Building mx-puppet-discord appears to have been broken for a while. Related to: - https://github.com/matrix-discord/mx-puppet-discord/issues/201 - https://github.com/matrix-discord/mx-puppet-discord/issues/202 - https://github.com/matrix-discord/mx-puppet-discord/issues/203 We'd rather use a fork that is maintained better and by someone who cares about whether their software works or not, so we'll be using the Beeper-maintained for from now on. In the future, we should probably do the same for the Slack bridge which is also part of the same monorepo (https://gitlab.com/beeper/mx-puppet-monorepo).
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Setting up MX Puppet Discord (optional)
Note: bridging to Discord can also happen via the matrix-appservice-discord bridge supported by the playbook.
The playbook can install and configure mx-puppet-discord for you.
See the project page to learn what it does and why it might be useful to you.
Note: we actually use the Beeper-maintained fork of mx-puppet-discord, because matrix-discord/mx-puppet-discord
is a low-quality and poorly maintained project.
To enable the Discord bridge just use the following playbook configuration:
matrix_mx_puppet_discord_enabled: true
Usage
Once the bot is enabled you need to start a chat with Discord Puppet Bridge
with
the handle @_discordpuppet_bot:YOUR_DOMAIN
(where YOUR_DOMAIN
is your base
domain, not the matrix.
domain).
Three authentication methods are available, Legacy Token, OAuth and xoxc token. See mx-puppet-discord documentation for more information about how to configure the bridge.
Once logged in, send list
to the bot user to list the available rooms.
Clicking rooms in the list will result in you receiving an invitation to the bridged room.
Also send help
to the bot to see the commands available.