# vim:ft=yaml ## Server ## # The domain name of the server, with optional explicit port. # This is used by remote servers to connect to this server, # e.g. matrix.org, localhost:8080, etc. # This is also the last part of your UserID. # # This is set in /etc/matrix-synapse/conf.d/server_name.yaml for Debian installations. # server_name: "SERVERNAME" # When running as a daemon, the file to store the pid in pid_file: "/var/run/matrix-synapse.pid" # CPU affinity mask. Setting this restricts the CPUs on which the # process will be scheduled. It is represented as a bitmask, with the # lowest order bit corresponding to the first logical CPU and the # highest order bit corresponding to the last logical CPU. Not all CPUs # may exist on a given system but a mask may specify more CPUs than are # present. # # For example: # 0x00000001 is processor #0, # 0x00000003 is processors #0 and #1, # 0xFFFFFFFF is all processors (#0 through #31). # # Pinning a Python process to a single CPU is desirable, because Python # is inherently single-threaded due to the GIL, and can suffer a # 30-40% slowdown due to cache blow-out and thread context switching # if the scheduler happens to schedule the underlying threads across # different cores. See # https://www.mirantis.com/blog/improve-performance-python-programs-restricting-single-cpu/. # # This setting requires the affinity package to be installed! # #cpu_affinity: 0xFFFFFFFF # The path to the web client which will be served at /_matrix/client/ # if 'webclient' is configured under the 'listeners' configuration. # web_client_location: "/var/www/riot" # The public-facing base URL that clients use to access this HS # (not including _matrix/...). This is the same URL a user would # enter into the 'custom HS URL' field on their client. If you # use synapse with a reverse proxy, this should be the URL to reach # synapse via the proxy. # public_baseurl: https://{{ matrix_domain }} # Set the soft limit on the number of file descriptors synapse can use # Zero is used to indicate synapse should set the soft limit to the # hard limit. soft_file_limit: 0 # Set to false to disable presence tracking on this homeserver. use_presence: true # The GC threshold parameters to pass to `gc.set_threshold`, if defined # #gc_thresholds: [700, 10, 10] # Set the limit on the returned events in the timeline in the get # and sync operations. The default value is -1, means no upper limit. # #filter_timeline_limit: 5000 # Whether room invites to users on this server should be blocked # (except those sent by local server admins). The default is False. # #block_non_admin_invites: True # Room searching # # If disabled, new messages will not be indexed for searching and users # will receive errors when searching for messages. Defaults to enabled. # #enable_search: false # Restrict federation to the following whitelist of domains. # N.B. we recommend also firewalling your federation listener to limit # inbound federation traffic as early as possible, rather than relying # purely on this application-layer restriction. If not specified, the # default is to whitelist everything. # #federation_domain_whitelist: # - lon.example.com # - nyc.example.com # - syd.example.com # List of ports that Synapse should listen on, their purpose and their # configuration. # # Options for each listener include: # # port: the TCP port to bind to # # bind_addresses: a list of local addresses to listen on. The default is # 'all local interfaces'. # # type: the type of listener. Normally 'http', but other valid options are: # 'manhole' (see docs/manhole.md), # 'metrics' (see docs/metrics-howto.rst), # 'replication' (see docs/workers.rst). # # tls: set to true to enable TLS for this listener. Will use the TLS # key/cert specified in tls_private_key_path / tls_certificate_path. # # x_forwarded: Only valid for an 'http' listener. Set to true to use the # X-Forwarded-For header as the client IP. Useful when Synapse is # behind a reverse-proxy. # # resources: Only valid for an 'http' listener. A list of resources to host # on this port. Options for each resource are: # # names: a list of names of HTTP resources. See below for a list of # valid resource names. # # compress: set to true to enable HTTP comression for this resource. # # additional_resources: Only valid for an 'http' listener. A map of # additional endpoints which should be loaded via dynamic modules. # # Valid resource names are: # # client: the client-server API (/_matrix/client). Also implies 'media' and # 'static'. # # consent: user consent forms (/_matrix/consent). See # docs/consent_tracking.md. # # federation: the server-server API (/_matrix/federation). Also implies # 'media', 'keys', 'openid' # # keys: the key discovery API (/_matrix/keys). # # media: the media API (/_matrix/media). # # metrics: the metrics interface. See docs/metrics-howto.rst. # # openid: OpenID authentication. # # replication: the HTTP replication API (/_synapse/replication). See # docs/workers.rst. # # static: static resources under synapse/static (/_matrix/static). (Mostly # useful for 'fallback authentication'.) # # webclient: A web client. Requires web_client_location to be set. # listeners: # TLS-enabled listener: for when matrix traffic is sent directly to synapse. # # Disabled by default. To enable it, uncomment the following. (Note that you # will also need to give Synapse a TLS key and certificate: see the TLS section # below.) # #- port: 8448 # type: http # tls: true # bind_addresses: # - '::' # # resources: # - names: [client, federation, webclient] # Unsecure HTTP listener: for when matrix traffic passes through a reverse proxy # that unwraps TLS. # # If you plan to use a reverse proxy, please see # https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/reverse_proxy.rst. # - port: 8008 tls: false bind_addresses: ['::1', '127.0.0.1'] type: http x_forwarded: true resources: - names: [client, federation, webclient] compress: false # example additonal_resources: # #additional_resources: # "/_matrix/my/custom/endpoint": # module: my_module.CustomRequestHandler # config: {} # Turn on the twisted ssh manhole service on localhost on the given # port. # #- port: 9000 # bind_addresses: ['::1', '127.0.0.1'] # type: manhole ## Homeserver blocking ## # How to reach the server admin, used in ResourceLimitError # admin_contact: 'mailto:{{ synapse_admin }}' # Global blocking # #hs_disabled: False #hs_disabled_message: 'Human readable reason for why the HS is blocked' #hs_disabled_limit_type: 'error code(str), to help clients decode reason' # Monthly Active User Blocking # #limit_usage_by_mau: False #max_mau_value: 50 #mau_trial_days: 2 # If enabled, the metrics for the number of monthly active users will # be populated, however no one will be limited. If limit_usage_by_mau # is true, this is implied to be true. # #mau_stats_only: False # Sometimes the server admin will want to ensure certain accounts are # never blocked by mau checking. These accounts are specified here. # #mau_limit_reserved_threepids: # - medium: 'email' # address: 'reserved_user@example.com' ## TLS ## # PEM-encoded X509 certificate for TLS. # This certificate, as of Synapse 1.0, will need to be a valid and verifiable # certificate, signed by a recognised Certificate Authority. # # See 'ACME support' below to enable auto-provisioning this certificate via # Let's Encrypt. # tls_certificate_path: "/etc/letsencrypt/live/{{ domain }}/cert.pem" # PEM-encoded private key for TLS # tls_private_key_path: "/etc/letsencrypt/live/{{ domain }}/privkey.pem" # ACME support: This will configure Synapse to request a valid TLS certificate # for your configured `server_name` via Let's Encrypt. # # Note that provisioning a certificate in this way requires port 80 to be # routed to Synapse so that it can complete the http-01 ACME challenge. # By default, if you enable ACME support, Synapse will attempt to listen on # port 80 for incoming http-01 challenges - however, this will likely fail # with 'Permission denied' or a similar error. # # There are a couple of potential solutions to this: # # * If you already have an Apache, Nginx, or similar listening on port 80, # you can configure Synapse to use an alternate port, and have your web # server forward the requests. For example, assuming you set 'port: 8009' # below, on Apache, you would write: # # ProxyPass /.well-known/acme-challenge http://localhost:8009/.well-known/acme-challenge # # * Alternatively, you can use something like `authbind` to give Synapse # permission to listen on port 80. # acme: # ACME support is disabled by default. Uncomment the following line # (and tls_certificate_path and tls_private_key_path above) to enable it. # #enabled: true # Endpoint to use to request certificates. If you only want to test, # use Let's Encrypt's staging url: # https://acme-staging.api.letsencrypt.org/directory # #url: https://acme-v01.api.letsencrypt.org/directory # Port number to listen on for the HTTP-01 challenge. Change this if # you are forwarding connections through Apache/Nginx/etc. # #port: 80 # Local addresses to listen on for incoming connections. # Again, you may want to change this if you are forwarding connections # through Apache/Nginx/etc. # #bind_addresses: ['::', '0.0.0.0'] # How many days remaining on a certificate before it is renewed. # #reprovision_threshold: 30 # The domain that the certificate should be for. Normally this # should be the same as your Matrix domain (i.e., 'server_name'), but, # by putting a file at 'https:///.well-known/matrix/server', # you can delegate incoming traffic to another server. If you do that, # you should give the target of the delegation here. # # For example: if your 'server_name' is 'example.com', but # 'https://example.com/.well-known/matrix/server' delegates to # 'matrix.example.com', you should put 'matrix.example.com' here. # # If not set, defaults to your 'server_name'. # #domain: matrix.example.com # List of allowed TLS fingerprints for this server to publish along # with the signing keys for this server. Other matrix servers that # make HTTPS requests to this server will check that the TLS # certificates returned by this server match one of the fingerprints. # # Synapse automatically adds the fingerprint of its own certificate # to the list. So if federation traffic is handled directly by synapse # then no modification to the list is required. # # If synapse is run behind a load balancer that handles the TLS then it # will be necessary to add the fingerprints of the certificates used by # the loadbalancers to this list if they are different to the one # synapse is using. # # Homeservers are permitted to cache the list of TLS fingerprints # returned in the key responses up to the "valid_until_ts" returned in # key. It may be necessary to publish the fingerprints of a new # certificate and wait until the "valid_until_ts" of the previous key # responses have passed before deploying it. # # You can calculate a fingerprint from a given TLS listener via: # openssl s_client -connect $host:$port < /dev/null 2> /dev/null | # openssl x509 -outform DER | openssl sha256 -binary | base64 | tr -d '=' # or by checking matrix.org/federationtester/api/report?server_name=$host # #tls_fingerprints: [{"sha256": ""}] # Database configuration database: name: psycopg2 args: user: {{ synapse_db_username }} password: {{ synapse_db_password }} database: {{ synapse_db_database }} host: localhost cp_min: 5 cp_max: 10 # Number of events to cache in memory. event_cache_size: "10K" # A yaml python logging config file # log_config: "/etc/matrix-synapse/log.yaml" ## Ratelimiting ## # Number of messages a client can send per second # rc_messages_per_second: 0.2 # Number of message a client can send before being throttled # rc_message_burst_count: 10.0 # The federation window size in milliseconds # federation_rc_window_size: 1000 # The number of federation requests from a single server in a window # before the server will delay processing the request. # federation_rc_sleep_limit: 10 # The duration in milliseconds to delay processing events from # remote servers by if they go over the sleep limit. # federation_rc_sleep_delay: 500 # The maximum number of concurrent federation requests allowed # from a single server # federation_rc_reject_limit: 50 # The number of federation requests to concurrently process from a # single server # federation_rc_concurrent: 3 # Directory where uploaded images and attachments are stored. # media_store_path: "/data/matrix-synapse/media" # Media storage providers allow media to be stored in different # locations. # #media_storage_providers: # - module: file_system # # Whether to write new local files. # store_local: false # # Whether to write new remote media # store_remote: false # # Whether to block upload requests waiting for write to this # # provider to complete # store_synchronous: false # config: # directory: /mnt/some/other/directory # Directory where in-progress uploads are stored. # uploads_path: "/data/matrix-synapse/uploads" # The largest allowed upload size in bytes # max_upload_size: "10M" # Maximum number of pixels that will be thumbnailed # max_image_pixels: "32M" # Whether to generate new thumbnails on the fly to precisely match # the resolution requested by the client. If true then whenever # a new resolution is requested by the client the server will # generate a new thumbnail. If false the server will pick a thumbnail # from a precalculated list. # dynamic_thumbnails: false # List of thumbnails to precalculate when an image is uploaded. # thumbnail_sizes: - width: 32 height: 32 method: crop - width: 96 height: 96 method: crop - width: 320 height: 240 method: scale - width: 640 height: 480 method: scale - width: 800 height: 600 method: scale # Is the preview URL API enabled? If enabled, you *must* specify # an explicit url_preview_ip_range_blacklist of IPs that the spider is # denied from accessing. # url_preview_enabled: False # List of IP address CIDR ranges that the URL preview spider is denied # from accessing. There are no defaults: you must explicitly # specify a list for URL previewing to work. You should specify any # internal services in your network that you do not want synapse to try # to connect to, otherwise anyone in any Matrix room could cause your # synapse to issue arbitrary GET requests to your internal services, # causing serious security issues. # #url_preview_ip_range_blacklist: # - '127.0.0.0/8' # - '10.0.0.0/8' # - '172.16.0.0/12' # - '192.168.0.0/16' # - '100.64.0.0/10' # - '169.254.0.0/16' # - '::1/128' # - 'fe80::/64' # - 'fc00::/7' # # List of IP address CIDR ranges that the URL preview spider is allowed # to access even if they are specified in url_preview_ip_range_blacklist. # This is useful for specifying exceptions to wide-ranging blacklisted # target IP ranges - e.g. for enabling URL previews for a specific private # website only visible in your network. # #url_preview_ip_range_whitelist: # - '192.168.1.1' # Optional list of URL matches that the URL preview spider is # denied from accessing. You should use url_preview_ip_range_blacklist # in preference to this, otherwise someone could define a public DNS # entry that points to a private IP address and circumvent the blacklist. # This is more useful if you know there is an entire shape of URL that # you know that will never want synapse to try to spider. # # Each list entry is a dictionary of url component attributes as returned # by urlparse.urlsplit as applied to the absolute form of the URL. See # https://docs.python.org/2/library/urlparse.html#urlparse.urlsplit # The values of the dictionary are treated as an filename match pattern # applied to that component of URLs, unless they start with a ^ in which # case they are treated as a regular expression match. If all the # specified component matches for a given list item succeed, the URL is # blacklisted. # #url_preview_url_blacklist: # # blacklist any URL with a username in its URI # - username: '*' # # # blacklist all *.google.com URLs # - netloc: 'google.com' # - netloc: '*.google.com' # # # blacklist all plain HTTP URLs # - scheme: 'http' # # # blacklist http(s)://www.acme.com/foo # - netloc: 'www.acme.com' # path: '/foo' # # # blacklist any URL with a literal IPv4 address # - netloc: '^[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+$' # The largest allowed URL preview spidering size in bytes max_spider_size: "10M" ## Captcha ## # See docs/CAPTCHA_SETUP for full details of configuring this. # This Home Server's ReCAPTCHA public key. # recaptcha_public_key: "YOUR_PUBLIC_KEY" # This Home Server's ReCAPTCHA private key. # recaptcha_private_key: "YOUR_PRIVATE_KEY" # Enables ReCaptcha checks when registering, preventing signup # unless a captcha is answered. Requires a valid ReCaptcha # public/private key. # enable_registration_captcha: False # A secret key used to bypass the captcha test entirely. #captcha_bypass_secret: "YOUR_SECRET_HERE" # The API endpoint to use for verifying m.login.recaptcha responses. recaptcha_siteverify_api: "https://www.recaptcha.net/recaptcha/api/siteverify" ## TURN ## # The public URIs of the TURN server to give to clients # #turn_uris: [] # The shared secret used to compute passwords for the TURN server # #turn_shared_secret: "YOUR_SHARED_SECRET" # The Username and password if the TURN server needs them and # does not use a token # #turn_username: "TURNSERVER_USERNAME" #turn_password: "TURNSERVER_PASSWORD" # How long generated TURN credentials last # turn_user_lifetime: "1h" # Whether guests should be allowed to use the TURN server. # This defaults to True, otherwise VoIP will be unreliable for guests. # However, it does introduce a slight security risk as it allows users to # connect to arbitrary endpoints without having first signed up for a # valid account (e.g. by passing a CAPTCHA). # turn_allow_guests: True ## Registration ## # Enable registration for new users. enable_registration: False # The user must provide all of the below types of 3PID when registering. # #registrations_require_3pid: # - email # - msisdn # Explicitly disable asking for MSISDNs from the registration # flow (overrides registrations_require_3pid if MSISDNs are set as required) # #disable_msisdn_registration: True # Mandate that users are only allowed to associate certain formats of # 3PIDs with accounts on this server. # #allowed_local_3pids: # - medium: email # pattern: '.*@matrix\.org' # - medium: email # pattern: '.*@vector\.im' # - medium: msisdn # pattern: '\+44' # If set, allows registration by anyone who also has the shared # secret, even if registration is otherwise disabled. # registration_shared_secret: {{ synapse_registration_secret }} # Set the number of bcrypt rounds used to generate password hash. # Larger numbers increase the work factor needed to generate the hash. # The default number is 12 (which equates to 2^12 rounds). # N.B. that increasing this will exponentially increase the time required # to register or login - e.g. 24 => 2^24 rounds which will take >20 mins. # bcrypt_rounds: 12 # Allows users to register as guests without a password/email/etc, and # participate in rooms hosted on this server which have been made # accessible to anonymous users. # allow_guest_access: False # The identity server which we suggest that clients should use when users log # in on this server. # # (By default, no suggestion is made, so it is left up to the client. # This setting is ignored unless public_baseurl is also set.) # default_identity_server: https://matrix.org # The list of identity servers trusted to verify third party # identifiers by this server. # # Also defines the ID server which will be called when an account is # deactivated (one will be picked arbitrarily). # trusted_third_party_id_servers: - matrix.org - vector.im # Users who register on this homeserver will automatically be joined # to these rooms # #auto_join_rooms: # - "#example:example.com" # Where auto_join_rooms are specified, setting this flag ensures that the # the rooms exist by creating them when the first user on the # homeserver registers. # Setting to false means that if the rooms are not manually created, # users cannot be auto-joined since they do not exist. # autocreate_auto_join_rooms: true ## Metrics ### # Enable collection and rendering of performance metrics # enable_metrics: False # Enable sentry integration # NOTE: While attempts are made to ensure that the logs don't contain # any sensitive information, this cannot be guaranteed. By enabling # this option the sentry server may therefore receive sensitive # information, and it in turn may then diseminate sensitive information # through insecure notification channels if so configured. # #sentry: # dsn: "..." # Whether or not to report anonymized homeserver usage statistics. ## API Configuration ## # A list of event types that will be included in the room_invite_state # room_invite_state_types: - "m.room.join_rules" - "m.room.canonical_alias" - "m.room.avatar" - "m.room.encryption" - "m.room.name" # A list of application service config file to use # app_service_config_files: [] # Whether or not to track application service IP addresses. Implicitly # enables MAU tracking for application service users. # track_appservice_user_ips: False # a secret which is used to sign access tokens. If none is specified, # the registration_shared_secret is used, if one is given; otherwise, # a secret key is derived from the signing key. # # macaroon_secret_key: # Used to enable access token expiration. # expire_access_token: False # a secret which is used to calculate HMACs for form values, to stop # falsification of values. Must be specified for the User Consent # forms to work. # # form_secret: ## Signing Keys ## # Path to the signing key to sign messages with # signing_key_path: "/etc/matrix-synapse/homeserver.signing.key" # The keys that the server used to sign messages with but won't use # to sign new messages. E.g. it has lost its private key # #old_signing_keys: # "ed25519:auto": # # Base64 encoded public key # key: "The public part of your old signing key." # # Millisecond POSIX timestamp when the key expired. # expired_ts: 123456789123 # How long key response published by this server is valid for. # Used to set the valid_until_ts in /key/v2 APIs. # Determines how quickly servers will query to check which keys # are still valid. # key_refresh_interval: "1d" # 1 Day. # The trusted servers to download signing keys from. # perspectives: servers: "matrix.org": verify_keys: "ed25519:auto": key: "Noi6WqcDj0QmPxCNQqgezwTlBKrfqehY1u2FyWP9uYw" # Enable SAML2 for registration and login. Uses pysaml2. # # `sp_config` is the configuration for the pysaml2 Service Provider. # See pysaml2 docs for format of config. # # Default values will be used for the 'entityid' and 'service' settings, # so it is not normally necessary to specify them unless you need to # override them. # #saml2_config: # sp_config: # # point this to the IdP's metadata. You can use either a local file or # # (preferably) a URL. # metadata: # #local: ["saml2/idp.xml"] # remote: # - url: https://our_idp/metadata.xml # # # The rest of sp_config is just used to generate our metadata xml, and you # # may well not need it, depending on your setup. Alternatively you # # may need a whole lot more detail - see the pysaml2 docs! # # description: ["My awesome SP", "en"] # name: ["Test SP", "en"] # # organization: # name: Example com # display_name: # - ["Example co", "en"] # url: "http://example.com" # # contact_person: # - given_name: Bob # sur_name: "the Sysadmin" # email_address": ["admin@example.com"] # contact_type": technical # # # Instead of putting the config inline as above, you can specify a # # separate pysaml2 configuration file: # # # config_path: "/etc/matrix-synapse/sp_conf.py" # Enable CAS for registration and login. # #cas_config: # enabled: true # server_url: "https://cas-server.com" # service_url: "https://homeserver.domain.com:8448" # #required_attributes: # # name: value # The JWT needs to contain a globally unique "sub" (subject) claim. # #jwt_config: # enabled: true # secret: "a secret" # algorithm: "HS256" # Enable password for login. # password_config: enabled: true # Uncomment and change to a secret random string for extra security. # DO NOT CHANGE THIS AFTER INITIAL SETUP! pepper: "{{ synapse_pw_pepper }}" # Enable sending emails for notification events # Defining a custom URL for Riot is only needed if email notifications # should contain links to a self-hosted installation of Riot; when set # the "app_name" setting is ignored. # # If your SMTP server requires authentication, the optional smtp_user & # smtp_pass variables should be used # #email: # enable_notifs: false # smtp_host: "localhost" # smtp_port: 25 # smtp_user: "exampleusername" # smtp_pass: "examplepassword" # require_transport_security: False # notif_from: "Your Friendly %(app)s Home Server " # app_name: Matrix # # if template_dir is unset, uses the example templates that are part of # # the Synapse distribution. # #template_dir: res/templates # notif_template_html: notif_mail.html # notif_template_text: notif_mail.txt # notif_for_new_users: True # riot_base_url: "http://localhost/riot" #password_providers: # - module: "ldap_auth_provider.LdapAuthProvider" # config: # enabled: true # uri: "ldap://ldap.example.com:389" # start_tls: true # base: "ou=users,dc=example,dc=com" # attributes: # uid: "cn" # mail: "email" # name: "givenName" # #bind_dn: # #bind_password: # #filter: "(objectClass=posixAccount)" # Clients requesting push notifications can either have the body of # the message sent in the notification poke along with other details # like the sender, or just the event ID and room ID (`event_id_only`). # If clients choose the former, this option controls whether the # notification request includes the content of the event (other details # like the sender are still included). For `event_id_only` push, it # has no effect. # # For modern android devices the notification content will still appear # because it is loaded by the app. iPhone, however will send a # notification saying only that a message arrived and who it came from. # #push: # include_content: true #spam_checker: # module: "my_custom_project.SuperSpamChecker" # config: # example_option: 'things' # Whether to allow non server admins to create groups on this server # enable_group_creation: false # If enabled, non server admins can only create groups with local parts # starting with this prefix # #group_creation_prefix: "unofficial/" # User Directory configuration # # 'search_all_users' defines whether to search all users visible to your HS # when searching the user directory, rather than limiting to users visible # in public rooms. Defaults to false. If you set it True, you'll have to run # UPDATE user_directory_stream_pos SET stream_id = NULL; # on your database to tell it to rebuild the user_directory search indexes. # #user_directory: # search_all_users: false # User Consent configuration # # for detailed instructions, see # https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/consent_tracking.md # # Parts of this section are required if enabling the 'consent' resource under # 'listeners', in particular 'template_dir' and 'version'. # # 'template_dir' gives the location of the templates for the HTML forms. # This directory should contain one subdirectory per language (eg, 'en', 'fr'), # and each language directory should contain the policy document (named as # '.html') and a success page (success.html). # # 'version' specifies the 'current' version of the policy document. It defines # the version to be served by the consent resource if there is no 'v' # parameter. # # 'server_notice_content', if enabled, will send a user a "Server Notice" # asking them to consent to the privacy policy. The 'server_notices' section # must also be configured for this to work. Notices will *not* be sent to # guest users unless 'send_server_notice_to_guests' is set to true. # # 'block_events_error', if set, will block any attempts to send events # until the user consents to the privacy policy. The value of the setting is # used as the text of the error. # # 'require_at_registration', if enabled, will add a step to the registration # process, similar to how captcha works. Users will be required to accept the # policy before their account is created. # # 'policy_name' is the display name of the policy users will see when registering # for an account. Has no effect unless `require_at_registration` is enabled. # Defaults to "Privacy Policy". # #user_consent: # template_dir: res/templates/privacy # version: 1.0 # server_notice_content: # msgtype: m.text # body: >- # To continue using this homeserver you must review and agree to the # terms and conditions at %(consent_uri)s # send_server_notice_to_guests: True # block_events_error: >- # To continue using this homeserver you must review and agree to the # terms and conditions at %(consent_uri)s # require_at_registration: False # policy_name: Privacy Policy # # Server Notices room configuration # # Uncomment this section to enable a room which can be used to send notices # from the server to users. It is a special room which cannot be left; notices # come from a special "notices" user id. # # If you uncomment this section, you *must* define the system_mxid_localpart # setting, which defines the id of the user which will be used to send the # notices. # # It's also possible to override the room name, the display name of the # "notices" user, and the avatar for the user. # #server_notices: # system_mxid_localpart: notices # system_mxid_display_name: "Server Notices" # system_mxid_avatar_url: "mxc://server.com/oumMVlgDnLYFaPVkExemNVVZ" # room_name: "Server Notices" # The `alias_creation` option controls who's allowed to create aliases # on this server. # # The format of this option is a list of rules that contain globs that # match against user_id, room_id and the new alias (fully qualified with # server name). The action in the first rule that matches is taken, # which can currently either be "allow" or "deny". # # Missing user_id/room_id/alias fields default to "*". # # If no rules match the request is denied. An empty list means no one # can create aliases. # # Options for the rules include: # # user_id: Matches against the creator of the alias # alias: Matches against the alias being created # room_id: Matches against the room ID the alias is being pointed at # action: Whether to "allow" or "deny" the request if the rule matches # # The default is: # #alias_creation_rules: # - user_id: "*" # alias: "*" # room_id: "*" # action: allow # The `room_list_publication_rules` option controls who can publish and # which rooms can be published in the public room list. # # The format of this option is the same as that for # `alias_creation_rules`. # # If the room has one or more aliases associated with it, only one of # the aliases needs to match the alias rule. If there are no aliases # then only rules with `alias: *` match. # # If no rules match the request is denied. An empty list means no one # can publish rooms. # # Options for the rules include: # # user_id: Matches agaisnt the creator of the alias # room_id: Matches against the room ID being published # alias: Matches against any current local or canonical aliases # associated with the room # action: Whether to "allow" or "deny" the request if the rule matches # # The default is: # #room_list_publication_rules: # - user_id: "*" # alias: "*" # room_id: "*" # action: allow