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Delegation
By default, other homeservers will expect to be able to reach yours via
your server_name
, on port 8448. For example, if you set your server_name
to example.com
(so that your user names look like @user:example.com
),
other servers will try to connect to yours at https://example.com:8448/
.
Delegation is a Matrix feature allowing a homeserver admin to retain a
server_name
of example.com
so that user IDs, room aliases, etc continue
to look like *:example.com
, whilst having federation traffic routed
to a different server and/or port (e.g. synapse.example.com:443
).
.well-known delegation
To use this method, you need to be able to alter the
server_name
's https server to serve the /.well-known/matrix/server
URL. Having an active server (with a valid TLS certificate) serving your
server_name
domain is out of the scope of this documentation.
The URL https://<server_name>/.well-known/matrix/server
should
return a JSON structure containing the key m.server
like so:
{
"m.server": "<synapse.server.name>[:<yourport>]"
}
In our example, this would mean that URL https://example.com/.well-known/matrix/server
should return:
{
"m.server": "synapse.example.com:443"
}
Note, specifying a port is optional. If no port is specified, then it defaults to 8448.
With .well-known delegation, federating servers will check for a valid TLS
certificate for the delegated hostname (in our example: synapse.example.com
).
SRV DNS record delegation
It is also possible to do delegation using a SRV DNS record. However, that is
considered an advanced topic since it's a bit complex to set up, and .well-known
delegation is already enough in most cases.
However, if you really need it, you can find some documentation on how such a record should look like and how Synapse will use it in the Matrix specification.
Delegation FAQ
When do I need delegation?
If your homeserver's APIs are accessible on the default federation port (8448)
and the domain your server_name
points to, you do not need any delegation.
For instance, if you registered example.com
and pointed its DNS A record at a
fresh server, you could install Synapse on that host, giving it a server_name
of example.com
, and once a reverse proxy has been set up to proxy all requests
sent to the port 8448
and serve TLS certificates for example.com
, you
wouldn't need any delegation set up.
However, if your homeserver's APIs aren't accessible on port 8448 and on the
domain server_name
points to, you will need to let other servers know how to
find it using delegation.
Do you still recommend against using a reverse proxy on the federation port?
We no longer actively recommend against using a reverse proxy. Many admins will find it easier to direct federation traffic to a reverse proxy and manage their own TLS certificates, and this is a supported configuration.
See reverse_proxy.md for information on setting up a reverse proxy.
Do I still need to give my TLS certificates to Synapse if I am using a reverse proxy?
This is no longer necessary. If you are using a reverse proxy for all of your
TLS traffic, then you can set no_tls: True
in the Synapse config.
In that case, the only reason Synapse needs the certificate is to populate a legacy
tls_fingerprints
field in the federation API. This is ignored by Synapse 0.99.0
and later, and the only time pre-0.99 Synapses will check it is when attempting to
fetch the server keys - and generally this is delegated via matrix.org
, which
is running a modern version of Synapse.
Do I need the same certificate for the client and federation port?
No. There is nothing stopping you from using different certificates, particularly if you are using a reverse proxy.