mirror of
https://github.com/hoernschen/dendrite.git
synced 2024-12-27 23:48:27 +00:00
Explain how SRV works in Matrix and discourage using it (#2577)
* Explain how SRV works in Matrix and discourage using it * Minor tweaks to formatting Co-authored-by: Neil Alexander <neilalexander@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit is contained in:
parent
5c01306bb5
commit
84a7797883
1 changed files with 37 additions and 23 deletions
|
@ -14,15 +14,18 @@ that take the format `@user:example.com`.
|
||||||
For federation to work, the server name must be resolvable by other homeservers on the internet
|
For federation to work, the server name must be resolvable by other homeservers on the internet
|
||||||
— that is, the domain must be registered and properly configured with the relevant DNS records.
|
— that is, the domain must be registered and properly configured with the relevant DNS records.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
Matrix servers discover each other when federating using the following methods:
|
Matrix servers usually discover each other when federating using the following methods:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
1. If a well-known delegation exists on `example.com`, use the path server from the
|
1. If a well-known delegation exists on `example.com`, use the domain and port from the
|
||||||
well-known file to connect to the remote homeserver;
|
well-known file to connect to the remote homeserver;
|
||||||
2. If a DNS SRV delegation exists on `example.com`, use the hostname and port from the DNS SRV
|
2. If a DNS SRV delegation exists on `example.com`, use the IP address and port from the DNS SRV
|
||||||
record to connect to the remote homeserver;
|
record to connect to the remote homeserver;
|
||||||
3. If neither well-known or DNS SRV delegation are configured, attempt to connect to the remote
|
3. If neither well-known or DNS SRV delegation are configured, attempt to connect to the remote
|
||||||
homeserver by connecting to `example.com` port TCP/8448 using HTTPS.
|
homeserver by connecting to `example.com` port TCP/8448 using HTTPS.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The exact details of how server name resolution works can be found in
|
||||||
|
[the spec](https://spec.matrix.org/v1.3/server-server-api/#resolving-server-names).
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
## TLS certificates
|
## TLS certificates
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
Matrix federation requires that valid TLS certificates are present on the domain. You must
|
Matrix federation requires that valid TLS certificates are present on the domain. You must
|
||||||
|
@ -51,17 +54,12 @@ you will be able to delegate from `example.com` to `matrix.example.com` so that
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
Delegation can be performed in one of two ways:
|
Delegation can be performed in one of two ways:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
* **Well-known delegation**: A well-known text file is served over HTTPS on the domain name
|
* **Well-known delegation (preferred)**: A well-known text file is served over HTTPS on the domain
|
||||||
that you want to use, pointing to your server on `matrix.example.com` port 8448;
|
name that you want to use, pointing to your server on `matrix.example.com` port 8448;
|
||||||
* **DNS SRV delegation**: A DNS SRV record is created on the domain name that you want to
|
* **DNS SRV delegation (not recommended)**: See the SRV delegation section below for details.
|
||||||
use, pointing to your server on `matrix.example.com` port TCP/8448.
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
If you are using a reverse proxy to forward `/_matrix` to Dendrite, your well-known or DNS SRV
|
If you are using a reverse proxy to forward `/_matrix` to Dendrite, your well-known or delegation
|
||||||
delegation must refer to the hostname and port that the reverse proxy is listening on instead.
|
must refer to the hostname and port that the reverse proxy is listening on instead.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
Well-known delegation is typically easier to set up and usually preferred. However, you can use
|
|
||||||
either or both methods to delegate. If you configure both methods of delegation, it is important
|
|
||||||
that they both agree and refer to the same hostname and port.
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
## Well-known delegation
|
## Well-known delegation
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
@ -74,20 +72,36 @@ and contain the following JSON document:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
```json
|
```json
|
||||||
{
|
{
|
||||||
"m.server": "https://matrix.example.com:8448"
|
"m.server": "matrix.example.com:8448"
|
||||||
}
|
}
|
||||||
```
|
```
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
You can also serve `.well-known` with Dendrite itself by setting the `well_known_server_name` config
|
||||||
|
option to the value you want for `m.server`. This is primarily useful if Dendrite is exposed on
|
||||||
|
`example.com:443` and you don't want to set up a separate webserver just for serving the `.well-known`
|
||||||
|
file.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
```yaml
|
||||||
|
global:
|
||||||
|
...
|
||||||
|
well_known_server_name: "example.com:443"
|
||||||
|
```
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
## DNS SRV delegation
|
## DNS SRV delegation
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
Using DNS SRV delegation requires creating DNS SRV records on the `example.com` zone which
|
This method is not recommended, as the behavior of SRV records in Matrix is rather unintuitive:
|
||||||
refer to your Dendrite installation.
|
SRV records will only change the IP address and port that other servers connect to, they won't
|
||||||
|
affect the domain name. In technical terms, the `Host` header and TLS SNI of federation requests
|
||||||
|
will still be `example.com` even if the SRV record points at `matrix.example.com`.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
Assuming that your Dendrite installation is listening for HTTPS connections at `matrix.example.com`
|
In practice, this means that the server must be configured with valid TLS certificates for
|
||||||
port 8448, the DNS SRV record must have the following fields:
|
`example.com`, rather than `matrix.example.com` as one might intuitively expect. If there's a
|
||||||
|
reverse proxy in between, the proxy configuration must be written as if it's `example.com`, as the
|
||||||
|
proxy will never see the name `matrix.example.com` in incoming requests.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
* Name: `@` (or whichever term your DNS provider uses to signal the root)
|
This behavior also means that if `example.com` and `matrix.example.com` point at the same IP
|
||||||
* Service: `_matrix`
|
address, there is no reason to have a SRV record pointing at `matrix.example.com`. It can still
|
||||||
* Protocol: `_tcp`
|
be used to change the port number, but it won't do anything else.
|
||||||
* Port: `8448`
|
|
||||||
* Target: `matrix.example.com`
|
If you understand how SRV records work and still want to use them, the service name is `_matrix` and
|
||||||
|
the protocol is `_tcp`.
|
||||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue