This library sits on top of the core application service library and provides an API for setting up bridges quickly. Check out the HOW-TO for a step-by-step tutorial on setting up a new bridge.
matrix-appservice-bridge
requires Node JS 18.x or greater.
If you are looking to contribute to this library, please check out our CONTRIBUTING guide.
A hosted reference can be found on
GitHub Pages.
Alternatively, build the docs using yarn gendoc
. Each component's class
constructor is exposed on require("matrix-appservice-bridge")
so check each
class for more information on how to use each component.
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| Your bridge e.g. IRC |
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| matrix-appservice-bridge |
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| matrix-appservice |
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The bridge relies on matrix-appservice
and matrix-bot-sdk
for their of the Application
Service API (AS API) and Client-Server
API (CS API) respectively. The bridge manages
state for virtual users and provides many useful helper functions bridges may desire.
The bridge is formed around "components". You can pick and choose which components you use, though some components depend upon other components. All components operate on data models defined in the bridge. You can directly construct components: the bridge exposes the class constructor.
The component which orchestrates other components: a "glue" component. Provides a way to start the bridge. This is the component most examples use. Has dependencies on most of the components listed above.
Provides basic document store (key-value) CRUD operations.
Provides storage for matrix and remote users. Provides CRUD operations and mapping between different types of users.
Provides storage for matrix and remote rooms. Provides CRUD operations and mapping between different types of rooms.
Provides storage for matrix and remote event ids.
An abstraction provided to identify a single request through the bridge. Can be used for request-context logging (each request has a unique ID) and metrics (each request can succeed or fail and has timers for how long they take to go through the bridge).
Provides a way to perform Matrix actions by intent rather than by raw
API calls. This can be thought of as an extension to the client-server JS SDK.
For example, intent.invite(roomId, invitee)
would make sure that you are
actually joined to the room roomId
first (and will automatically join it if
you aren't) before trying to send the invite.
Performing actions by intent makes creating bridges a lot easier. For example,
if your bridge has no concept of inviting or joining rooms, then you don't need
to care about it either in the bridge. Simply calling
intent.sendMessage(roomId, text)
would make sure that you are joined to the
room first before sending the message.
Provides a way to validate a YAML file when provided with a schema file. Useful for setting your bridge-specific configuration information.
Processes command line arguments and runs the Bridge
.
A wrapper around the JS SDK MatrixClient
designed for use by the application
service itself. Contains helper methods to get all rooms the AS is in, how
many virtual / real users are in each, etc.
This component exposes access to the bridges log reporter.
To use the component, use Logger.configure
to setup
the logger.
// Configure the logger by providing these options
Logger.configure({ level: "info" });
// In each module, instantiate the Logger class with a module name.
const log = new Logger('MyModule');
// Then log away!
log.info('Hello, this is a log from my module');
log.debug('Some debug info');
log.error('Oh no, something went wrong!', new Error('an error'));
You MUST configure the logger before anything will be emitted to the console.
This component validates if a room can be linked to a remote channel based on
whether it conflicts with any rules given in a rule file. The filename is given
in opts.roomLinkValidation.ruleFile
for Bridge
, though you may also set the
rules as an object instead by setting opts.roomLinkValidation.rules
.
The format for the file (in YAML) or the object is as follows:
{
// This rule checks the memberlist of a room to determine if it will let
// the bridge create a link to the room. This is useful for avoiding conflicts
// with other bridges.
"userIds": {
// Anyone in this set will be ALWAYS exempt from the conflicts rule.
// Here anyone whose localpart starts with nice is exempt.
"exempt": ["@nice.+:example.com"]
// This is a regex that will exclude anyone who has "guy" at the end of their localpart.
// evilbloke is also exempt.
"conflict": ["@.+guy:example.com", "@evilbloke:example.com"]
}
}
If you set opts.roomLinkValidation.triggerEndpoint
to true
, then you may use
/_bridge/roomLinkValidator/reload
to reload the config from file. This endpoint
optionally takes the filename
parameter if you want to reload the config from
another location.
This component automatically handles Room Upgrades by changing all associated room entries to use the new room id as well as leaving and joining ghosts. It can also be hooked into so you can manually adjust entries, or do an action once the upgrade is over.
This component is disabled by default but can enabled by simply defining roomUpgradeOpts
in the options given to the bridge (simply {}
(empty object)). By default, users
will be copied on upgrade. Upgrade events will also be consumed by the bridge, and
will not be emitted by onEvent
. For more information, see the docs.
MatrixRoom
- A representation of a matrix room.RemoteRoom
- A representation of a third-party room.MatrixUser
- A representation of a matrix user.RemoteUser
- A representation of a third-party user.
Warning: This feature is experimental and not part of the matrix specification yet. MSC2162 is currently ongoing which means that changes will likely happen to the format of the errors. Do not use this in production bridges.
This section applies when you are using Bridge
and want to notify your users
about problems while processing their events.
One thing the bridge requires you to do is fulfilling or rejecting the
request
promise which is handed to you as argument of the
controller.onEvent
callback. When rejecting the promise, the Error
you
reject with will indicate to the bridge library how to behave:
- On an
EventNotHandledError
(and all its subtypes) the bridge will declare the event as permanently failed. It will mark it as such by sending ade.nasnotfound.bridge_error
room event, which will make clients show an error message to their users. - On all other
Error
types no message is sent to the clients. The bridge still uses the information that the event was handled for queuing purposes.