# Homeserver details homeserver: # The address that this appservice can use to connect to the homeserver. address: https://example.com # The domain of the homeserver (for MXIDs, etc). domain: example.com # Whether or not to verify the SSL certificate of the homeserver. # Only applies if address starts with https:// verify_ssl: true # What software is the homeserver running? # Standard Matrix homeservers like Synapse, Dendrite and Conduit should just use "standard" here. software: standard # Number of retries for all HTTP requests if the homeserver isn't reachable. http_retry_count: 4 # The URL to push real-time bridge status to. # If set, the bridge will make POST requests to this URL whenever a user's Instagram MQTT connection state changes. # The bridge will use the appservice as_token to authorize requests. status_endpoint: null # Endpoint for reporting per-message status. message_send_checkpoint_endpoint: null # Whether asynchronous uploads via MSC2246 should be enabled for media. # Requires a media repo that supports MSC2246. async_media: false # Application service host/registration related details # Changing these values requires regeneration of the registration. appservice: # The address that the homeserver can use to connect to this appservice. address: http://localhost:29330 # When using https:// the TLS certificate and key files for the address. tls_cert: false tls_key: false # The hostname and port where this appservice should listen. hostname: 0.0.0.0 port: 29330 # The maximum body size of appservice API requests (from the homeserver) in mebibytes # Usually 1 is enough, but on high-traffic bridges you might need to increase this to avoid 413s max_body_size: 1 # The full URI to the database. SQLite and Postgres are supported. # Format examples: # SQLite: sqlite:///filename.db # Postgres: postgres://username:password@hostname/dbname database: postgres://username:password@hostname/db # Additional arguments for asyncpg.create_pool() or sqlite3.connect() # https://magicstack.github.io/asyncpg/current/api/index.html#asyncpg.pool.create_pool # https://docs.python.org/3/library/sqlite3.html#sqlite3.connect # For sqlite, min_size is used as the connection thread pool size and max_size is ignored. # Additionally, SQLite supports init_commands as an array of SQL queries to run on connect (e.g. to set PRAGMAs). database_opts: min_size: 1 max_size: 10 # The unique ID of this appservice. id: instagram # Username of the appservice bot. bot_username: instagrambot # Display name and avatar for bot. Set to "remove" to remove display name/avatar, leave empty # to leave display name/avatar as-is. bot_displayname: Instagram bridge bot bot_avatar: mxc://maunium.net/JxjlbZUlCPULEeHZSwleUXQv # Whether or not to receive ephemeral events via appservice transactions. # Requires MSC2409 support (i.e. Synapse 1.22+). # You should disable bridge -> sync_with_custom_puppets when this is enabled. ephemeral_events: true # Authentication tokens for AS <-> HS communication. Autogenerated; do not modify. as_token: "This value is generated when generating the registration" hs_token: "This value is generated when generating the registration" # Prometheus telemetry config. Requires prometheus-client to be installed. metrics: enabled: false listen_port: 8000 # Manhole config. manhole: # Whether or not opening the manhole is allowed. enabled: false # The path for the unix socket. path: /var/tmp/mautrix-instagram.manhole # The list of UIDs who can be added to the whitelist. # If empty, any UIDs can be specified in the open-manhole command. whitelist: - 0 instagram: # Seed for generating devices. This is secret because the seed is used to generate # device IDs, which can apparently be used to bypass two-factor authentication after # logging out, because Instagram is insecure. device_seed: generate # Bridge config bridge: # Localpart template of MXIDs for Instagram users. # {userid} is replaced with the user ID of the Instagram user. username_template: "instagram_{userid}" # Displayname template for Instagram users. # {displayname} is replaced with the display name of the Instagram user. # {username} is replaced with the username of the Instagram user. displayname_template: "{displayname} (Instagram)" # Displayname template for 1:1 chat portals. Same variables as displayname_template. private_chat_name_template: "{displayname}" # Displayname template for group chat portals. Only {name} is available. group_chat_name_template: "{name}" # Maximum length of displayname displayname_max_length: 100 # The maximum number of conversations that should be synced when we get a # message sync error. In general, 1 page (20) is sufficient. max_startup_thread_sync_count: 20 # Whether or not to use /sync to get read receipts and typing notifications # when double puppeting is enabled sync_with_custom_puppets: false # Whether or not to update the m.direct account data event when double puppeting is enabled. # Note that updating the m.direct event is not atomic (except with mautrix-asmux) # and is therefore prone to race conditions. sync_direct_chat_list: false # Allow using double puppeting from any server with a valid client .well-known file. double_puppet_allow_discovery: false # Servers to allow double puppeting from, even if double_puppet_allow_discovery is false. double_puppet_server_map: example.com: https://example.com # Shared secret for https://github.com/devture/matrix-synapse-shared-secret-auth # # If set, custom puppets will be enabled automatically for local users # instead of users having to find an access token and run `login-matrix` # manually. # If using this for other servers than the bridge's server, # you must also set the URL in the double_puppet_server_map. login_shared_secret_map: example.com: foo # Whether or not created rooms should have federation enabled. # If false, created portal rooms will never be federated. federate_rooms: true # Settings for backfilling messages from Instagram. backfill: # Enable initial backfill (~10 messages after creating portal)? enable_initial: true # Enable backfill queue? This is used for backfilling additional threads after the initial sync, # and when MSC2716 is enabled, to backfill message history going backwards. enable: false # Use MSC2716 for backfilling? If this is disabled, backfilling only happens when syncing threads, # and the incremental settings below don't apply. # # This requires a server with MSC2716 support, which is currently an experimental feature in Synapse. # It can be enabled by setting experimental_features -> msc2716_enabled to true in homeserver.yaml. msc2716: false # Use double puppets for backfilling? # In order to use this, the double puppets must be in the appservice's user ID namespace # (because the bridge can't use the double puppet access token with batch sending). # This only affects double puppets on the local server, double puppets on other servers will never be used. double_puppet_backfill: false # The maximum number of conversations that should be synced. # Other conversations will be backfilled on demand when the start PM # provisioning endpoint is used or when a message comes in from that # chat. # If set to -1, all conversations will by synced. max_conversations: 20 # The minimum amount of time to wait between syncing each thread. This # helps avoid situations where you sync too quickly. min_sync_thread_delay: 5 # If this value is greater than 0, then if the conversation's last # message was more than this number of hours ago, then the conversation # will automatically be marked it as read. # Conversations that have a last message that is less than this number # of hours ago will have their unread status synced from Instagram. unread_hours_threshold: 0 # Settings for how quickly to backoff when rate-limits are encountered # while backfilling. backoff: # How many seconds to wait after getting rate limited during a # thread list fetch. thread_list: 300 # How many seconds to wait after getting rate limited during a # message history fetch. message_history: 300 # Settings for backfills. # # During initial/incremental sync, the entirety of the thread that is # available will be backfilled. For example, on initial sync, about 20 # messages are included for each thread in the thread list returned by # the server. After that, incremental backfills will be run for each of # the portals in a round-robin fashion until all portals have been # backfilled as configured below. incremental: # The maximum number of pages to backfill per batch. max_pages: 10 # The maximum number of total pages to backfill per portal. # If set to -1, infinite pages will be synced. max_total_pages: -1 # The number of seconds to wait between backfilling each page. page_delay: 5 # The number of seconds to wait after backfilling the batch of # messages. post_batch_delay: 20 periodic_reconnect: # Interval in seconds in which to automatically reconnect all users. # This can be used to automatically mitigate the bug where Instagram stops sending messages. # Set to -1 to disable periodic reconnections entirely. interval: -1 # Whether or not the bridge should backfill chats when reconnecting. resync: true # Should even disconnected users be reconnected? always: false # URL to call to retrieve a proxy URL from (defaults to the http_proxy environment variable). get_proxy_api_url: null # End-to-bridge encryption support options. # # See https://docs.mau.fi/bridges/general/end-to-bridge-encryption.html for more info. encryption: # Allow encryption, work in group chat rooms with e2ee enabled allow: false # Default to encryption, force-enable encryption in all portals the bridge creates # This will cause the bridge bot to be in private chats for the encryption to work properly. default: false # Whether to use MSC2409/MSC3202 instead of /sync long polling for receiving encryption-related data. appservice: false # Require encryption, drop any unencrypted messages. require: false # Enable key sharing? If enabled, key requests for rooms where users are in will be fulfilled. # You must use a client that supports requesting keys from other users to use this feature. allow_key_sharing: false # What level of device verification should be required from users? # # Valid levels: # unverified - Send keys to all device in the room. # cross-signed-untrusted - Require valid cross-signing, but trust all cross-signing keys. # cross-signed-tofu - Require valid cross-signing, trust cross-signing keys on first use (and reject changes). # cross-signed-verified - Require valid cross-signing, plus a valid user signature from the bridge bot. # Note that creating user signatures from the bridge bot is not currently possible. # verified - Require manual per-device verification # (currently only possible by modifying the `trust` column in the `crypto_device` database table). verification_levels: # Minimum level for which the bridge should send keys to when bridging messages from Telegram to Matrix. receive: unverified # Minimum level that the bridge should accept for incoming Matrix messages. send: unverified # Minimum level that the bridge should require for accepting key requests. share: cross-signed-tofu # Options for Megolm room key rotation. These options allow you to # configure the m.room.encryption event content. See: # https://spec.matrix.org/v1.3/client-server-api/#mroomencryption for # more information about that event. rotation: # Enable custom Megolm room key rotation settings. Note that these # settings will only apply to rooms created after this option is # set. enable_custom: false # The maximum number of milliseconds a session should be used # before changing it. The Matrix spec recommends 604800000 (a week) # as the default. milliseconds: 604800000 # The maximum number of messages that should be sent with a given a # session before changing it. The Matrix spec recommends 100 as the # default. messages: 100 # Whether or not to explicitly set the avatar and room name for private # chat portal rooms. This will be implicitly enabled if encryption.default is true. private_chat_portal_meta: false # Whether or not the bridge should send a read receipt from the bridge bot when a message has # been sent to Instagram. delivery_receipts: false # Whether or not delivery errors should be reported as messages in the Matrix room. delivery_error_reports: false # Whether the bridge should send the message status as a custom com.beeper.message_send_status event. message_status_events: false # Set this to true to tell the bridge to re-send m.bridge events to all rooms on the next run. # This field will automatically be changed back to false after it, # except if the config file is not writable. resend_bridge_info: false # Whether or not unimportant bridge notices should be sent to the user. # (e.g. connected, disconnected but will retry) unimportant_bridge_notices: true # Disable bridge notices entirely disable_bridge_notices: false # Send captions in the same message as images. This will send data compatible with both MSC2530 and MSC3552. # This is currently not supported in most clients. caption_in_message: false # Should Matrix m.notice-type messages be bridged? bridge_notices: true # Provisioning API part of the web server for automated portal creation and fetching information. # Used by things like mautrix-manager (https://github.com/tulir/mautrix-manager). provisioning: # Whether or not the provisioning API should be enabled. enabled: true # The prefix to use in the provisioning API endpoints. prefix: /_matrix/provision/v1 # The shared secret to authorize users of the API. # Set to "generate" to generate and save a new token. shared_secret: generate # Segment API key to enable analytics tracking for web server endpoints. Set to null to disable. segment_key: null # Optional user_id to use when sending Segment events. If null, defaults to using mxID. segment_user_id: null # The prefix for commands. Only required in non-management rooms. command_prefix: "!ig" # Permissions for using the bridge. # Permitted values: # relay - Allowed to be relayed through the bridge, no access to commands. # user - Use the bridge with puppeting. # admin - Use and administrate the bridge. # Permitted keys: # * - All Matrix users # domain - All users on that homeserver # mxid - Specific user permissions: "*": "relay" "example.com": "user" "@admin:example.com": "admin" relay: # Whether relay mode should be allowed. If allowed, `!ig set-relay` can be used to turn any # authenticated user into a relaybot for that chat. enabled: false # The formats to use when sending messages to Instagram via a relay user. # # Available variables: # $sender_displayname - The display name of the sender (e.g. Example User) # $sender_username - The username (Matrix ID localpart) of the sender (e.g. exampleuser) # $sender_mxid - The Matrix ID of the sender (e.g. @exampleuser:example.com) # $message - The message content # # Note that Instagram doesn't support captions for images, so images won't include any indication of being relayed. message_formats: m.text: '$sender_displayname: $message' m.notice: '$sender_displayname: $message' m.emote: '* $sender_displayname $message' # Python logging configuration. # # See section 16.7.2 of the Python documentation for more info: # https://docs.python.org/3.6/library/logging.config.html#configuration-dictionary-schema logging: version: 1 formatters: colored: (): mautrix_instagram.util.ColorFormatter format: "[%(asctime)s] [%(levelname)s@%(name)s] %(message)s" normal: format: "[%(asctime)s] [%(levelname)s@%(name)s] %(message)s" handlers: file: class: logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler formatter: normal filename: ./mautrix-instagram.log maxBytes: 10485760 backupCount: 10 console: class: logging.StreamHandler formatter: colored loggers: mau: level: DEBUG mauigpapi: level: DEBUG aiohttp: level: INFO paho.mqtt: level: INFO root: level: DEBUG handlers: [file, console]