This documentation site is for the versions of Synapse maintained by the Matrix.org Foundation (github.com/matrix-org/synapse), available under the Apache 2.0 licence.
It is recommended to put a reverse proxy such as
nginx,
Apache,
Caddy,
HAProxy or
relayd in front of Synapse. One advantage
of doing so is that it means that you can expose the default https port
(443) to Matrix clients without needing to run Synapse with root
privileges.
You should configure your reverse proxy to forward requests to /_matrix or
/_synapse/client to Synapse, and have it set the X-Forwarded-For and
X-Forwarded-Proto request headers.
You should remember that Matrix clients and other Matrix servers do not
necessarily need to connect to your server via the same server name or
port. Indeed, clients will use port 443 by default, whereas servers default to
port 8448. Where these are different, we refer to the 'client port' and the
'federation port'. See the Matrix
specification
for more details of the algorithm used for federation connections, and
Delegation for instructions on setting up delegation.
NOTE: Your reverse proxy must not canonicalise or normalise
the requested URI in any way (for example, by decoding %xx escapes).
Beware that Apache will canonicalise URIs unless you specify
nocanon.
Let's assume that we expect clients to connect to our server at
https://matrix.example.com, and other servers to connect at
https://example.com:8448. The following sections detail the configuration of
the reverse proxy and the homeserver.
The HTTP configuration will need to be updated for Synapse to correctly record
client IP addresses and generate redirect URLs while behind a reverse proxy.
In homeserver.yaml set x_forwarded: true in the port 8008 section and
consider setting bind_addresses: ['127.0.0.1'] so that the server only
listens to traffic on localhost. (Do not change bind_addresses to 127.0.0.1
when using a containerized Synapse, as that will prevent it from responding
to proxied traffic.)
Optionally, you can also set
request_id_header
so that the server extracts and re-uses the same request ID format that the
reverse proxy is using.
server {
listen 443 ssl http2;
listen [::]:443 ssl http2;
# For the federation port
listen 8448 ssl http2 default_server;
listen [::]:8448 ssl http2 default_server;
server_name matrix.example.com;
location ~ ^(/_matrix|/_synapse/client) {
# note: do not add a path (even a single /) after the port in `proxy_pass`,
# otherwise nginx will canonicalise the URI and cause signature verification
# errors.
proxy_pass http://localhost:8008;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
# Nginx by default only allows file uploads up to 1M in size
# Increase client_max_body_size to match max_upload_size defined in homeserver.yaml
client_max_body_size 50M;
# Synapse responses may be chunked, which is an HTTP/1.1 feature.
proxy_http_version 1.1;
}
}
<VirtualHost *:443>
SSLEngine on
ServerName matrix.example.com
RequestHeader set "X-Forwarded-Proto" expr=%{REQUEST_SCHEME}
AllowEncodedSlashes NoDecode
ProxyPreserveHost on
ProxyPass /_matrix http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix nocanon
ProxyPassReverse /_matrix http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix
ProxyPass /_synapse/client http://127.0.0.1:8008/_synapse/client nocanon
ProxyPassReverse /_synapse/client http://127.0.0.1:8008/_synapse/client
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost *:8448>
SSLEngine on
ServerName example.com
RequestHeader set "X-Forwarded-Proto" expr=%{REQUEST_SCHEME}
AllowEncodedSlashes NoDecode
ProxyPass /_matrix http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix nocanon
ProxyPassReverse /_matrix http://127.0.0.1:8008/_matrix
</VirtualHost>
NOTE: ensure the nocanon options are included.
NOTE 2: It appears that Synapse is currently incompatible with the ModSecurity module for Apache (mod_security2). If you need it enabled for other services on your web server, you can disable it for Synapse's two VirtualHosts by including the following lines before each of the two </VirtualHost> above:
<IfModule security2_module>
SecRuleEngine off
</IfModule>
NOTE 3: Missing ProxyPreserveHost on can lead to a redirect loop.
table <webserver> { 127.0.0.1 }
table <matrixserver> { 127.0.0.1 }
http protocol "https" {
tls { no tlsv1.0, ciphers "HIGH" }
tls keypair "example.com"
match header set "X-Forwarded-For" value "$REMOTE_ADDR"
match header set "X-Forwarded-Proto" value "https"
# set CORS header for .well-known/matrix/server, .well-known/matrix/client
# httpd does not support setting headers, so do it here
match request path "/.well-known/matrix/*" tag "matrix-cors"
match response tagged "matrix-cors" header set "Access-Control-Allow-Origin" value "*"
pass quick path "/_matrix/*" forward to <matrixserver>
pass quick path "/_synapse/client/*" forward to <matrixserver>
# pass on non-matrix traffic to webserver
pass forward to <webserver>
}
relay "https_traffic" {
listen on egress port 443 tls
protocol "https"
forward to <matrixserver> port 8008 check tcp
forward to <webserver> port 8080 check tcp
}
http protocol "matrix" {
tls { no tlsv1.0, ciphers "HIGH" }
tls keypair "example.com"
block
pass quick path "/_matrix/*" forward to <matrixserver>
pass quick path "/_synapse/client/*" forward to <matrixserver>
}
relay "matrix_federation" {
listen on egress port 8448 tls
protocol "matrix"
forward to <matrixserver> port 8008 check tcp
}
Synapse exposes a health check endpoint for use by reverse proxies.
Each configured HTTP listener has a /health endpoint which always returns
200 OK (and doesn't get logged).
Endpoints for administering your Synapse instance are placed under
/_synapse/admin. These require authentication through an access token of an
admin user. However as access to these endpoints grants the caller a lot of power,
we do not recommend exposing them to the public internet without good reason.