Server Notices ============== 'Server Notices' are a new feature introduced in Synapse 0.30. They provide a channel whereby server administrators can send messages to users on the server. They are used as part of the communication of the server polices (see [consent_tracking.md]), however the intention is that they may also find a use for features such as "Message of the day". This is a feature specific to Synapse, but it uses standard Matrix communication mechanisms, so should work with any Matrix client. User experience --------------- When the user is first sent a server notice, they will get an invitation to a room (typically called 'Server Notices', though this is configurable in `homeserver.yaml`). They will be **unable to reject** this invitation - attempts to do so will receive an error. Once they accept the invitation, they will see the notice message in the room history; it will appear to have come from the 'server notices user' (see below). The user is prevented from sending any messages in this room by the power levels. They also cannot leave it. Synapse configuration --------------------- Server notices come from a specific user id on the server. Server administrators are free to choose the user id - something like `server` is suggested, meaning the notices will come from `@server:`. Once the server notices user is configured, that user id becomes a special, privileged user, so administrators should ensure that **it is not already allocated**. In order to support server notices, it is necessary to add some configuration to the `homeserver.yaml` file. In particular, you should add a `server_notices` section, which should look like this: ```yaml server_notices: system_mxid_localpart: server system_mxid_display_name: "Server Notices" room_name: "Server Notices" ``` The only compulsory setting is `system_mxid_localpart`, which defines the user id of the server notices user, as above. `system_mxid_display_name` and `room_name` define the displayname of the system notices user, and of the notices room, respectively.