Matrix Matrix is an open standard for interoperable, decentralised, real-time communication over IP. It can be used to power Instant Messaging, VoIP/WebRTC signalling, Internet of Things communication - or anywhere you need a standard HTTP API for publishing and subscribing to data whilst tracking the conversation history. This chapter will show you how to set up your own, self-hosted Matrix homeserver using the Synapse reference homeserver, and how to serve your own copy of the Riot web client. See the Try Matrix Now! overview page for links to Riot Apps for Android and iOS, desktop clients, as well as bridges to other networks and other projects around Matrix.
Synapse Homeserver Synapse is the reference homeserver implementation of Matrix from the core development team at matrix.org. The following configuration example will set up a synapse server for the example.org domain, served from the host myhostname.example.org. For more information, please refer to the installation instructions of Synapse . let fqdn = let join = hostName: domain: hostName + optionalString (domain != null) ".${domain}"; in join config.networking.hostName config.networking.domain; in { networking = { hostName = "myhostname"; domain = "example.org"; }; networking.firewall.allowedTCPPorts = [ 80 443 ]; services.nginx = { enable = true; # only recommendedProxySettings and recommendedGzipSettings are strictly required, # but the rest make sense as well recommendedTlsSettings = true; recommendedOptimisation = true; recommendedGzipSettings = true; recommendedProxySettings = true; virtualHosts = { # This host section can be placed on a different host than the rest, # i.e. to delegate from the host being accessible as ${config.networking.domain} # to another host actually running the Matrix homeserver. "${config.networking.domain}" = { locations."= /.well-known/matrix/server".extraConfig = let # use 443 instead of the default 8448 port to unite # the client-server and server-server port for simplicity server = { "m.server" = "${fqdn}:443"; }; in '' add_header Content-Type application/json; return 200 '${builtins.toJSON server}'; ''; locations."= /.well-known/matrix/client".extraConfig = let client = { "m.homeserver" = { "base_url" = "https://${fqdn}"; }; "m.identity_server" = { "base_url" = "https://vector.im"; }; }; # ACAO required to allow riot-web on any URL to request this json file in '' add_header Content-Type application/json; add_header Access-Control-Allow-Origin *; return 200 '${builtins.toJSON client}'; ''; }; # Reverse proxy for Matrix client-server and server-server communication ${fqdn} = { enableACME = true; forceSSL = true; # Or do a redirect instead of the 404, or whatever is appropriate for you. # But do not put a Matrix Web client here! See the Riot Web section below. locations."/".extraConfig = '' return 404; ''; # forward all Matrix API calls to the synapse Matrix homeserver locations."/_matrix" = { proxyPass = "http://[::1]:8008"; # without a trailing / }; }; }; }; services.matrix-synapse = { enable = true; server_name = config.networking.domain; listeners = [ { port = 8008; bind_address = "::1"; type = "http"; tls = false; x_forwarded = true; resources = [ { names = [ "client" "federation" ]; compress = false; } ]; } ]; }; }; If the A and AAAA DNS records on example.org do not point on the same host as the records for myhostname.example.org, you can easily move the /.well-known virtualHost section of the code to the host that is serving example.org, while the rest stays on myhostname.example.org with no other changes required. This pattern also allows to seamlessly move the homeserver from myhostname.example.org to myotherhost.example.org by only changing the /.well-known redirection target. If you want to run a server with public registration by anybody, you can then enable . Otherwise, or you can generate a registration secret with pwgen -s 64 1 and set it with . To create a new user or admin, run the following after you have set the secret and have rebuilt NixOS: $ nix run nixpkgs.matrix-synapse $ register_new_matrix_user -k your-registration-shared-secret http://localhost:8008 New user localpart: your-username Password: Confirm password: Make admin [no]: Success! In the example, this would create a user with the Matrix Identifier @your-username:example.org. Note that the registration secret ends up in the nix store and therefore is world-readable by any user on your machine, so it makes sense to only temporarily activate the option until a better solution for NixOS is in place.
Riot Web Client Riot Web is the reference web client for Matrix and developed by the core team at matrix.org. The following snippet can be optionally added to the code before to complete the synapse installation with a web client served at https://riot.myhostname.example.org and https://riot.example.org. Alternatively, you can use the hosted copy at https://riot.im/app, or use other web clients or native client applications. Due to the /.well-known urls set up done above, many clients should fill in the required connection details automatically when you enter your Matrix Identifier. See Try Matrix Now! for a list of existing clients and their supported featureset. services.nginx.virtualHosts."riot.${fqdn}" = { enableACME = true; forceSSL = true; serverAliases = [ "riot.${config.networking.domain}" ]; root = pkgs.riot-web; }; Note that the Riot developers do not recommend running Riot and your Matrix homeserver on the same fully-qualified domain name for security reasons. In the example, this means that you should not reuse the myhostname.example.org virtualHost to also serve Riot, but instead serve it on a different subdomain, like riot.example.org in the example. See the Riot Important Security Notes for more information on this subject.