14 Jun 2021 |
Antonin Peronnet | I don't understand what is the 8448 port | 14:17:40 |
Stefan | What guide did you follow? | 14:18:04 |
Antonin Peronnet | I followed the install guide on the synapse github page. In fact I came on this room by accident... I'm reading your guide and I don't know if I have to re-install everything. For me synapse is still really confusing :confused: | 14:24:59 |
Antonin Peronnet | * I followed the install guide on the synapse github page. In fact I came on this room by accident... I'm reading your guide and I don't know if I have to re-install everything. For me synapse is still really confusing 😕 | 14:25:21 |
Stefan | Maybe its better if you head to #synapse:matrix.org for further help. more people with more knowledge, to be completely honest :) | 14:25:58 |
Antonin Peronnet | is "#synapse:matrix.org" a room or a set of rooms ?
because the main room is just for announcement | 14:27:04 |
Antonin Peronnet | * is "#synapse:matrix.org" a room or a set of rooms ?
because the main room is just for announcements | 14:27:16 |
Stefan | Its one room and i invited you | 14:29:18 |
Antonin Peronnet | "TCP port 8008 is the port for clients, TCP port 8448 is the federation port for HTTPS."
Ok, this is a bit more clear for me.
But do you know when do you need that exactly ?
To join rooms on other servers, to invite people from other servers maybe ?
I didn't heard about that in the docs | 14:29:20 |
Antonin Peronnet | I think I found the page I was looking for: https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/develop/docs/reverse_proxy.md | 14:32:13 |
Antonin Peronnet | thanks natrius ! | 14:33:05 |
18 Jun 2021 |
| testuser998 joined the room. | 08:22:03 |
| testuser998 left the room. | 13:25:56 |
| qualifiedhebrewexcorsist changed their display name from Katsuki to qualifiedhebrewexcorsist. | 19:34:10 |
19 Jun 2021 |
| qualifiedhebrewexcorsist changed their display name from qualifiedhebrewexcorsist to lol1. | 22:26:59 |
| qualifiedhebrewexcorsist changed their display name from lol1 to qualifiedhebrewexcorsist. | 22:32:51 |
20 Jun 2021 |
| qualifiedhebrewexcorsist left the room. | 09:28:30 |
27 Jun 2021 |
| h4z3n joined the room. | 15:09:03 |
| h4z3n left the room. | 15:59:04 |
2 Jul 2021 |
| muniv changed their display name from muniv to muniv1. | 06:23:54 |
| muniv changed their display name from muniv1 to muniv. | 06:24:33 |
8 Jul 2021 |
| nirgal joined the room. | 14:33:19 |
nirgal | Hello. I had a quick look at https://www.natrius.eu/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=digital:server:matrixsynapse (thanks!). I don't think this is proper to generate a password from /dev/urandom, in step 3. One must use /dev/random for permanent password generation, even if it takes times when the system lacks enough entropy. Just my two cents... | 14:35:49 |
Stefan | Hey nirgal | 14:37:32 |
Stefan | Thanks for the input, i will read through that https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/324209/when-to-use-dev-random-vs-dev-urandom | 14:40:24 |
Stefan | If you have more input according to that, feel free :) | 14:40:40 |
nirgal | natrius: Good luck with that! It's interresting, but also very confusing... The entropy handling on Linux is a kind of nightmare. Basically there is a system that detects when entropy is low. /dev/random will block for a indefinite duration when that happens. I've heard people say it's better for permanent password generation, and I share that point of view. There should be no difference between the 2 interfaces unless you did just boot. But using /dev/random is a good practice I believe. I'd rather be slow than have poor passwords. And this is a once in a installation command. No use hurrying. I recommend reading "man 7 random", a bit simplier. This is definitely not a big issue. ^^ | 14:48:39 |
| nirgal left the room. | 16:15:14 |
11 Jul 2021 |
| Akshay Kumar C joined the room. | 15:41:08 |
15 Jul 2021 |
| haitam joined the room. | 16:00:45 |