Note: bridging to Discord can also happen via the mx-puppet-discord bridge supported by the playbook.
The playbook can install and configure matrix-appservice-discord for you.
See the project's documentation to learn what it does and why it might be useful to you.
Instructions loosely based on this.
- Create a Discord Application here.
- Retrieve Client ID.
- Create a bot from the Bot tab and retrieve the Bot token.
- Enable the bridge with the following configuration in your
vars.yml
file:
matrix_appservice_discord_enabled: true
matrix_appservice_discord_client_id: "YOUR DISCORD APP CLIENT ID"
matrix_appservice_discord_bot_token: "YOUR DISCORD APP BOT TOKEN"
- 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.
Other configuration options are available via the matrix_appservice_discord_configuration_extension_yaml
variable.
Self-service bridging allows you to bridge specific and existing Matrix rooms to specific Discord rooms. This is disabled by default, so it must be enabled by adding this to your vars.yml
:
matrix_appservice_discord_bridge_enableSelfServiceBridging: true
Note: If self-service bridging is not enabled, !discord help
commands will return no results.
Once self-service is enabled:
- Start a chat with
@_discord_bot:<YOUR_DOMAIN>
and say!discord help bridge
. - Follow the instructions in the help output message. If the bot is not already in the Discord server, follow the provided invite link. This may require you to be a administrator of the Discord server.
Note: Encrypted Matrix rooms are not supported as of writing.
On the Discord side, you can say !matrix help
to get a list of available commands to manage the bridge and Matrix users.
Through portal bridging, Matrix rooms will automatically be created by the bot and bridged to the relevant Discord room. This is done by simply joining a room with a specific name pattern (#_discord_<guildID>_<channlID>
).
All Matrix rooms created this way are listed publicly by default, and you will not have admin permissions to change this. To get more control, make yourself a room Administrator. You can then unlist the room from the directory and change the join rules.
If you want to disable portal bridging, set the following in vars.yml
:
matrix_appservice_discord_bridge_disablePortalBridging: true
To get started with Portal Bridging:
- To invite the bot to Discord, retrieve the invite link from the
{{ matrix_appservice_discord_config_path }}/invite_link
file on the server (this defaults to/matrix/appservice-discord/config/invite_link
). You need to peek at the file on the server via SSH, etc., because it's not available via HTTP(S). - Room addresses follow this syntax:
#_discord_<guildID>_<channelID>
. You can easily find the guild and channel IDs by logging into Discord in a browser and opening the desired channel. The URL will have this format:discord.com/channels/<guildID>/<channelID>
. - Once you have figured out the appropriate room address, you can join by doing
/join #_discord_<guildID>_<channelID>
in your Matrix client.
By default, you won't have Administrator access in rooms created by the bridge.
To adjust room access privileges or do various other things (change the room name subsequently, etc.), you'd wish to become an Administrator.
There's the Discord bridge's guide for setting privileges on bridge managed rooms. To do the same with our container setup, run the following command on the server:
docker exec -it matrix-appservice-discord \
/bin/sh -c 'cp /cfg/registration.yaml /tmp/discord-registration.yaml && cd /tmp && node /build/tools/adminme.js -c /cfg/config.yaml -m "!ROOM_ID:SERVER" -u "@USER:SERVER" -p 100'