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diff --git a/INSTALL.md b/INSTALL.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a04524cdc7 --- /dev/null +++ b/INSTALL.md @@ -0,0 +1,487 @@ +* [Installing Synapse](#installing-synapse) + * [Installing from source](#installing-from-source) + * [Platform-Specific Instructions](#platform-specific-instructions) + * [Troubleshooting Installation](#troubleshooting-installation) + * [Prebuilt packages](#prebuilt-packages) +* [Setting up Synapse](#setting-up-synapse) + * [TLS certificates](#tls-certificates) + * [Registering a user](#registering-a-user) + * [Setting up a TURN server](#setting-up-a-turn-server) + * [URL previews](#url-previews) + +# Installing Synapse + +## Installing from source + +(Prebuilt packages are available for some platforms - see [Prebuilt packages](#prebuilt-packages).) + +System requirements: + +- POSIX-compliant system (tested on Linux & OS X) +- Python 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, or 2.7 +- At least 1GB of free RAM if you want to join large public rooms like #matrix:matrix.org + +Synapse is written in Python but some of the libraries it uses are written in +C. So before we can install Synapse itself we need a working C compiler and the +header files for Python C extensions. See [Platform-Specific +Instructions](#platform-specific-instructions) for information on installing +these on various platforms. + +To install the Synapse homeserver run: + +``` +mkdir -p ~/synapse +virtualenv -p python3 ~/synapse/env +source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate +pip install --upgrade pip +pip install --upgrade setuptools +pip install matrix-synapse[all] +``` + +This will download Synapse from [PyPI](https://pypi.org/project/matrix-synapse) +and install it, along with the python libraries it uses, into a virtual environment +under ``~/synapse/env``. Feel free to pick a different directory if you +prefer. + +This Synapse installation can then be later upgraded by using pip again with the +update flag: + +``` +source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate +pip install -U matrix-synapse[all] +``` + +Before you can start Synapse, you will need to generate a configuration +file. To do this, run (in your virtualenv, as before):: + +``` +cd ~/synapse +python -m synapse.app.homeserver \ + --server-name my.domain.name \ + --config-path homeserver.yaml \ + --generate-config \ + --report-stats=[yes|no] +``` + +... substituting an appropriate value for `--server-name`. The server name +determines the "domain" part of user-ids for users on your server: these will +all be of the format `@user:my.domain.name`. It also determines how other +matrix servers will reach yours for Federation. For a test configuration, +set this to the hostname of your server. For a more production-ready setup, you +will probably want to specify your domain (`example.com`) rather than a +matrix-specific hostname here (in the same way that your email address is +probably `user@example.com` rather than `user@email.example.com`) - but +doing so may require more advanced setup. - see [Setting up Federation](README.rst#setting-up-federation). Beware that the server name cannot be changed later. + +This command will generate you a config file that you can then customise, but it will +also generate a set of keys for you. These keys will allow your Home Server to +identify itself to other Home Servers, so don't lose or delete them. It would be +wise to back them up somewhere safe. (If, for whatever reason, you do need to +change your Home Server's keys, you may find that other Home Servers have the +old key cached. If you update the signing key, you should change the name of the +key in the `<server name>.signing.key` file (the second word) to something +different. See the +[spec](https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/latest.html#retrieving-server-keys) +for more information on key management.) + +You will need to give Synapse a TLS certficate before it will start - see [TLS +certificates](#tls-certificates). + +To actually run your new homeserver, pick a working directory for Synapse to +run (e.g. ``~/synapse``), and:: + + cd ~/synapse + source env/bin/activate + synctl start + +### Platform-Specific Instructions + +#### Debian/Ubuntu/Raspbian + +Installing prerequisites on Ubuntu or Debian: + +``` +sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \ + python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 \ + libssl-dev python-virtualenv libjpeg-dev libxslt1-dev +``` + +#### ArchLinux + +Installing prerequisites on ArchLinux: + +``` +sudo pacman -S base-devel python python-pip \ + python-setuptools python-virtualenv sqlite3 +``` + +#### CentOS/Fedora + +Installing prerequisites on CentOS 7 or Fedora 25: + +``` +sudo yum install libtiff-devel libjpeg-devel libzip-devel freetype-devel \ + lcms2-devel libwebp-devel tcl-devel tk-devel redhat-rpm-config \ + python-virtualenv libffi-devel openssl-devel +sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools" +``` + +#### Mac OS X + +Installing prerequisites on Mac OS X: + +``` +xcode-select --install +sudo easy_install pip +sudo pip install virtualenv +brew install pkg-config libffi +``` + +#### OpenSUSE + +Installing prerequisites on openSUSE: + +``` +sudo zypper in -t pattern devel_basis +sudo zypper in python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 python-virtualenv \ + python-devel libffi-devel libopenssl-devel libjpeg62-devel +``` + +#### OpenBSD + +Installing prerequisites on OpenBSD: + +``` +doas pkg_add python libffi py-pip py-setuptools sqlite3 py-virtualenv \ + libxslt jpeg +``` + +There is currently no port for OpenBSD. Additionally, OpenBSD's security +settings require a slightly more difficult installation process. + +XXX: I suspect this is out of date. + +1. Create a new directory in `/usr/local` called `_synapse`. Also, create a + new user called `_synapse` and set that directory as the new user's home. + This is required because, by default, OpenBSD only allows binaries which need + write and execute permissions on the same memory space to be run from + `/usr/local`. +2. `su` to the new `_synapse` user and change to their home directory. +3. Create a new virtualenv: `virtualenv -p python2.7 ~/.synapse` +4. Source the virtualenv configuration located at + `/usr/local/_synapse/.synapse/bin/activate`. This is done in `ksh` by + using the `.` command, rather than `bash`'s `source`. +5. Optionally, use `pip` to install `lxml`, which Synapse needs to parse + webpages for their titles. +6. Use `pip` to install this repository: `pip install matrix-synapse` +7. Optionally, change `_synapse`'s shell to `/bin/false` to reduce the + chance of a compromised Synapse server being used to take over your box. + +After this, you may proceed with the rest of the install directions. + +#### Windows + +If you wish to run or develop Synapse on Windows, the Windows Subsystem For +Linux provides a Linux environment on Windows 10 which is capable of using the +Debian, Fedora, or source installation methods. More information about WSL can +be found at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10 for +Windows 10 and https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-on-server +for Windows Server. + +### Troubleshooting Installation + +XXX a bunch of this is no longer relevant. + +Synapse requires pip 8 or later, so if your OS provides too old a version you +may need to manually upgrade it:: + + sudo pip install --upgrade pip + +Installing may fail with ``Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement pymacaroons-pynacl (from matrix-synapse==0.12.0)``. +You can fix this by manually upgrading pip and virtualenv:: + + sudo pip install --upgrade virtualenv + +You can next rerun ``virtualenv -p python3 synapse`` to update the virtual env. + +Installing may fail during installing virtualenv with ``InsecurePlatformWarning: A true SSLContext object is not available. This prevents urllib3 from configuring SSL appropriately and may cause certain SSL connections to fail. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.org/en/latest/security.html#insecureplatformwarning.`` +You can fix this by manually installing ndg-httpsclient:: + + pip install --upgrade ndg-httpsclient + +Installing may fail with ``mock requires setuptools>=17.1. Aborting installation``. +You can fix this by upgrading setuptools:: + + pip install --upgrade setuptools + +If pip crashes mid-installation for reason (e.g. lost terminal), pip may +refuse to run until you remove the temporary installation directory it +created. To reset the installation:: + + rm -rf /tmp/pip_install_matrix + +pip seems to leak *lots* of memory during installation. For instance, a Linux +host with 512MB of RAM may run out of memory whilst installing Twisted. If this +happens, you will have to individually install the dependencies which are +failing, e.g.:: + + pip install twisted + +## Prebuilt packages + +As an alternative to installing from source, prebuilt packages are available +for a number of platforms. + +### Docker images and Ansible playbooks + +There is an offical synapse image available at +https://hub.docker.com/r/matrixdotorg/synapse which can be used with +the docker-compose file available at [contrib/docker](contrib/docker). Further information on +this including configuration options is available in the README on +hub.docker.com. + +Alternatively, Andreas Peters (previously Silvio Fricke) has contributed a +Dockerfile to automate a synapse server in a single Docker image, at +https://hub.docker.com/r/avhost/docker-matrix/tags/ + +Slavi Pantaleev has created an Ansible playbook, +which installs the offical Docker image of Matrix Synapse +along with many other Matrix-related services (Postgres database, riot-web, coturn, mxisd, SSL support, etc.). +For more details, see +https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy + + +### Debian/Ubuntu + +#### Matrix.org packages + +Matrix.org provides Debian/Ubuntu packages of the latest stable version of +Synapse via https://matrix.org/packages/debian/. To use them: + +``` +sudo apt install -y lsb-release curl apt-transport-https +echo "deb https://matrix.org/packages/debian `lsb_release -cs` main" | + sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/matrix-org.list +curl "https://matrix.org/packages/debian/repo-key.asc" | + sudo apt-key add - +sudo apt update +sudo apt install matrix-synapse-py3 +``` + +#### Downstream Debian/Ubuntu packages + +For `buster` and `sid`, Synapse is available in the Debian repositories and +it should be possible to install it with simply: + +``` + sudo apt install matrix-synapse +``` + +There is also a version of `matrix-synapse` in `stretch-backports`. Please see +the [Debian documentation on +backports](https://backports.debian.org/Instructions/) for information on how +to use them. + +We do not recommend using the packages in downstream Ubuntu at this time, as +they are old and suffer from known security vulnerabilities. + +### Fedora + +Synapse is in the Fedora repositories as `matrix-synapse`: + +``` +sudo dnf install matrix-synapse +``` + +Oleg Girko provides Fedora RPMs at +https://obs.infoserver.lv/project/monitor/matrix-synapse + +### OpenSUSE + +Synapse is in the OpenSUSE repositories as `matrix-synapse`: + +``` +sudo zypper install matrix-synapse +``` + +### SUSE Linux Enterprise Server + +Unofficial package are built for SLES 15 in the openSUSE:Backports:SLE-15 repository at +https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Backports:/SLE-15/standard/ + +### ArchLinux + +The quickest way to get up and running with ArchLinux is probably with the community package +https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/any/matrix-synapse/, which should pull in most of +the necessary dependencies. + +pip may be outdated (6.0.7-1 and needs to be upgraded to 6.0.8-1 ): + +``` +sudo pip install --upgrade pip +``` + +If you encounter an error with lib bcrypt causing an Wrong ELF Class: +ELFCLASS32 (x64 Systems), you may need to reinstall py-bcrypt to correctly +compile it under the right architecture. (This should not be needed if +installing under virtualenv): + +``` +sudo pip uninstall py-bcrypt +sudo pip install py-bcrypt +``` + +### FreeBSD + +Synapse can be installed via FreeBSD Ports or Packages contributed by Brendan Molloy from: + + - Ports: `cd /usr/ports/net-im/py-matrix-synapse && make install clean` + - Packages: `pkg install py27-matrix-synapse` + + +### NixOS + +Robin Lambertz has packaged Synapse for NixOS at: +https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/nixos/modules/services/misc/matrix-synapse.nix + +# Setting up Synapse + +Once you have installed synapse as above, you will need to configure it. + +## TLS certificates + +The default configuration exposes two HTTP ports: 8008 and 8448. Port 8008 is +configured without TLS; it should be behind a reverse proxy for TLS/SSL +termination on port 443 which in turn should be used for clients. Port 8448 +is configured to use TLS for Federation with a self-signed or verified +certificate, but please be aware that a valid certificate will be required in +Synapse v1.0. + +If you would like to use your own certificates, you can do so by changing +`tls_certificate_path` and `tls_private_key_path` in `homeserver.yaml`; +alternatively, you can use a reverse-proxy. Apart from port 8448 using TLS, +both ports are the same in the default configuration. + +### ACME setup + +Synapse v1.0 will require valid TLS certificates for communication between servers +(port `8448` by default) in addition to those that are client-facing (port +`443`). In the case that your `server_name` config variable is the same as +the hostname that the client connects to, then the same certificate can be +used between client and federation ports without issue. Synapse v0.99.0+ +**will provision server-to-server certificates automatically for you for +free** through [Let's Encrypt](https://letsencrypt.org/) if you tell it to. + +In order for Synapse to complete the ACME challenge to provision a +certificate, it needs access to port 80. Typically listening on port 80 is +only granted to applications running as root. There are thus two solutions to +this problem. + +#### Using a reverse proxy + +A reverse proxy such as Apache or nginx allows a single process (the web +server) to listen on port 80 and proxy traffic to the appropriate program +running on your server. It is the recommended method for setting up ACME as +it allows you to use your existing webserver while also allowing Synapse to +provision certificates as needed. + +For nginx users, add the following line to your existing `server` block: + +``` +location /.well-known/acme-challenge { + proxy_pass http://localhost:8009/; +} +``` + +For Apache, add the following to your existing webserver config:: + +``` +ProxyPass /.well-known/acme-challenge http://localhost:8009/.well-known/acme-challenge +``` + +Make sure to restart/reload your webserver after making changes. + + +#### Authbind + +`authbind` allows a program which does not run as root to bind to +low-numbered ports in a controlled way. The setup is simpler, but requires a +webserver not to already be running on port 80. **This includes every time +Synapse renews a certificate**, which may be cumbersome if you usually run a +web server on port 80. Nevertheless, if you're sure port 80 is not being used +for any other purpose then all that is necessary is the following: + +Install `authbind`. For example, on Debian/Ubuntu: + +``` +sudo apt-get install authbind +``` + +Allow `authbind` to bind port 80: + +``` +sudo touch /etc/authbind/byport/80 +sudo chmod 777 /etc/authbind/byport/80 +``` + +When Synapse is started, use the following syntax:: + +``` +authbind --deep <synapse start command> +``` + +Finally, once Synapse is able to listen on port 80 for ACME challenge +requests, it must be told to perform ACME provisioning by setting `enabled` +to true under the `acme` section in `homeserver.yaml`: + +``` +acme: + enabled: true +``` + +## Registering a user + +You will need at least one user on your server in order to use a Matrix +client. Users can be registered either via a Matrix client, or via a +commandline script. + +To get started, it is easiest to use the command line to register new +users. This can be done as follows: + +``` +$ source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate +$ synctl start # if not already running +$ register_new_matrix_user -c homeserver.yaml https://localhost:8448 +New user localpart: erikj +Password: +Confirm password: +Make admin [no]: +Success! +``` + +This process uses a setting ``registration_shared_secret`` in +``homeserver.yaml``, which is shared between Synapse itself and the +``register_new_matrix_user`` script. It doesn't matter what it is (a random +value is generated by ``--generate-config``), but it should be kept secret, as +anyone with knowledge of it can register users on your server even if +``enable_registration`` is ``false``. + +## Setting up a TURN server + +For reliable VoIP calls to be routed via this homeserver, you MUST configure +a TURN server. See [docs/turn-howto.rst](docs/turn-howto.rst) for details. + +## URL previews + +Synapse includes support for previewing URLs, which is disabled by default. To +turn it on you must enable the ``url_preview_enabled: True`` config parameter +and explicitly specify the IP ranges that Synapse is not allowed to spider for +previewing in the ``url_preview_ip_range_blacklist`` configuration parameter. +This is critical from a security perspective to stop arbitrary Matrix users +spidering 'internal' URLs on your network. At the very least we recommend that +your loopback and RFC1918 IP addresses are blacklisted. + +This also requires the optional lxml and netaddr python dependencies to be +installed. This in turn requires the libxml2 library to be available - on +Debian/Ubuntu this means ``apt-get install libxml2-dev``, or equivalent for +your OS. diff --git a/README.rst b/README.rst index 9e3d85de4c..8c5220be88 100644 --- a/README.rst +++ b/README.rst @@ -81,261 +81,8 @@ Thanks for using Matrix! Synapse Installation ==================== -Synapse is the reference Python/Twisted Matrix homeserver implementation. +For details on how to install synapse, see `<INSTALL.md>`_. -System requirements: - -- POSIX-compliant system (tested on Linux & OS X) -- Python 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, or 2.7 -- At least 1GB of free RAM if you want to join large public rooms like #matrix:matrix.org - -Installing from source ----------------------- - -(Prebuilt packages are available for some platforms - see `Platform-Specific -Instructions`_.) - -Synapse is written in Python but some of the libraries it uses are written in -C. So before we can install Synapse itself we need a working C compiler and the -header files for Python C extensions. - -Installing prerequisites on Ubuntu or Debian:: - - sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \ - python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 \ - libssl-dev python-virtualenv libjpeg-dev libxslt1-dev - -Installing prerequisites on ArchLinux:: - - sudo pacman -S base-devel python python-pip \ - python-setuptools python-virtualenv sqlite3 - -Installing prerequisites on CentOS 7 or Fedora 25:: - - sudo yum install libtiff-devel libjpeg-devel libzip-devel freetype-devel \ - lcms2-devel libwebp-devel tcl-devel tk-devel redhat-rpm-config \ - python-virtualenv libffi-devel openssl-devel - sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools" - -Installing prerequisites on Mac OS X:: - - xcode-select --install - sudo easy_install pip - sudo pip install virtualenv - brew install pkg-config libffi - -Installing prerequisites on Raspbian:: - - sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libffi-dev \ - python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 \ - libssl-dev python-virtualenv libjpeg-dev - -Installing prerequisites on openSUSE:: - - sudo zypper in -t pattern devel_basis - sudo zypper in python-pip python-setuptools sqlite3 python-virtualenv \ - python-devel libffi-devel libopenssl-devel libjpeg62-devel - -Installing prerequisites on OpenBSD:: - - doas pkg_add python libffi py-pip py-setuptools sqlite3 py-virtualenv \ - libxslt jpeg - -To install the Synapse homeserver run:: - - mkdir -p ~/synapse - virtualenv -p python3 ~/synapse/env - source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate - pip install --upgrade pip - pip install --upgrade setuptools - pip install matrix-synapse[all] - -This installs Synapse, along with the libraries it uses, into a virtual -environment under ``~/synapse/env``. Feel free to pick a different directory -if you prefer. - -This Synapse installation can then be later upgraded by using pip again with the -update flag:: - - source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate - pip install -U matrix-synapse[all] - -In case of problems, please see the _`Troubleshooting` section below. - -There is an offical synapse image available at -https://hub.docker.com/r/matrixdotorg/synapse/tags/ which can be used with -the docker-compose file available at `contrib/docker <contrib/docker>`_. Further information on -this including configuration options is available in the README on -hub.docker.com. - -Alternatively, Andreas Peters (previously Silvio Fricke) has contributed a -Dockerfile to automate a synapse server in a single Docker image, at -https://hub.docker.com/r/avhost/docker-matrix/tags/ - -Slavi Pantaleev has created an Ansible playbook, -which installs the offical Docker image of Matrix Synapse -along with many other Matrix-related services (Postgres database, riot-web, coturn, mxisd, SSL support, etc.). -For more details, see -https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy - -Configuring Synapse -------------------- - -Before you can start Synapse, you will need to generate a configuration -file. To do this, run (in your virtualenv, as before):: - - cd ~/synapse - python -m synapse.app.homeserver \ - --server-name my.domain.name \ - --config-path homeserver.yaml \ - --generate-config \ - --report-stats=[yes|no] - -... substituting an appropriate value for ``--server-name``. The server name -determines the "domain" part of user-ids for users on your server: these will -all be of the format ``@user:my.domain.name``. It also determines how other -matrix servers will reach yours for `Federation`_. For a test configuration, -set this to the hostname of your server. For a more production-ready setup, you -will probably want to specify your domain (``example.com``) rather than a -matrix-specific hostname here (in the same way that your email address is -probably ``user@example.com`` rather than ``user@email.example.com``) - but -doing so may require more advanced setup - see `Setting up -Federation`_. Beware that the server name cannot be changed later. - -This command will generate you a config file that you can then customise, but it will -also generate a set of keys for you. These keys will allow your Home Server to -identify itself to other Home Servers, so don't lose or delete them. It would be -wise to back them up somewhere safe. (If, for whatever reason, you do need to -change your Home Server's keys, you may find that other Home Servers have the -old key cached. If you update the signing key, you should change the name of the -key in the ``<server name>.signing.key`` file (the second word) to something -different. See `the spec`__ for more information on key management.) - -.. __: `key_management`_ - -The default configuration exposes two HTTP ports: 8008 and 8448. Port 8008 is -configured without TLS; it should be behind a reverse proxy for TLS/SSL -termination on port 443 which in turn should be used for clients. Port 8448 -is configured to use TLS for `Federation`_ with a self-signed or verified -certificate, but please be aware that a valid certificate will be required in -Synapse v1.0. - -If you would like to use your own certificates, you can do so by changing -``tls_certificate_path`` and ``tls_private_key_path`` in ``homeserver.yaml``; -alternatively, you can use a reverse-proxy. Apart from port 8448 using TLS, -both ports are the same in the default configuration. - - -ACME setup ----------- - -Synapse v1.0 will require valid TLS certificates for communication between servers -(port ``8448`` by default) in addition to those that are client-facing (port -``443``). In the case that your `server_name` config variable is the same as -the hostname that the client connects to, then the same certificate can be -used between client and federation ports without issue. Synapse v0.99.0+ -**will provision server-to-server certificates automatically for you for -free** through `Let's Encrypt -<https://letsencrypt.org/>`_ if you tell it to. - -In order for Synapse to complete the ACME challenge to provision a -certificate, it needs access to port 80. Typically listening on port 80 is -only granted to applications running as root. There are thus two solutions to -this problem. - -**Using a reverse proxy** - -A reverse proxy such as Apache or nginx allows a single process (the web -server) to listen on port 80 and proxy traffic to the appropriate program -running on your server. It is the recommended method for setting up ACME as -it allows you to use your existing webserver while also allowing Synapse to -provision certificates as needed. - -For nginx users, add the following line to your existing ``server`` block:: - - location /.well-known/acme-challenge { - proxy_pass http://localhost:8009/; - } - -For Apache, add the following to your existing webserver config:: - - ProxyPass /.well-known/acme-challenge http://localhost:8009/.well-known/acme-challenge - -Make sure to restart/reload your webserver after making changes. - - -**Authbind** - -``authbind`` allows a program which does not run as root to bind to -low-numbered ports in a controlled way. The setup is simpler, but requires a -webserver not to already be running on port 80. **This includes every time -Synapse renews a certificate**, which may be cumbersome if you usually run a -web server on port 80. Nevertheless, if you're sure port 80 is not being used -for any other purpose then all that is necessary is the following: - -Install ``authbind``. For example, on Debian/Ubuntu:: - - sudo apt-get install authbind - -Allow ``authbind`` to bind port 80:: - - sudo touch /etc/authbind/byport/80 - sudo chmod 777 /etc/authbind/byport/80 - -When Synapse is started, use the following syntax:: - - authbind --deep <synapse start command> - -Finally, once Synapse's is able to listen on port 80 for ACME challenge -requests, it must be told to perform ACME provisioning by setting ``enabled`` -to true under the ``acme`` section in ``homeserver.yaml``:: - - acme: - enabled: true - - -Registering a user ------------------- - -You will need at least one user on your server in order to use a Matrix -client. Users can be registered either `via a Matrix client`__, or via a -commandline script. - -.. __: `client-user-reg`_ - -To get started, it is easiest to use the command line to register new users:: - - $ source ~/synapse/env/bin/activate - $ synctl start # if not already running - $ register_new_matrix_user -c homeserver.yaml https://localhost:8448 - New user localpart: erikj - Password: - Confirm password: - Make admin [no]: - Success! - -This process uses a setting ``registration_shared_secret`` in -``homeserver.yaml``, which is shared between Synapse itself and the -``register_new_matrix_user`` script. It doesn't matter what it is (a random -value is generated by ``--generate-config``), but it should be kept secret, as -anyone with knowledge of it can register users on your server even if -``enable_registration`` is ``false``. - -Setting up a TURN server ------------------------- - -For reliable VoIP calls to be routed via this homeserver, you MUST configure -a TURN server. See `<docs/turn-howto.rst>`_ for details. - -Running Synapse -=============== - -To actually run your new homeserver, pick a working directory for Synapse to -run (e.g. ``~/synapse``), and:: - - cd ~/synapse - source env/bin/activate - synctl start Connecting to Synapse from a client =================================== @@ -397,177 +144,11 @@ server on the same domain. See https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/1977 and https://developer.github.com/changes/2014-04-25-user-content-security for more details. - -Platform-Specific Instructions -============================== - -Debian/Ubuntu -------------- - -Matrix.org packages -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Matrix.org provides Debian/Ubuntu packages of the latest stable version of -Synapse via https://matrix.org/packages/debian/. To use them:: - - sudo apt install -y lsb-release curl apt-transport-https - echo "deb https://matrix.org/packages/debian `lsb_release -cs` main" | - sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/matrix-org.list - curl "https://matrix.org/packages/debian/repo-key.asc" | - sudo apt-key add - - sudo apt update - sudo apt install matrix-synapse-py3 - -Downstream Debian/Ubuntu packages -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -For ``buster`` and ``sid``, Synapse is available in the Debian repositories and -it should be possible to install it with simply:: - - sudo apt install matrix-synapse - -There is also a version of ``matrix-synapse`` in ``stretch-backports``. Please -see the `Debian documentation on backports -<https://backports.debian.org/Instructions/>`_ for information on how to use -them. - -We do not recommend using the packages in downstream Ubuntu at this time, as -they are old and suffer from known security vulnerabilities. - -Fedora ------- - -Synapse is in the Fedora repositories as ``matrix-synapse``:: - - sudo dnf install matrix-synapse - -Oleg Girko provides Fedora RPMs at -https://obs.infoserver.lv/project/monitor/matrix-synapse - -OpenSUSE --------- - -Synapse is in the OpenSUSE repositories as ``matrix-synapse``:: - - sudo zypper install matrix-synapse - -SUSE Linux Enterprise Server ----------------------------- - -Unofficial package are built for SLES 15 in the openSUSE:Backports:SLE-15 repository at -https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Backports:/SLE-15/standard/ - -ArchLinux ---------- - -The quickest way to get up and running with ArchLinux is probably with the community package -https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/any/matrix-synapse/, which should pull in most of -the necessary dependencies. - -pip may be outdated (6.0.7-1 and needs to be upgraded to 6.0.8-1 ):: - - sudo pip install --upgrade pip - -If you encounter an error with lib bcrypt causing an Wrong ELF Class: -ELFCLASS32 (x64 Systems), you may need to reinstall py-bcrypt to correctly -compile it under the right architecture. (This should not be needed if -installing under virtualenv):: - - sudo pip uninstall py-bcrypt - sudo pip install py-bcrypt - -FreeBSD -------- - -Synapse can be installed via FreeBSD Ports or Packages contributed by Brendan Molloy from: - - - Ports: ``cd /usr/ports/net-im/py-matrix-synapse && make install clean`` - - Packages: ``pkg install py27-matrix-synapse`` - - -OpenBSD -------- - -There is currently no port for OpenBSD. Additionally, OpenBSD's security -settings require a slightly more difficult installation process. - -1) Create a new directory in ``/usr/local`` called ``_synapse``. Also, create a - new user called ``_synapse`` and set that directory as the new user's home. - This is required because, by default, OpenBSD only allows binaries which need - write and execute permissions on the same memory space to be run from - ``/usr/local``. -2) ``su`` to the new ``_synapse`` user and change to their home directory. -3) Create a new virtualenv: ``virtualenv -p python2.7 ~/.synapse`` -4) Source the virtualenv configuration located at - ``/usr/local/_synapse/.synapse/bin/activate``. This is done in ``ksh`` by - using the ``.`` command, rather than ``bash``'s ``source``. -5) Optionally, use ``pip`` to install ``lxml``, which Synapse needs to parse - webpages for their titles. -6) Use ``pip`` to install this repository: ``pip install matrix-synapse`` -7) Optionally, change ``_synapse``'s shell to ``/bin/false`` to reduce the - chance of a compromised Synapse server being used to take over your box. - -After this, you may proceed with the rest of the install directions. - -NixOS ------ - -Robin Lambertz has packaged Synapse for NixOS at: -https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/blob/master/nixos/modules/services/misc/matrix-synapse.nix - -Windows Install ---------------- - -If you wish to run or develop Synapse on Windows, the Windows Subsystem For -Linux provides a Linux environment on Windows 10 which is capable of using the -Debian, Fedora, or source installation methods. More information about WSL can -be found at https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-win10 for -Windows 10 and https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/wsl/install-on-server -for Windows Server. - Troubleshooting =============== -Troubleshooting Installation ----------------------------- - -Synapse requires pip 8 or later, so if your OS provides too old a version you -may need to manually upgrade it:: - - sudo pip install --upgrade pip - -Installing may fail with ``Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement pymacaroons-pynacl (from matrix-synapse==0.12.0)``. -You can fix this by manually upgrading pip and virtualenv:: - - sudo pip install --upgrade virtualenv - -You can next rerun ``virtualenv -p python3 synapse`` to update the virtual env. - -Installing may fail during installing virtualenv with ``InsecurePlatformWarning: A true SSLContext object is not available. This prevents urllib3 from configuring SSL appropriately and may cause certain SSL connections to fail. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.org/en/latest/security.html#insecureplatformwarning.`` -You can fix this by manually installing ndg-httpsclient:: - - pip install --upgrade ndg-httpsclient - -Installing may fail with ``mock requires setuptools>=17.1. Aborting installation``. -You can fix this by upgrading setuptools:: - - pip install --upgrade setuptools - -If pip crashes mid-installation for reason (e.g. lost terminal), pip may -refuse to run until you remove the temporary installation directory it -created. To reset the installation:: - - rm -rf /tmp/pip_install_matrix - -pip seems to leak *lots* of memory during installation. For instance, a Linux -host with 512MB of RAM may run out of memory whilst installing Twisted. If this -happens, you will have to individually install the dependencies which are -failing, e.g.:: - - pip install twisted - Running out of File Handles -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +--------------------------- If synapse runs out of filehandles, it typically fails badly - live-locking at 100% CPU, and/or failing to accept new TCP connections (blocking the @@ -609,7 +190,7 @@ Federation is the process by which users on different servers can participate in the same room. For this to work, those other servers must be able to contact yours to send messages. -As explained in `Configuring synapse`_, the ``server_name`` in your +The ``server_name`` in your ``homeserver.yaml`` file determines the way that other servers will reach yours. By default, they will treat it as a hostname and try to connect to port 8448. This is easy to set up and will work with the default configuration, @@ -796,24 +377,6 @@ an email address with your account, or send an invite to another user via their email address. -URL Previews -============ - -Synapse 0.15.0 introduces a new API for previewing URLs at -``/_matrix/media/r0/preview_url``. This is disabled by default. To turn it on -you must enable the ``url_preview_enabled: True`` config parameter and -explicitly specify the IP ranges that Synapse is not allowed to spider for -previewing in the ``url_preview_ip_range_blacklist`` configuration parameter. -This is critical from a security perspective to stop arbitrary Matrix users -spidering 'internal' URLs on your network. At the very least we recommend that -your loopback and RFC1918 IP addresses are blacklisted. - -This also requires the optional lxml and netaddr python dependencies to be -installed. This in turn requires the libxml2 library to be available - on -Debian/Ubuntu this means ``apt-get install libxml2-dev``, or equivalent for -your OS. - - Password reset ============== @@ -915,5 +478,3 @@ by installing the ``libjemalloc1`` package and adding this line to ``/etc/default/matrix-synapse``:: LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libjemalloc.so.1 - -.. _`key_management`: https://matrix.org/docs/spec/server_server/unstable.html#retrieving-server-keys |