summary refs log tree commit diff
path: root/docs/workers.rst
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorMatthew Hodgson <matthew@matrix.org>2018-05-29 00:25:22 +0100
committerMatthew Hodgson <matthew@matrix.org>2018-05-29 00:25:22 +0100
commit7a6df013cc8a128278d2ce7e5eb569e0b424f9b0 (patch)
tree5de624a65953eb96ab67274462d850a88c0cce3c /docs/workers.rst
parentmake lazy_load_members configurable in filters (diff)
parentMerge pull request #3256 from matrix-org/3218-official-prom (diff)
downloadsynapse-7a6df013cc8a128278d2ce7e5eb569e0b424f9b0.tar.xz
merge develop
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/workers.rst')
-rw-r--r--docs/workers.rst11
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/docs/workers.rst b/docs/workers.rst
index dee04bbf3e..1d521b9ec5 100644
--- a/docs/workers.rst
+++ b/docs/workers.rst
@@ -55,7 +55,12 @@ synapse process.)
 
 You then create a set of configs for the various worker processes.  These
 should be worker configuration files, and should be stored in a dedicated
-subdirectory, to allow synctl to manipulate them.
+subdirectory, to allow synctl to manipulate them. An additional configuration
+for the master synapse process will need to be created because the process will
+not be started automatically. That configuration should look like this::
+
+    worker_app: synapse.app.homeserver
+    daemonize: true
 
 Each worker configuration file inherits the configuration of the main homeserver
 configuration file.  You can then override configuration specific to that worker,
@@ -230,9 +235,11 @@ file. For example::
 ``synapse.app.event_creator``
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
-Handles non-state event creation. It can handle REST endpoints matching:
+Handles some event creation. It can handle REST endpoints matching::
 
     ^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/rooms/.*/send
+    ^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/rooms/.*/(join|invite|leave|ban|unban|kick)$
+    ^/_matrix/client/(api/v1|r0|unstable)/join/
 
 It will create events locally and then send them on to the main synapse
 instance to be persisted and handled.