Christopher May-Townsend ed18f32e1b Add required Debian dependencies to allow docker builds on the arm platform (#8144) | 4 år sedan | |
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conf | 4 år sedan | |
Dockerfile | 4 år sedan | |
Dockerfile-dhvirtualenv | 4 år sedan | |
Dockerfile-pgtests | 5 år sedan | |
README.md | 4 år sedan | |
build_debian.sh | 5 år sedan | |
run_pg_tests.sh | 5 år sedan | |
start.py | 4 år sedan |
This Docker image will run Synapse as a single process. By default it uses a sqlite database; for production use you should connect it to a separate postgres database.
The image also does not provide a TURN server.
By default, the image expects a single volume, located at /data
, that will hold:
You are free to use separate volumes depending on storage endpoints at your
disposal. For instance, /data/media
could be stored on a large but low
performance hdd storage while other files could be stored on high performance
endpoints.
In order to setup an application service, simply create an appservices
directory in the data volume and write the application service Yaml
configuration file there. Multiple application services are supported.
The first step is to generate a valid config file. To do this, you can run the
image with the generate
command line option.
You will need to specify values for the SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME
and
SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS
environment variable, and mount a docker volume to store
the configuration on. For example:
docker run -it --rm \
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-e SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME=my.matrix.host \
-e SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS=yes \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest generate
For information on picking a suitable server name, see https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/INSTALL.md.
The above command will generate a homeserver.yaml
in (typically)
/var/lib/docker/volumes/synapse-data/_data
. You should check this file, and
customise it to your needs.
The following environment variables are supported in generate
mode:
SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME
(mandatory): the server public hostname.SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS
(mandatory, yes
or no
): whether to enable
anonymous statistics reporting.SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR
: where additional config files (such as the log config
and event signing key) will be stored. Defaults to /data
.SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH
: path to the file to be generated. Defaults to
<SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR>/homeserver.yaml
.SYNAPSE_DATA_DIR
: where the generated config will put persistent data
such as the database and media store. Defaults to /data
.UID
, GID
: the user id and group id to use for creating the data
directories. Defaults to 991
, 991
.Once you have a valid configuration file, you can start synapse as follows:
docker run -d --name synapse \
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-p 8008:8008 \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest
You can then check that it has started correctly with:
docker logs synapse
If all is well, you should now be able to connect to http://localhost:8008 and see a confirmation message.
The following environment variables are supported in run mode:
SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR
: where additional config files are stored. Defaults to
/data
.SYNAPSE_CONFIG_PATH
: path to the config file. Defaults to
<SYNAPSE_CONFIG_DIR>/homeserver.yaml
.SYNAPSE_WORKER
: module to execute, used when running synapse with workers.
Defaults to synapse.app.homeserver
, which is suitable for non-worker mode.UID
, GID
: the user and group id to run Synapse as. Defaults to 991
, 991
.TZ
: the timezone the container will run with. Defaults to UTC
.After synapse is running, you may wish to create a user via register_new_matrix_user
.
This requires a registration_shared_secret
to be set in your config file. Synapse
must be restarted to pick up this change.
You can then call the script:
docker exec -it synapse register_new_matrix_user http://localhost:8008 -c /data/homeserver.yaml --help
Remember to remove the registration_shared_secret
and restart if you no-longer need it.
The default configuration exposes a single HTTP port: http://localhost:8008. It is suitable for local testing, but for any practical use, you will either need to use a reverse proxy, or configure Synapse to expose an HTTPS port.
For documentation on using a reverse proxy, see https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/reverse_proxy.md.
For more information on enabling TLS support in synapse itself, see
https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/INSTALL.md#tls-certificates. Of
course, you will need to expose the TLS port from the container with a -p
argument to docker run
.
The docker image used to support creating a dynamic configuration file based on environment variables. This is no longer supported, and an error will be raised if you try to run synapse without a config file.
It is, however, possible to generate a static configuration file based on
the environment variables that were previously used. To do this, run the docker
container once with the environment variables set, and migrate_config
command line option. For example:
docker run -it --rm \
--mount type=volume,src=synapse-data,dst=/data \
-e SYNAPSE_SERVER_NAME=my.matrix.host \
-e SYNAPSE_REPORT_STATS=yes \
matrixdotorg/synapse:latest migrate_config
This will generate the same configuration file as the legacy mode used, and
will store it in /data/homeserver.yaml
. You can then use it as shown above at
Running synapse.
Note that the defaults used in this configuration file may be different to
those when generating a new config file with generate
: for example, TLS is
enabled by default in this mode. You are encouraged to inspect the generated
configuration file and edit it to ensure it meets your needs.
If you need to build the image from a Synapse checkout, use the following docker
build
command from the repo's root:
docker build -t matrixdotorg/synapse -f docker/Dockerfile .
You can choose to build a different docker image by changing the value of the -f
flag to
point to another Dockerfile.
If you are using a non-standard port or tls inside docker you can disable the healthcheck
whilst running the above docker run
commands.
--no-healthcheck
If you wish to point the healthcheck at a different port with docker command, add the following
--health-cmd 'curl -fSs http://localhost:1234/health'
You can add the following to set a custom healthcheck in a docker compose file. You will need version >2.1 for this to work.
healthcheck:
test: ["CMD", "curl", "-fSs", "http://localhost:8008/health"]
interval: 1m
timeout: 10s
retries: 3