34 KiB
Just like IRC, Matrix has became a part of my social life online. My room can be found from my discuss page alongside some protocol comparison and my main accounts are in index.
I also have a txt with a list of all my accounts which has SSH signature.
Questions and Answers about Matrix
Matrix-related posts
Note that this section is manually updated and might be missing some links.
- Critique
- Inconsistency issues of Element, Element and Element, also privacy concerns
- Without selfhosting a homeserver or even then, Matrix moderation tools rely on security through obscurity
- A couple of words on protocols (on the Discuss page)
Questions & Answers
- Where else can I read about Matrix?
- Is there any kind of Matrix etiquette I should know about?
- How do you do custom not-emoji reactions?
- What are ghost and puppets?
- What does the public history visibility mean? I don’t want to appear in search engines
- Can I see who is in any specific room without being there?
- What are state resets?
- Can I have a non-federated room?
- What exactly is room upgrading?
- What are these idlekicks for inactivity, why are they for?
- I am told that I should Matrixify my IRC channel, what does that mean?
- Why should I use Matrix instead of IRC?
- I don’t currently want to touch Matrix, but I am seeing abuse from there, what can I do?
- Personal questions
- Why so many accounts?
- Why do you use Matrix URI scheme instead of matrix.to?
- Why does one of your accounts have capital letter in the username?
- Which client do you recommend?
- Which homeserver do you recommend?
- Why don’t you run your own?
- Why cannot I see history in your Matrix rooms?
- So do you wish Matrix to fail?
Where else can I read about Matrix?
- Miki is the Matrix wiki where I will attempt to contribute to.
- Matrix.org is the official website.
- My
gist repository also has notes on Matrix, mostly /devtools related
ones, they predate Miki and I hope to sort more relevant or
historical parts there.
- PPFI also has a couple of Matrix files, (GitHub mirror). Note that they are in Finnish.
- This site has random assortment of Matrix details around.
- txt/matrix.txt
- n/matrixspoilers has a quick note on spoilers.
- apothecary.gay
has a Matrix Tips & Tricks page
- At the time of writing also on using spoilers and custom emotes/stickers.
- Cos has written Matrix tips they don’t tell you containing a FAQ, hints and guides.
Is there any kind of Matrix etiquette I should know about?
Not particularly, you will find the same kind of social expectations like anywhere else, such as at IRC or Telegram. Here are some guidelines:
- Ask for a permission in room before starting a private/direct
message/discussion with someone.
- There is commonly an exception when you are contacting a moderator of about an issue in the chat and wish to avoid getting attention on yourself.
- When you eventually do message someone, state your business, without leaving your first message to a greeting. For more information about this, refer to nohello.net.
- When creating a new room, avoid advertising it in existing rooms.
The first guideline also applies, refrain from inviting random people
from other rooms without their permission.
- If you do perform mass inviting of strangers, you will be considered as a spammer and most likely end up on shared banlists resulting a significant portition of Matrix communities instantly banning you even if you never interacted with them directly.
How do you do custom not-emoji reactions?
They are implemented by multiple clients other than Element. In
FluffyChat, Gomuks and Nheko you can reply to something with
/react something
to add a something
reaction.
In Hydrogen there is a ...
next to emojis allowing you to
enter freeform text as a reaction. In Schildichat Android when you
search for a reaction, it offers to send your search as a
freeform-reaction.
Element-Web doesn’t support this yet and while there is open pull request, the merging is blocked due to Element not knowing how to handle moderation and reporting for malicious reactions.
What are ghost and puppets?
They are related to bringing Matrix to other protocols or vice versa.
- A ghost is a Matrix account on another protocol like IRC or XMPP (controlled from Matrix).
- A puppet is the opposite, a Matrix account controlled from another protocol such as IRC or XMPP (the controller/puppetmaster being the user there).
- A double-puppet is when you are using both protocols and have connected them to each other such as a message from Discord appears as your real Matrix account and message from Matrixx appears as your real Discord account instead of something virtual only existing due to the bridge.
What does the public history visibility mean? I don’t want to appear in search engines
The public/world-readable history visibility option means exactly
what it says, public even without joining the room. These rooms are
accessible to tools such as Matrix
Static and its successor Matrix Public
Archive (aka @archive:matrix.org
) and thus their
history is visible in search engines. If this isn’t what you want, set
history visibility to one of the members only options (since selecting
this option, since being invited or since join).
Additionally Matrix Foundation considers members-only history as public and will show it to anyone through archive.matrix.org. Thus if you have a semi-public room on Matrix, you should follow these steps:
- Set your room history visibility to “since user joined the room” or at least “since the user was invited”.
- Set the room join rule to
knock
orinvite
-only. If you really need to, you may also userestricted
orknock_restricted
, but be careful to not allow access from public rooms (although this will still protect you from matrix-public-archive). - Consider enabling end-to-end-encryption while it’s generally not adviced for public rooms.
Note that as the option name hints, the history visibility option will not apply to previous messages. Thus if you first make room public and then restrict it to members only the messages between these two changes are public and new users will see them. Same if messages are visible to members and then restricted further.
Another thing worth noting here is that encryption will not prevent new users from reading the future messages, Matrix will share keys to new joiners to some extent. For more information refer to Matrix Spec issue #1 and related issues.
Can I see who is in any specific room without being there?
It depends.
You can try Matrix
Public Archive, e.g. for Matrix HQ archive.matrix.org/r/matrix:matrix.org
omitting the leading #
.
If you too consider that undesirable, you can join
us at matrix-org/matrix-public-archive#47 requesting the ability to
opt-out and ban @archive:matrix.org
from your rooms in
hopes that it will be enough.
Alternatively if the room in question has an alias, you can try
poking the room directory API e.g. for #matrix.fi:matrix.org: https://matrix-client.matrix.org/_matrix/client/v3/directory/room/%23matrix.fi%3Amatrix.org,
you get the room ID and list of homeservers in it and if you see a
single user (or otherwise not so popular homeserver), you can make
educated guesses on who may be in the room. Note that this particular
link requires matrix.org
to be in the room and aware of the
alias.
Otherwise no, you cannot.
What are state resets?
The term is used least in two different scenarios:
- when your display name and/or avatar return back to what they were previously without anyone doing anything.
- more seriously when the Matrix federation decides that the room is actually in the past adding/removing users who were (or weren’t) in the room at that time. This also affects administrator/moderator access.
This
issue was supposed to be fixed at room version 2 with Stare Resolution
Version 2, but regardless still happens
in all versions after that. If you are affected, your best bet is to
/upgraderoom {{site.matrixLatestRoomVersion}}
, which is a
bit distruptive operation as all your users have to join the upgraded
version and all homeservers involved must support it.
You shouldn’t just trust me or the variable on this site on what is
the latest version, consult
the Spec and add Version
Checker or Fluff Generator or their sibling to your room and
once they join,
!servers upgrade {{site.matrixLatestRoomVersion}}
replacing
the {{site.matrixLatestRoomVersion}} with your target version.
How about DAG splits?
DAG splits are a phenomenon somehow related to state resets above, but instead of all servers accepting the same old state, they disagree and split to different directions with varying severity.
In minor case some servers may decide that a user is not in the room and not display messages from them, while in more severe situations the room may practically be two different rooms with no new messages in common between different sides kind of resembling IRC’s netsplits before sync.
People understanding state resolution (which by the way don’t include me) disagree on the exact cause only agreeing that it’s difficult to fix. From what is told to me, I understand it to be tracked in the same Synapse issue #8629.
Can I have a non-federated room?
Yes, there are two methods.
- During room creation, Element Web offers an option to have a non-federated room. That will permanently prevent any other homeserver from joining and to change that a manual room upgrade is required.
- What I recommend instead is setting a server ACL, so if necessary it can be changed later. This may be helpful when migrating to another domain (which Matrix doesn’t support) or cooperation with another entity with their own homeserver or anything.
The second method begins with the usual /devtools
,
explore room state, Send custom state event
, enter type as
m.room.server_acl
and contents:
{
"allow": ["example.org"],
"allow_ip_literals": false,
"deny": []
}
Now assuming all homeservers in the room implement ACL, only
example.org
users can join the room.
For futher reading about ACL:
- matrix.org: Moderation in Matrix, Banning servers from rooms (Server ACLs)
- Matrix Specification on ACL
- matrix-org/matrix-spec#928: Consider handling server ACLs through event auth rules rather than at the network level #928
What exactly is room upgrading?
Room upgrading basically means:
- Create a new room.
- Send an event to old room saying “the room has now moved to new room”
- Unless upgraded manually, the client copies some state such as power levels from the old room to the new one.
Manual upgrading means poking the API endpoint manually and thus not copying creation event (non-federation state) or power levels. For an example see my matrix-tombstone-room.bash script
See also Matrix
Specification on room versions or CTRL-F
this page for
/upgraderoom {{site.matrixLatestRoomVersion}}
(Element Web
command to perform the upgrade).
What are these idlekicks for inactivity, why are they for?
Some Matrix rooms decide to connect their channel to IRC maintaining the same users on both sides, which can be heavy for the IRC network depending on bridge type of which there are three “major” variants:
- matrix-appservice-irc which creates a ghost for every Matrix user on the IRC side. All of these pretend to be separate clients, so if you have 1000 ghosts at IRC, all internal PING/PONG (keepalive) traffic will be sent 1000 times every few minutes and so will every message received.
- heisenbridge has two modes, either it acts as a IRC bouncer keeping everything separate for every user or a single bot connection to IRC while creating puppets for IRC users to use at Matrix. It also supports RELAYMSG for more modern IRC networks.
- matterbridge is the most lightweight of the three working as a traditional relaybot on both sides. Unlike the others, it doesn’t require selfhosting your own homeserver making it the most accessible for those with less resources and the option I use whenever possible. Sadly it doesn’t look that great without RELAYMSG support I live in hope of Matrix implementing one day.
As matrix-appservice-irc very quickly becomes traffic-intensive, its
operators generally have agreement with IRC networks (or are IRC
networks by themselves) to remove unused connections after a month or
three of inactivity, which is judged by lack of public read-receipts
anywhere the bridge can see. It could have been implemented better pretending
to be a server instead, which would have a problem of practically
being root
and thus not many IRC networks would open their
door to a third party bridge and the Ergo IRCd doesn’t even support
server linking (opting to be HA instead, but more of that in “Why should
I use Matrix instead of IRC?”).
Being a server would also resolve IRC users getting annoyed by huge disconnection floods whenever matrix-appservice-irc restarts as it could be batched by the IRCd users are connected to.
The issues of matrix-appservice-irc grow worse when the room has
bridges to other protocols, as those grow the IRC user count, use
nicknames (sometimes capturing nicknames of people using both protocols
and may be difficult to regain if the bridge doesn’t answer to
!irc nick SomethingElse
) especially when the other protocol
doesn’t support direct/private messages and doesn’t have even that
excuse of using a connection slot.
I hope this answer helped explain why this behaviour exists and that IRC users aren’t opposed to bridging out of malice.
But the relaybots look so ugly
IRC users have dealt with them since always, I tend to use Limnoria
IRC bot which is forked from Supybot and has had the Relay plugin (for
relaying messages between multiple IRC networks) since
possibly before Wed Feb 2 06:45:35 2005 +0000
and I
imagine it was far from the first IRC relay.
This means that even before IRCv3 RELAYMSG and displayname proposals, which I wish to merge so modern clients could show displaynames and legacy RELAYMSGs, there have been client-side solutions that have also been evolving:
- Irssi I haven’t used personally, but I hear it has a detelexify that looks a bit like it’s made with Heisenbridge in mind.
- WeeChat used to have a separate script for this, but at version 1.1
in gained the Trigger plugin able to perform actions without scripts,
thus meaning you can use something like this
Relaybot 2 Trigger example without having to install anything (while
/script
would be easy too).
I hope Matrix will get better at this too.
I am told that I should Matrixify my IRC channel, what does that mean?
You are likely using IRCnet and I am sorry that you have to deal with this raider group. It means some mix of:
- setting a Matrix avatar to the room
- removing the
#
from the name of the Matrix room - setting a main alias to the Matrix room that doesn’t contain the IRC network’s name
- bridging to Matrix in a way that Matrix user (that may not be you)
has full power over the room, potentially also over the bridge bot
- be careful if you are told to answer a bot
yes
in a/query
!
- be careful if you are told to answer a bot
Why should I use Matrix instead of IRC?
No reason, if IRC suits you better than Matrix. As I have said before, I find maintaining IRC easier. IRC also tends to work better for me in poor network conditions and with IRCv3 specifications and implemented draft proposals, it can be very pleasant modern experience without the issues that come from federation.
There is a usecase for every tool and while federation is important feature in general I am yet to miss it in IRC.
I keep mentioning Ergo IRCd, which scales,
has serverside history and integrated bouncer feature so it’s just a
matter of adding it to your IRC client alongside your SASL credentials
and you will receive your offline messages whenever you reconnect. Ergo
also supports RELAYMSG
making messages from other protocols
seem more native to read and many graphical IRC clients even provide
integrated image uploading support.
Pirate Party of Finland considers Ergo-based PirateIRC and its webchat a reasonable fallback should we have to leave other protocols or they would be unusable otherwise.
Why isn’t Pirate Party of Finland using Matrix?
This goes a bit past my personal Q&A, but we are using it kind of as a “tech demo”. However it cannot currently mature past that as:
- we don’t have people interested in Matrix (obviously excluding me).
- we don’t have resources for hosting a Matrix homeserver, while we had IRC before we were founded.
- moderation tools are so bad it’s only me dealing with them (see critiques near top of the page).
- Matrix flagship clients, Element Web, Element Android and Element iOS don’t support knocking which has been supported by Matrix Specification since September 2021 or so meaning users of those aren’t able to request access to our rooms, unless they are members of an allowed rooms first.
If you want in, your options are:
- Join Matrix Suomi
Space, which lists Finnish speaking rooms and then our space.
- Due to aforementioned lack of moderation tools, this can be withdrawn should that become necessary to mitigate abuse.
- Knock one of our rooms using Nheko and hope someone is watching from Nheko.
- Come to #verkkopalvelut
using PrateIRC webchat and tell
AmindaSuomalainen
your Matrix ID in a nice message (to show you aren’t a bot) that you wish in.
I don’t currently want to touch Matrix, but I am seeing abuse from there, what can I do?
If you are using Telegram or Discord, you are out of luck, as while you can remove messages, that may get removed from Matrix, you cannot remove the abusive users. If you are using XMPP you may be out of luck.
However if you use IRC and the Matrix users are behind matrix-appservice-irc (check this list or your network operators) you may be in luck as long as you or your ops haven’t answered “yes” to the Matrix bot.
Matrix-appservice-irc attempts to sync permissions from IRC in a limited fashion, and if it’s unable to join a ghost (see an earlier question), it will kick the user from Matrix for as long as the ban stays in place.
In other words, if you were using Matrix personally, the IRC bridge
would drastically increase the moderation tools available for you! You
can now use wildcard bans that aren’t natively supported and even
extbans like (LiberaChat’s)
/mode #yourchannel +b $r:*:matrix.org*
to ban all
matrix.org users from your channel or set +e
ban exceptions
on them!
Note: this obviously stops working should the Matrix user change
their gecos/“real name” in which case your only option is to ban the
entirety of Matrix. E.g. on LiberaChat
/mode +b _!_@2001:470:69fc:105::/64
assuming your abusers
don’t have a cloak (vhost in any other IRC network).
I fear someone has said yes
In that case someone may have near absolute power on the Matrix side and could have removed the matrix-appservice-irc bot from power thus preventing it from kicking users banned from IRC letting them spam freely on Matrix while being invisible to IRC. In even worse scenario the abusive user was given power and they are immune to whatever is done from IRC.
There is also the chance that a netsplit gives a Matrix user moderator permissions that are never removed when sync occurs.
That doesn’t help me
If everything else fails, you can always mail abuse at matrix dot org, who will want the following details (as of 2022-10-16):
- Your matrix ID
- the room ID(s) your report is about
- timestamps or links to the events you are telling us about
Assuming you are an IRC user and thus unable to provide the two first, I would include:
- IRC network in question
- IRC channel in question
- WHOIS information of the abusive user (the realname should include MXID)
- timestamps and logs upon the incident
I haven’t tried this personally though, as I am Matrix user and have been sending raw events in JSON to them.
Personal questions
Why so many accounts?
My reasons for that are many and I am often proved correct in them.
- By having multiple accounts on different homeservers, there is no single entity that can decide whether I participate on Matrix or not. This is also a benefit of decentralisation in general.
- In case of federation meltdown, I have multiple entrypoints to send
events and thus hopefully one of them goes through faster. There have
been multiple incidents where this could have been useful for room
administrators.
- Matrix homeservers used to allow open registration with no kind of protection and no warnings they are being ran with that configuration until some time before room version 10 was released. This allowed multiple rooms to be spammed trivially and it took days for all homeservers to sync ACL bans in the worst cases. It also resulted to a lot of state resetting so the affected rooms never got cleaned up as the spam users kept coming back and clients had issues handling so inflated rooms.
- State resets keep happening and thus I cannot trust other accounts than the one which created a room in question stay as power level 100.
- Homeservers come and go, sometimes with little to no warning. As I have many functioning accounts generally with power levels set, homeserver migrations take me less effort than going through every room and ensuring just now created account has power.
Brief history of my experiences with dead homeservers
Believe my concern on homeservers coming and going or not, no homeserver is safe, you should have backup accounts on multiple independent ones. Or maybe I am just personally unlucky?
- 2018-09-07: Disroot.org announced Matrix closure.
- 2019-04-12: Matrix.org was compromised resulting the homeserver being down for a while, some integrations even longer and the XMPP bridge returned months later.
- From Disroot I moved to Feneas, the Federated networks association, thinking that homeserver being a paid membership benefit would help it to stay up and be reliable. However in late 2021 and early 2022 we decided to disband the association due to COVID-19 pandemic, lack of volunteers, lack of money (which wasn’t helped by Finnish money gathering law issues) etc.
- Around 2023-04-24 the-apothecary.club went down and returned sometime 2023-05-06. That would have been a long time with no communication on Matrix and not having access to any rooms, but luckily I have been using my account there just for accessibility testing and even if it was my primary account, I would have had backup accounts. I still don’t know what exactly happened there, but I am not an active member of their community and they are volunteers like most of Matrix (excluding EMS and other paid homeserver offerings).
- 2023-05-08 13:15 Kapsi.fi database server physically died taking down their homeserver and pikaviestin.fi (alongside sauna.social and järkkää.fi) which hosts my main account. It returned a couple of days later on the evening of 2023-05-11.
Why do you use Matrix URI scheme instead of matrix.to?
I dislike matrix.to as a concept. It’s a centralized service on decentralized protocol and in my opinion it shows lack of self-esteem on Matrix side considering neither XMPP or IRC require something like it, both of those trust being known or handled appropiately.
Why does one of your accounts have capital letter in the username?
In 2016 or so I mistakenly thought that usernames would be case-insensitive and they only got banned in Synapse on 10th November 2017.
Which client do you recommend?
Honestly the only one that I can recommend is Nheko nightly flatpak, even if it’s also missing features I care about such as Stories (#1038).
I have also said it before, but for any serious use of Matrix, you
will need Element
Web and especially the /devtools
command it has.
If you absolutely need Matrix somewhere neither fits you, maybe Hydrogen is your PWA hoping your needs don’t include too many Matrix accounts (#783, #817) and hoping you don’t use SailfishOS (#1000) or Ubuntu Touch (#1144).
Which homeserver do you recommend?
I am hesistant to recommend any. Finnish users may be interested in the Linux.fi wiki listing, everyone else may be served by joinmatrix.org listing.
Why don’t you run your own?
As can be read between the lines from my critiques, I don’t consider any homeserver to be in the state that it’s either safe to run legally or lightweight enough or not require constant maintenance as opposed to IRC which I do selfhost.
The world situation in general discourages me from anything as heavy.
Why cannot I see history in your Matrix rooms?
Matrix doesn’t support self-destructing messages or message expiry in general, so I don’t feel comfortable with world-readable logs (which would easily end to search engines forever).
If you need to see something in the backlog, I suggest using IRC (IRC@Etro or PirateIRC especially) or XMPP which each store messages only for 7 days (Ergo default) or some months (Prosody default) on a single server.
So do you wish Matrix to fail?
No, I have been using countless of hours at writing these critiques and performing “quality assurance”/testing, localizing clients to Finnish, providing support on their rooms for users of those clients, writing a Matrix Spec Change proposal (that was merged), having coauthored another, writing or contributing documentation in two languages and whatever else I have been doing since 2016.
Matrix has a place in my heart, just as IRC and XMPP and while none of the three are perfect, I wish for the issues get resolved and the fighting between them to end and I am tired of the “stop having fun” or “you are worse person for still using deprecated IRC” or “I wish IRC/XMPP just died already as it’s so old” or whatever attitude I see amongst certain Matrix user/enthustiastic groups.
However I admit having increasingly difficult time believing that either Matrix Foundation or New Vector trading as Element has their users best interests in heart.
The lucky Matrix number is
{{site.matrixLatestRoomVersion}}
, but do consult
the Spec for that and definitely ask
!servers upgrade {{site.matrixLatestRoomVersion}}
from Version Checker or Fluff Generator or their siblings.