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- ---
- # The bare domain name which represents your Matrix identity.
- # Matrix user IDs for your server will be of the form (`@alice:example.com`).
- #
- # Note: this playbook does not touch the server referenced here.
- # Installation happens on another server ("matrix.example.com", see `matrix_server_fqn_matrix`).
- #
- # If you've deployed using the wrong domain, you'll have to run the Uninstalling step,
- # because you can't change the Domain after deployment.
- matrix_domain: example.com
-
- # The Matrix homeserver software to install.
- # See:
- # - `roles/custom/matrix-base/defaults/main.yml` for valid options
- # - the `docs/configuring-playbook-IMPLEMENTATION_NAME.md` documentation page, if one is available for your implementation choice
- #
- # By default, we use Synapse, because it's the only full-featured Matrix server at the moment.
- #
- # Note that the homeserver implementation of a server will not be able to be changed without data loss.
- matrix_homeserver_implementation: synapse
-
- # A secret used as a base, for generating various other secrets.
- # You can put any string here, but generating a strong one is preferred. You can create one with a command like `pwgen -s 64 1`.
- matrix_homeserver_generic_secret_key: ''
-
- # By default, the playbook manages its own Traefik (https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/) reverse-proxy server.
- # It will retrieve SSL certificates for you on-demand and forward requests to all other components.
- # For alternatives, see `docs/configuring-playbook-own-webserver.md`.
- matrix_playbook_reverse_proxy_type: playbook-managed-traefik
-
- # Controls whether container networks will be created with IPv6 support.
- #
- # If you also have IPv6 support on your server/network and AAAA DNS records pointing to the server,
- # enabling this will effectively give you full public IPv6 connectivity (powered by NAT66).
- #
- # We recommend leaving this enabled even if you don't currently have IPv6 connectivity on your server/network.
- # This way, once you eventually get IPv6 connectivity, you won't have to change anything (besides DNS records).
- #
- # Flipping this setting later on requires manual work (stopping services, deleting and recreating all container networks).
- #
- # In the future, this setting will likely default to `true`, so if you really want IPv6 disabled, explicitly set this to `false`.
- #
- # People managing Docker themselves and running an older Docker version will need additional configuration.
- #
- # Learn more in `docs/configuring-playbook-ipv6.md`.
- devture_systemd_docker_base_ipv6_enabled: true
-
- # A Postgres password to use for the superuser Postgres user (called `matrix` by default).
- #
- # The playbook creates additional Postgres users and databases (one for each enabled service) using this superuser account.
- #
- # Changing this value subsequently requires manual work.
- # The value used here must be shorter than 100 characters.
- postgres_connection_password: ''
-
- # By default, we configure coturn's external IP address using the value specified for `ansible_host` in your `inventory/hosts` file.
- # If this value is an external IP address, you can skip this section.
- #
- # If `ansible_host` is not the server's external IP address, you have 2 choices:
- # 1. Uncomment the line below, to allow IP address auto-detection to happen (more on this below)
- # 2. Uncomment and adjust the line below to specify an IP address manually
- #
- # By default, auto-detection will be attempted using the `https://ifconfig.co/json` API.
- # Default values for this are specified in `matrix_coturn_turn_external_ip_address_auto_detection_*` variables in the coturn role
- # (see `roles/custom/matrix-coturn/defaults/main.yml`).
- #
- # If your server has multiple IP addresses, you may define them in another variable which allows a list of addresses.
- # Example: `matrix_coturn_turn_external_ip_addresses: ['1.2.3.4', '4.5.6.7']`
- #
- # matrix_coturn_turn_external_ip_address: ''
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