The newly extracted role also has native Traefik support,
so we no longer need to rely on `matrix-nginx-proxy` for
reverse-proxying to Ntfy.
The new role uses port `80` inside the container (not `8080`, like
before), because that's the default assumption of the officially
published container image. Using a custom port (like `8080`), means the
default healthcheck command (which hardcodes port `80`) doesn't work.
Instead of fiddling to override the healthcheck command, we've decided
to stick to the default port instead. This only affects the
inside-the-container port, not any external ports.
The new role also supports adding the network ranges of the container's
multiple additional networks as "exempt hosts". Previously, only one
network's address range was added to "exempt hosts".
This gets us started on adding a Traefik role and hooking Traefik:
- directly to services which support Traefik - we only have a few of
these right now, but the list will grow
- to matrix-nginx-proxy for most services that integrate with
matrix-nginx-proxy right now
Traefik usage should be disabled by default for now and nothing should
change for people just yet.
Enabling these experiments requires additional configuration like this:
```yaml
devture_traefik_ssl_email_address: '.....'
matrix_playbook_traefik_role_enabled: true
matrix_playbook_traefik_labels_enabled: true
matrix_ssl_retrieval_method: none
matrix_nginx_proxy_https_enabled: false
matrix_nginx_proxy_container_http_host_bind_port: ''
matrix_nginx_proxy_container_federation_host_bind_port: ''
matrix_nginx_proxy_trust_forwarded_proto: true
matrix_nginx_proxy_x_forwarded_for: '$proxy_add_x_forwarded_for'
matrix_coturn_enabled: false
```
What currently works is:
reverse-proxying for all nginx-proxy based services **except** for the Matrix homeserver
(both Client-Server an Federation traffic for the homeserver don't work yet)
Switching from doing "post-start" loop hacks to running the container
in 3 steps: `create` + potentially connect to additional networks + `start`.
This way, the container would be connected to all its networks even at
the very beginning of its life.
This extends the collection with support for seamless authentication at the Jitsi server using Matrix OpenID.
1. New role for installing the [Matrix User Verification Service](https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-user-verification-service)
2. Changes to Jitsi role: Installing Jitsi Prosody Mods and configuring Jitsi Auth
3. Changes to Jitsi and nginx-proxy roles: Serving .well-known/element/jitsi from jitsi.DOMAIN
4. We updated the Jitsi documentation on authentication and added documentation for the user verification service.
* add prometheus-nginxlog-exporter role
* Rename matrix_prometheus_nginxlog_exporter_container_url to matrix_prometheus_nginxlog_exporter_container_hostname
* avoid referencing variables from other roles, handover info using group_vars/matrix_servers
* fix: stop service when uninstalling
fix: typo
move available arch's into a var
fix: text
* fix: prometheus enabled condition
Co-authored-by: ikkemaniac <ikkemaniac@localhost>
More details about the new key type can be found here:
https://eff-certbot.readthedocs.io/en/stable/using.html#rsa-and-ecdsa-keys
Existing RSA-based keys will continue to renew as RSA until manual
action is taken. Example from the documentation above:
> certbot renew --key-type ecdsa --cert-name example.com --force-renewal
In the future, we may add a command which does this automatically for
all domains.
- forego removing Docker images - it's not effective anyway, because it
only removes the last version.. which is a drop in the bucket, usually
- do not reload systemd - it's none of our business. `--tags=start`,
etc., handle this
- combine all uninstall tasks under a single block, which only runs if
we detect traces (a leftover systemd .service file) of the component.
If no such .service is detected, we skip them all. This may lead to
incorect cleanup in rare cases, but is good enough for the most part.