot` container image is available,
which is available for the arm64 platform, but that's non-official and doesn't
contain an amd64 build, so it's of limited use.
Related to https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/issues/1682
Previously, when matrix-postgres was disabled, we were setting
`matrix_mautrix_twitter_database_engine` to an invalid empty value.
Now, we always hardcode `matrix_mautrix_twitter_database_engine: postgres`,
but set/unset the database hostname and password values instead.
1.0.2 is the first container image tag that is available as a multi-arch image
with support for linux/amd64, linux/arm64/v8 (arm64) and linux/arm/v7 (arm32),
so self-building is no longer necessary on all these platforms.
4.95-r0-1 is the first container image tag that is available as a multi-arch image
with support for linux/amd64, linux/arm64/v8 (arm64) and linux/arm/v7 (arm32),
so self-building is no longer necessary on all these platforms.
2.2.3 is the first container image tag that is available as a multi-arch image
with support for linux/amd64, linux/arm64/v8 (arm64) and linux/arm/v7 (arm32),
so self-building is no longer necessary on all these platforms.
The goal is to have a single variable which tells us which homeserver
software is in use. Much simpler than having if/elif/elif checks for
variables like (`matrix_synapse_enabled` and `matrix_dendrite_enabled`, etc.)
everywhere.
This change forces ansible to decrypt the variable with ansible-vault if encrypted, to avoid the error '{"msg": "Unexpected templating type error occurred on ({{ matrix_synapse_macaroon_secret_key | password_hash('sha512') }}): secret must be unicode or bytes, not ansible.parsing.yaml.objects.AnsibleVaultEncryptedUnicode"}'
Every other variable in the playbook was found to have no problems with encryption.
The change has no negative impact on non-encrypted matrix_synapse_macaroon_secret_key.
* fix for string concatenation on matrix_synapse_account_threepid_delegates_email and matrix_synapse_account_threepid_delegates_msisdn
* .editorconfig should not be ignored
* Restore .gitignore
Co-authored-by: b <b@b>
Co-authored-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>
This bridge doesn't support SQLite anyway, so it's not necessary
to carry around configuration fields and code for migration from SQLite
to Postgres. There's nothing to migrate.
This commit introduces a new role that downloads and installs the
prometheus community postgres exporter https://github.com/prometheus-community/postgres_exporter.
A new credential is added to matrix_postgres_additional_databases that
allows the exporter access to the database to gather statistics.
A new dashboard was added to the grafana role, with some refactoring
to enable the dashboard only if the new role is enabled.
I've included some basic instructions for how to enable the role in
the Docs section.
In terms of testing, I've tested enabling the role, and disabling
it to make sure it cleans up the container and systemd role.
Expected to have regressed after https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/pull/1008
This patch comes with its own downsides (as described in the comments
for matrix_prometheus_node_exporter_container_http_host_bind_port),
but at least there's:
- no security issue
- metrics remain readable from matrix-prometheus (even if the network metrics are inaccurate)
A better patch is certainly welcome.
Not sure why this had been done in the first place.
It doesn't make any sense.
There's no relation between matrix-nginx-proxy and
prometheus-node-exporter.
This variable was previously undefined in the role and was only getting
defined via `group_vars/matrix_servers`.
We now properly initialize it (and its good default value) in the role
itself.
- add matrix_postgres_backup_databases to be build on top of matrix_postgres_additional_databases
- POSTGRES_DB is now directly set from matrix_postgres_backup_databases while building the templates/env-postgres-backup.j2
People who were disabling matrix-nginx-proxy (in favor of their own
nginx webserver) and also overriding `matrix_federation_public_port`,
found that the generated nginx configuration still hardcoded `8448`,
which forced their nginx server to use that, regardless of the fact
that `matrix_federation_public_port` was pointing elsewhere.
We now allow for the in-container federation port to be configurable,
and also automatically wire things properly.
Also includes the dashboards for Synapse and for Node Exporter.
Again has only been tested on debian amd64 so far, but the grafana docker image is available for arm64 and arm32. Nice.
Basic system stats, to show stuff the synapse metrics
can't show such as resource usage by bridges, etc
Seems to work fine as well.
This too has only been tested on debian amd64 so far
I felt that adding another variable was probably going to be the easiest way to do this. I may end up adding another variable to enable this feature, for consistency with some of the other things.
We do this by creating one more layer of indirection.
First we reach some generic vhost handling matrix.DOMAIN.
A bunch of override rules are added there (capturing traffic to send to
ma1sd, etc). nginx-status and similar generic things also live there.
We then proxy to the homeserver on some other vhost (only Synapse being
available right now, but repointing this to Dendrite or other will be
possible in the future).
Then that homeserver-specific vhost does its thing to proxy to the
homeserver. It may or may not use workers, etc.
Without matrix-corporal, the flow is now:
1. matrix.DOMAIN (matrix-nginx-proxy/matrix-domain.conf)
2. matrix-nginx-proxy/matrix-synapse.conf
3. matrix-synapse
With matrix-corporal enabled, it becomes:
1. matrix.DOMAIN (matrix-nginx-proxy/matrix-domain.conf)
2. matrix-corporal
3. matrix-nginx-proxy/matrix-synapse.conf
4. matrix-synapse
(matrix-corporal gets injected at step 2).
There was a `matrix_nginx_proxy_enabled|default(False)` check, but:
- it didn't seem to work reliably for some reason (hmm)
- referring to a `matrix_nginx_proxy_*` variable from within the
`matrix-synapse` role is not ideal
- exposing always happened on `127.0.0.1`, which may not be good enough
for some rarer setups (where the own webserver is external to the host)
I guess it didn't hurt to do it until now, but it's not great serving
federation APIs on the client-server API port, etc.
matrix-corporal doesn't work yet (still something to be solved in the
future), but its firewalling operations will also be sabotaged
by Client-Server APIs being served on the federation port (it's a way to get around its firewalling).
In short, this makes Synapse a 2nd class citizen,
preparing for a future where it's just one-of-many homeserver software
options.
We also no longer have a default Postgres superuser password,
which improves security.
The changelog explains more as to why this was done
and how to proceed from here.
I had intentionally held it back in 39ea3496a4
until:
- it received more testing (there were a few bugs during the
migration, but now it seems OK)
- this migration guide was written