--- # matrix-media-repo is a highly customizable multi-domain media repository for Matrix. # Intended for medium to large environments consisting of several homeservers, this # media repo de-duplicates media (including remote media) while being fully compliant # with the specification. # See: https://github.com/turt2live/matrix-media-repo matrix_media_repo_enabled: false # matrix_media_repo_identifier controls the identifier of this media-repo instance, which influences: # - the default storage path # - the names of systemd services matrix_media_repo_identifier: matrix-media-repo matrix_media_repo_container_image_self_build: false matrix_media_repo_container_image_self_build_repo: "https://github.com/turt2live/matrix-media-repo.git" matrix_media_repo_docker_image_path: "turt2live/matrix-media-repo" matrix_media_repo_docker_image: "{{ matrix_media_repo_docker_image_name_prefix }}{{ matrix_media_repo_docker_image_path }}:{{ matrix_media_repo_docker_image_tag }}" matrix_media_repo_docker_image_name_prefix: "{{ 'localhost/' if matrix_media_repo_container_image_self_build else matrix_container_global_registry_prefix }}" matrix_media_repo_docker_image_tag: "v1.2.13" matrix_media_repo_docker_image_force_pull: "{{ matrix_media_repo_docker_image.endswith(':latest') }}" matrix_media_repo_base_path: "{{ matrix_base_data_path }}/{{ matrix_media_repo_identifier }}" matrix_media_repo_config_path: "{{ matrix_media_repo_base_path }}/config" matrix_media_repo_data_path: "{{ matrix_media_repo_base_path }}/data" matrix_media_repo_docker_src_files_path: "{{ matrix_media_repo_base_path }}/docker-src" # List of systemd services that matrix-conduit.service depends on matrix_media_repo_systemd_required_services_list: ["docker.service"] # List of systemd services that matrix-conduit.service wants matrix_media_repo_systemd_wanted_services_list: [] # The base container network. It will be auto-created by this role if it doesn't exist already. matrix_media_repo_container_network: "{{ matrix_docker_network }}" # A list of additional container networks that the container would be connected to. # The role does not create these networks, so make sure they already exist. # Use this to expose this container to another reverse proxy, which runs in a different container network. matrix_media_repo_container_additional_networks: [] # Controls whether the matrix-media-repo container exposes its HTTP port (tcp/8000 in the container). # # Takes an ":" or "" value (e.g. "127.0.0.1:8000"), or empty string to not expose. matrix_media_repo_container_http_host_bind_port: "" # Controls whether the matrix-media-repo container exposes its metrics port (tcp/9000 in the container). # # Takes an ":" or "" value (e.g. "127.0.0.1:9000"), or empty string to not expose. matrix_media_repo_container_metrics_host_bind_port: "" # Extra arguments for the Docker container matrix_media_repo_container_extra_arguments: [] # matrix_media_repo_dashboard_urls contains a list of URLs with Grafana dashboard definitions. # If the Grafana role is enabled, these dashboards will be downloaded. matrix_media_repo_dashboard_urls: - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy/master/roles/custom/matrix-media-repo/templates/grafana/media-repo.json # ***************************************************************************** # Configuration File Settings # ***************************************************************************** # General repo configuration matrix_media_repo_bind_address: '0.0.0.0' matrix_media_repo_port: 8000 # Where to store the logs, relative to where the repo is started from. Logs will be automatically # rotated every day and held for 14 days. To disable the repo logging to files, set this to # "-" (including quotation marks). # # Note: to change the log directory you'll have to restart the repository. This setting cannot be # live reloaded. matrix_media_repo_log_directory: "-" # Set to true to enable color coding in your logs. Note that this may cause escape sequences to # appear in logs which render them unreadable, which is why colors are disabled by default. matrix_media_repo_log_colors: false # Set to true to enable JSON logging for consumption by things like logstash. Note that this is # incompatible with the log color option and will always render without colors. matrix_media_repo_json_logs: false # The log level to log at. Note that this will need to be at least "info" to receive support. # # Values (in increasing spam): panic | fatal | error | warn | info | debug | trace matrix_media_repo_log_level: "info" # If true, the media repo will accept any X-Forwarded-For header without validation. In most cases # this option should be left as "false". Note that the media repo already expects an X-Forwarded-For # header, but validates it to ensure the IP being given makes sense. matrix_media_repo_trust_any_forwarded_address: false # If false, the media repo will not use the X-Forwarded-Host header commonly added by reverse proxies. # Typically this should remain as true, though in some circumstances it may need to be disabled. # See https://github.com/turt2live/matrix-media-repo/issues/202 for more information. matrix_media_repo_use_forwarded_host: true # Options for dealing with federation # On a per-host basis, the number of consecutive failures in calling the host before the # media repo will back off. This defaults to 20 if not given. Note that 404 errors from # the remote server do not count towards this. matrix_media_repo_federation_backoff_at: 20 # The database configuration for the media repository # Do NOT put your homeserver's existing database credentials here. Create a new database and # user instead. Using the same server is fine, just not the same username and database. matrix_media_repo_database_username: "matrix_media_repo" matrix_media_repo_database_password: "your_password" matrix_media_repo_database_hostname: "{{ devture_postgres_identifier }}" matrix_media_repo_database_port: 5432 matrix_media_repo_database_name: "matrix_media_repo" matrix_media_repo_database_sslmode: disable # Currently only "postgres" is supported. matrix_media_repo_database_postgres: "postgres://{{ matrix_media_repo_database_username }}:{{ matrix_media_repo_database_password }}@{{ matrix_media_repo_database_hostname }}:{{ matrix_media_repo_database_port }}/{{ matrix_media_repo_database_name }}?sslmode={{ matrix_media_repo_database_sslmode }}" # The database pooling options # The maximum number of connects to hold open. More of these allow for more concurrent # processes to happen. matrix_media_repo_database_max_connections: 25 # The maximum number of connects to leave idle. More of these reduces the time it takes # to serve requests in low-traffic scenarios. matrix_media_repo_database_max_idle_connections: 5 # The configuration for the homeservers this media repository is known to control. Servers # not listed here will not be able to upload media. matrix_media_repo_homeservers: homeservers: # This should match the server_name of your homeserver, and the Host header # provided to the media repo. - name: "{{ matrix_server_fqn_matrix }}" # The base URL to where the homeserver can actually be reached csApi: "http://{{ matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_client_api_addr_with_container }}" # The number of consecutive failures in calling this homeserver before the # media repository will start backing off. This defaults to 10 if not given. backoffAt: 10 # The kind of admin API the homeserver supports. If set to "matrix", # the media repo will use the Synapse-defined endpoints under the # unstable client-server API. When this is "synapse", the new /_synapse # endpoints will be used instead. Unknown values are treated as the # default, "matrix". adminApiKind: "{{ 'synapse' if matrix_homeserver_implementation == 'synapse' else 'matrix' }}" # Options for controlling how access tokens work with the media repo. It is recommended that if # you are going to use these options that the `/logout` and `/logout/all` client-server endpoints # be proxied through this process. They will also be called on the homeserver, and the response # sent straight through the client - they are simply used to invalidate the cache faster for # a particular user. Without these, the access tokens might still work for a short period of time # after the user has already invalidated them. # # This will also cache errors from the homeserver. # # Note that when this config block is used outside of a per-domain config, all hosts will be # subject to the same cache. This also means that application services on limited homeservers # could be authorized on the wrong domain. # # *************************************************************************** # * IT IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED TO USE PER-DOMAIN CONFIGS WITH THIS FEATURE. * # *************************************************************************** matrix_media_repo_access_tokens: accessTokens: # The maximum time a cached access token will be considered valid. Set to zero (the default) # to disable the cache and constantly hit the homeserver. This is recommended to be set to # 43200 (12 hours) on servers with the logout endpoints proxied through the media repo, and # zero for servers who do not proxy the endpoints through. maxCacheTimeSeconds: 43200 # Whether or not to use the `appservices` config option below. If disabled (the default), # the regular access token cache will be used for each user, potentially leading to high # memory usage. useLocalAppserviceConfig: false # The application services (and their namespaces) registered on the homeserver. Only used # if `useLocalAppserviceConfig` is enabled (recommended). # # Usually the appservice will provide you with these config details - they'll just need # translating from the appservice registration to here. Note that this does not require # all options from the registration, and only requires the bare minimum required to run # the media repo. # appservices: # - id: Name_of_appservice_for_your_reference # asToken: Secret_token_for_appservices_to_use # senderUserId: "@_example_bridge:yourdomain.com" # userNamespaces: # - regex: "@_example_bridge_.+:yourdomain.com" # # A note about regexes: it is best to suffix *all* namespaces with the homeserver # # domain users are valid for, as otherwise the appservice can use any user with # # any domain name it feels like, even if that domain is not configured with the # # media repo. This will lead to inaccurate reporting in the case of the media # # repo, and potentially leading to media being considered "remote". # These users have full access to the administrative functions of the media repository. # See docs/admin.md for information on what these people can do. They must belong to one of the # configured homeservers above. matrix_media_repo_admins: admins: [] # admins: # - "@your_username:example.org" # Shared secret auth is useful for applications building on top of the media repository, such # as a management interface. The `token` provided here is treated as a repository administrator # when shared secret auth is enabled: if the `token` is used in place of an access token, the' # request will be authorized. This is not limited to any particular domain, giving applications # the ability to use it on any configured hostname. # Set this to true to enable shared secret auth. matrix_media_repo_shared_secret_auth_enabled: false # Use a secure value here to prevent unauthorized access to the media repository. matrix_media_repo_shared_secret_auth_token: "PutSomeRandomSecureValueHere" # Datastores are places where media should be persisted. This isn't dedicated for just uploads: # thumbnails and other misc data is also stored in these places. The media repo, when looking # for a datastore to use, will always use the smallest datastore first. matrix_media_repo_datastores: datastores: - type: file enabled: true # Enable this to set up data storage. # Datastores can be split into many areas when handling uploads. Media is still de-duplicated # across all datastores (local content which duplicates remote content will re-use the remote # content's location). This option is useful if your datastore is becoming very large, or if # you want faster storage for a particular kind of media. # # The kinds available are: # thumbnails - Used to store thumbnails of media (local and remote). # remote_media - Original copies of remote media (servers not configured by this repo). # local_media - Original uploads for local media. # archives - Archives of content (GDPR and similar requests). forKinds: ["thumbnails", "remote_media", "local_media", "archives"] opts: path: /data/media - type: s3 enabled: false # Enable this to set up s3 uploads forKinds: ["thumbnails", "remote_media", "local_media", "archives"] opts: # The s3 uploader needs a temporary location to buffer files to reduce memory usage on # small file uploads. If the file size is unknown, the file is written to this location # before being uploaded to s3 (then the file is deleted). If you aren't concerned about # memory usage, set this to an empty string. tempPath: "/tmp/mediarepo_s3_upload" endpoint: sfo2.digitaloceanspaces.com accessKeyId: "" accessSecret: "" ssl: true bucketName: "your-media-bucket" # An optional region for where this S3 endpoint is located. Typically not needed, though # some providers will need this (like Scaleway). Uncomment to use. # region: "sfo2" # An optional storage class for tuning how the media is stored at s3. # See https://aws.amazon.com/s3/storage-classes/ for details; uncomment to use. # storageClass: STANDARD # The media repo does support an IPFS datastore, but only if the IPFS feature is enabled. If # the feature is not enabled, this will not work. Note that IPFS support is experimental at # the moment and not recommended for general use. # # NOTE: Everything you upload to IPFS will be publicly accessible, even when the media repo # puts authentication on the download endpoints. Only use this option for cases where you # expect your media to be publicly accessible. - type: ipfs enabled: false # Enable this to use IPFS support forKinds: ["local_media"] # The IPFS datastore currently has no options. It will use the daemon or HTTP API configured # in the IPFS section of your main config. opts: {} # Options for controlling archives. Archives are exports of a particular user's content for # the purpose of GDPR or moving media to a different server. # Whether archiving is enabled or not. Default enabled. matrix_media_repo_archiving_enabled: true # If true, users can request a copy of their own data. By default, only repository administrators # can request a copy. # This includes the ability for homeserver admins to request a copy of their own server's # data, as known to the repo. matrix_media_repo_archiving_self_service: false # The number of bytes to target per archive before breaking up the files. This is independent # of any file upload limits and will require a similar amount of memory when performing an export. # The file size is also a target, not a guarantee - it is possible to have files that are smaller # or larger than the target. This is recommended to be approximately double the size of your # file upload limit, provided there is enough memory available for the demand of exporting. matrix_media_repo_archiving_target_bytes_per_part: 209715200 # 200mb default # The file upload settings for the media repository matrix_media_repo_uploads: uploads: # The maximum individual file size a user can upload. maxBytes: 104857600 # 100MB default, 0 to disable # The minimum number of bytes to let people upload. This is recommended to be non-zero to # ensure that the "cost" of running the media repo is worthwhile - small file uploads tend # to waste more CPU and database resources than small files, thus a default of 100 bytes # is applied here as an approximate break-even point. minBytes: 100 # 100 bytes by default # The number of bytes to claim as the maximum size for uploads for the limits API. If this # is not provided then the maxBytes setting will be used instead. This is useful to provide # if the media repo's settings and the reverse proxy do not match for maximum request size. # This is purely for informational reasons and does not actually limit any functionality. # Set this to -1 to indicate that there is no limit. Zero will force the use of maxBytes. reportedMaxBytes: 0 # Options for limiting how much content a user can upload. Quotas are applied to content # associated with a user regardless of de-duplication. Quotas which affect remote servers # or users will not take effect. When a user exceeds their quota they will be unable to # upload any more media. quotas: # Whether or not quotas are enabled/enforced. Note that even when disabled the media repo # will track how much media a user has uploaded. This is disabled by default. enabled: false # The quota rules that affect users. The first rule to match the uploader will take effect. # An implied rule which matches all users and has no quota is always last in this list, # meaning that if no rules are supplied then users will be able to upload anything. Similarly, # if no rules match a user then the implied rule will match, allowing the user to have no # quota. The quota will let the user upload to 1 media past their quota, meaning that from # a statistics perspective the user might exceed their quota however only by a small amount. users: - glob: "@*:*" # Affect all users. Use asterisks (*) to match any character. maxBytes: 53687063712 # 50GB default, 0 to disable # Settings related to downloading files from the media repository # The maximum number of bytes to download from other servers matrix_media_repo_downloads_max_bytes: 104857600 # 100MB default, 0 to disable # The number of workers to use when downloading remote media. Raise this number if remote # media is downloading slowly or timing out. # # Maximum memory usage = numWorkers multiplied by the maximum download size # Average memory usage is dependent on how many concurrent downloads your users are doing. matrix_media_repo_downloads_num_workers: 10 # How long, in minutes, to cache errors related to downloading remote media. Once this time # has passed, the media is able to be re-requested. matrix_media_repo_downloads_failure_cache_minutes: 5 # The cache control settings for downloads. This can help speed up downloads for users by # keeping popular media in the cache. This cache is also used for thumbnails. matrix_media_repo_downloads_cache_enabled: true # The maximum size of cache to have. Higher numbers are better. matrix_media_repo_downloads_cache_max_size_bytes: 1048576000 # 1GB default # The maximum file size to cache. This should normally be the same size as your maximum # upload size. matrix_media_repo_downloads_cache_max_file_size_bytes: 104857600 # 100MB default # The number of minutes to track how many downloads a file gets matrix_media_repo_downloads_cache_tracked_minutes: 30 # The number of downloads a file must receive in the window above (trackedMinutes) in # order to be cached. matrix_media_repo_downloads_cache_min_downloads: 5 # The minimum amount of time an item should remain in the cache. This prevents the cache # from cycling out the file if it needs more room during this time. Note that the media # repo regularly cleans out media which is past this point from the cache, so this number # may need increasing depending on your use case. If the maxSizeBytes is reached for the # media repo, and some cached items are still under this timer, new items will not be able # to enter the cache. When this happens, consider raising maxSizeBytes or lowering this # timer. matrix_media_repo_downloads_cache_min_cache_time_seconds: 300 # The minimum amount of time an item should remain outside the cache once it is removed. matrix_media_repo_downloads_cache_min_evicted_time_seconds: 60 # How many days after a piece of remote content is downloaded before it expires. It can be # re-downloaded on demand, this just helps free up space in your datastore. Set to zero or # negative to disable. Defaults to disabled. matrix_media_repo_downloads_expire_after_days: 0 # URL Preview settings matrix_media_repo_url_previews: urlPreviews: enabled: true # If enabled, the preview_url routes will be accessible maxPageSizeBytes: 10485760 # 10MB default, 0 to disable # If true, the media repository will try to provide previews for URLs with invalid or unsafe # certificates. If false (the default), the media repo will fail requests to said URLs. previewUnsafeCertificates: false # Note: URL previews are limited to a given number of words, which are then limited to a number # of characters, taking off the last word if it needs to. This also applies for the title. numWords: 50 # The number of words to include in a preview (maximum) maxLength: 200 # The maximum number of characters for a description numTitleWords: 30 # The maximum number of words to include in a preview's title maxTitleLength: 150 # The maximum number of characters for a title # The mime types to preview when OpenGraph previews cannot be rendered. OpenGraph previews are # calculated on anything matching "text/*". To have a thumbnail in the preview the URL must be # an image and the image's type must be allowed by the thumbnailer. filePreviewTypes: - "image/*" # The number of workers to use when generating url previews. Raise this number if url # previews are slow or timing out. # # Maximum memory usage = numWorkers multiplied by the maximum page size # Average memory usage is dependent on how many concurrent urls your users are previewing. numWorkers: 10 # Either allowedNetworks or disallowedNetworks must be provided. If both are provided, they # will be merged. URL previews will be disabled if neither is supplied. Each entry must be # a CIDR range. disallowedNetworks: - "127.0.0.1/8" - "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' allowedNetworks: # "Everything". The blacklist will help limit this. # This is the default value for this field. - "0.0.0.0/0" # How many days after a preview is generated before it expires and is deleted. The preview # can be regenerated safely - this just helps free up some space in your database. Set to # zero or negative to disable. Defaults to disabled. expireAfterDays: 0 # The default Accept-Language header to supply when generating URL previews when one isn't # supplied by the client. # Reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Accept-Language defaultLanguage: "en-US,en" # When true, oEmbed previews will be enabled. Typically these kinds of previews are used for # sites that do not support OpenGraph or page scraping, such as Twitter. For information on # specifying providers for oEmbed, including your own, see the following documentation: # https://docs.t2bot.io/matrix-media-repo/url-previews/oembed.html # Defaults to disabled. oEmbed: false # The thumbnail configuration for the media repository. matrix_media_repo_thumbnails: thumbnails: # The maximum number of bytes an image can be before the thumbnailer refuses. maxSourceBytes: 10485760 # 10MB default, 0 to disable # The maximum number of pixels an image can have before the thumbnailer refuses. Note that # this only applies to image types: file types like audio and video are affected solely by # the maxSourceBytes. maxPixels: 32000000 # 32M default # The number of workers to use when generating thumbnails. Raise this number if thumbnails # are slow to generate or timing out. # # Maximum memory usage = numWorkers multiplied by the maximum image source size # Average memory usage is dependent on how many thumbnails are being generated by your users numWorkers: 100 # All thumbnails are generated into one of the sizes listed here. The first size is used as # the default for when no width or height is requested. The media repository will return # either an exact match or the next largest size of thumbnail. sizes: - width: 32 height: 32 - width: 96 height: 96 - width: 320 height: 240 - width: 640 height: 480 - width: 768 # This size is primarily used for audio thumbnailing. height: 240 - width: 800 height: 600 # To allow for thumbnails to be any size, not just in the sizes specified above, set this to # true (default false). When enabled, whatever size requested by the client will be generated # up to a maximum of the largest possible dimensions in the `sizes` list. For best results, # specify only one size in the `sizes` list when this option is enabled. dynamicSizing: false # The content types to thumbnail when requested. Types that are not supported by the media repo # will not be thumbnailed (adding application/json here won't work). Clients may still not request # thumbnails for these types - this won't make clients automatically thumbnail these file types. types: - "image/jpeg" - "image/jpg" - "image/png" - "image/apng" - "image/gif" - "image/heif" - "image/webp" # - "image/svg+xml" # Be sure to have ImageMagick installed to thumbnail SVG files - "audio/mpeg" - "audio/ogg" - "audio/wav" - "audio/flac" # - "video/mp4" # Be sure to have ffmpeg installed to thumbnail video files # Animated thumbnails can be CPU intensive to generate. To disable the generation of animated # thumbnails, set this to false. If disabled, regular thumbnails will be returned. allowAnimated: true # Default to animated thumbnails, if available defaultAnimated: false # The maximum file size to thumbnail when a capable animated thumbnail is requested. If the image # is larger than this, the thumbnail will be generated as a static image. maxAnimateSizeBytes: 10485760 # 10MB default, 0 to disable # On a scale of 0 (start of animation) to 1 (end of animation), where should the thumbnailer try # and thumbnail animated content? Defaults to 0.5 (middle of animation). stillFrame: 0.5 # How many days after a thumbnail is generated before it expires and is deleted. The thumbnail # can be regenerated safely - this just helps free up some space in your datastores. Set to # zero or negative to disable. Defaults to disabled. expireAfterDays: 0 # Controls for the rate limit functionality # Set this to false if rate limiting is handled at a higher level or you don't want it enabled. matrix_media_repo_rate_limit_enabled: true # The number of requests per second before an IP will be rate limited. Must be a whole number. matrix_media_repo_rate_limit_requests_per_second: 1 # The number of requests an IP can send at once before the rate limit is actually considered. matrix_media_repo_rate_limit_burst: 10 # Identicons are generated avatars for a given username. Some clients use these to give users a # default avatar after signing up. Identicons are not part of the official matrix spec, therefore # this feature is completely optional. matrix_media_repo_identicons_enabled: true # The quarantine media settings. # If true, when a thumbnail of quarantined media is requested an image will be returned. If no # image is given in the thumbnailPath below then a generated image will be provided. This does # not affect regular downloads of files. matrix_media_repo_quarantine_replace_thumbnails: true # If true, when media which has been quarantined is requested an image will be returned. If # no image is given in the thumbnailPath below then a generated image will be provided. This # will replace media which is not an image (ie: quarantining a PDF will replace the PDF with # an image). matrix_media_repo_quarantine_replace_downloads: false # If provided, the given image will be returned as a thumbnail for media that is quarantined. matrix_media_repo_quarantine_thumbnail_path: "" # If true, administrators of the configured homeservers may quarantine media for their server # only. Global administrators can quarantine any media (local or remote) regardless of this # flag. matrix_media_repo_quarantine_allow_local_admins: true # The various timeouts that the media repo will use. # The maximum amount of time the media repo should spend trying to fetch a resource that is # being previewed. matrix_media_repo_timeouts_url_preview_timeout_seconds: 10 # The maximum amount of time the media repo will spend making remote requests to other repos # or homeservers. This is primarily used to download media. matrix_media_repo_timeouts_federation_timeout_seconds: 120 # The maximum amount of time the media repo will spend talking to your configured homeservers. # This is usually used to verify a user's identity. matrix_media_repo_timeouts_client_server_timeout_seconds: 30 # Prometheus metrics configuration # For an example Grafana dashboard, import the following JSON: # https://github.com/turt2live/matrix-media-repo/blob/master/docs/grafana.json # If true, the bindAddress and port below will serve GET /metrics for Prometheus to scrape. matrix_media_repo_metrics_enabled: false # The address to listen on. Typically "127.0.0.1" or "0.0.0.0" for all interfaces. matrix_media_repo_metrics_bind_address: "0.0.0.0" # The port to listen on. Cannot be the same as the general web server port. matrix_media_repo_metrics_port: 9000 # Plugins are optional pieces of the media repo used to extend the functionality offered. # Currently there are only antispam plugins, but in future there should be more options. # Plugins are not supported on per-domain paths and are instead repo-wide. For more # information on writing plugins, please visit #matrix-media-repo:t2bot.io on Matrix. matrix_media_repo_plugins: plugins: [] # An example OCR plugin to block images with certain text. Note that the Docker image # for the media repo automatically ships this at /plugins/plugin_antispam_ocr # - exec: /plugins/plugin_antispam_ocr # config: # # The URL to your OCR server (https://github.com/otiai10/ocrserver) # ocrServer: "http://localhost:8080" # # The keywords to scan for. The image must contain at least one of the keywords # # from each list to qualify for spam. # keywordGroups: # - - elon # - musk # - elonmusk # - - bitcoin # # The minimum (and maximum) sizes of images to process. # minSizeBytes: 20000 # maxSizeBytes: 200000 # # The types of files to process # types: ["image/png", "image/jpeg", "image/jpg"] # # The user ID regex to check against # userIds: "@telegram_.*" # # How much of the image's height, starting from the top, to consider before # # discarding the rest. Set to 1.0 to consider the whole image. # percentageOfHeight: 0.35 # Options for controlling various MSCs/unstable features of the media repo # Sections of this config might disappear or be added over time. By default all # features are disabled in here and must be explicitly enabled to be used. matrix_media_repo_feature_support: featureSupport: # MSC2248 - Blurhash MSC2448: # Whether or not this MSC is enabled for use in the media repo enabled: false # Maximum dimensions for converting a blurhash to an image. When no width and # height options are supplied, the default will be half these values. maxWidth: 1024 maxHeight: 1024 # Thumbnail size in pixels to use to generate the blurhash string thumbWidth: 64 thumbHeight: 64 # The X and Y components to use. Higher numbers blur less, lower numbers blur more. xComponents: 4 yComponents: 3 # The amount of contrast to apply when converting a blurhash to an image. Lower values # make the effect more subtle, larger values make it stronger. punch: 1 # IPFS Support # This is currently experimental and might not work at all. IPFS: # Whether or not IPFS support is enabled for use in the media repo. enabled: false # Options for the built in IPFS daemon builtInDaemon: # Enable this to spawn an in-process IPFS node to use instead of a localhost # HTTP agent. If this is disabled, the media repo will assume you have an HTTP # IPFS agent running and accessible. Defaults to using a daemon (true). enabled: true # If the Daemon is enabled, set this to the location where the IPFS files should # be stored. If you're using Docker, this should be something like "/data/ipfs" # so it can be mapped to a volume. repoPath: "./ipfs" # Support for redis as a cache mechanism # # Note: Enabling Redis support will mean that the existing cache mechanism will do nothing. # It can be safely disabled once Redis support is enabled. # # See docs/redis.md for more information on how this works and how to set it up. redis: # Whether or not use Redis instead of in-process caching. enabled: false # The Redis shards that should be used by the media repo in the ring. The names of the # shards are for your reference and have no bearing on the connection, but must be unique. shards: - name: "server1" addr: ":7000" - name: "server2" addr: ":7001" - name: "server3" addr: ":7002" # Optional sentry (https://sentry.io/) configuration for the media repo # Whether or not to set up error reporting. Defaults to off. matrix_media_repo_sentry_enabled: false # Get this value from the setup instructions in Sentry matrix_media_repo_sentry_dsn: "https://examplePublicKey@ingest.sentry.io/0" # Optional environment flag. Defaults to an empty string. matrix_media_repo_sentry_environment: "" # Whether or not to turn on sentry's built in debugging. This will increase log output. matrix_media_repo_sentry_debug: false