2.0 KiB
Setting up Appservice Webhooks (optional)
The playbook can install and configure matrix-appservice-webhooks for you.
This bridge provides support for Slack-compatible webhooks.
Setup Instructions:
loosely based on this
- All you basically need is to adjust your
inventory/host_vars/matrix.<domain-name>/vars.yml
:
matrix_appservice_webhooks_enabled: true
matrix_appservice_webhooks_api_secret: '<your_secret>'
- In case you want to change the verbosity of logging via
journalctl -fu matrix-appservice-webhooks.service
you can adjust this ininventory/host_vars/matrix.<domain-name>/vars.yml
as well.
Note: default value is: info
and availabe log levels are : info
, verbose
matrix_appservice_webhooks_log_level: '<log_level>'
-
If you've already installed Matrix services using the playbook before, you'll need to re-run it (
--tags=setup-all,start
). If not, proceed with configuring other playbook services and then with Installing. Get back to this guide once ready. -
Invite the bridge bot user to your room:
-
either with
/invite @_webhook:<domain.name>
(Note: Make sure you have administration permissions in your room) -
or simply add the bridge bot to a private channel (personal channels imply you being an administrator)
-
-
Send a message to the bridge bot in order to receive a private message including the webhook link.
!webhook
- The JSON body for posting messages will have to look like this:
{
"text": "Hello world!",
"format": "plain",
"displayName": "My Cool Webhook",
"avatarUrl": "http://i.imgur.com/IDOBtEJ.png"
}
You can test this via curl like so:
curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
--data '{
"text": "Hello world!",
"format": "plain",
"displayName": "My Cool Webhook",
"avatarUrl": "http://i.imgur.com/IDOBtEJ.png"
}' \
<the link you've gotten in 5.>