A bridge between Matrix and Discord. Currently the bridge is in Beta and quite usable for everyday bridging, with one or two bugs cropping up.
PRs are graciously accepted, so please come talk to us in #discord-bridge:matrix.org
about any neat ideas you might have. If you are going to make a change, please merge it with the develop
branch :).
You can also file bug reports/ feature requests on Github Issues which also helps a ton. Please remember to include logs. Please also be aware that this is an unoffical project worked on in our spare time.
The bridge has been tested against the Synapse homeserver, although any homeserver that implements the AS API should work with this bridge.
The bridge supports any version of Node.js >= v12.X, including all current releases.
-
Run
npm install
to grab the dependencies.npm
may complain about peer dependencies, but you can safely ignore these. -
Run
npm run build
to build the typescript into javascript. -
Copy
config/config.sample.yaml
toconfig.yaml
and edit it to reflect your setup.- Note that you are expected to set
domain
andhomeserverURL
to your public host name. While localhost would work, it does not resolve correctly with Webhooks/Avatars. Please note that a self-signed SSL certificate won't work, either.
bridge: domain: "example.com" homeserverUrl: "https://example.com"
- Note that you are expected to set
-
Run
node build/src/discordas.js -r -u "http://localhost:9005" -c config.yaml
-
Modify your HSs appservices config so that it includes the generated file.
- e.g. On synapse, adding to
app_service_config_files
array inhomeserver.yaml
app_service_config_files: - "discord-registration.yaml"
- Copy
discord-registration.yaml
to your Synapse's directory.
- e.g. On synapse, adding to
Following the instructions above, generate a registration file. The file may also be hand-crafted if you're familiar with the layout. You'll need this file to use the Docker image.
# Create the volume where we'll keep the bridge's files
mkdir -p /matrix-appservice-discord
# Create the configuration file. Use the sample configuration file as a template.
# Be sure to set the database paths to something like this:
# database:
# filename: "/data/discord.db"
# userStorePath: "/data/user-store.db"
# roomStorePath: "/data/room-store.db"
nano /matrix-appservice-discord/config.yaml
# Copy the registration file to the volume
cp discord-registration.yaml /matrix-appservice-discord/discord-registration.yaml
# Optional: Build the container yourself (requires a git clone, and to be in the root of the project)
docker build -t halfshot/matrix-appservice-discord .
# Run the container
docker run -v /matrix-appservice-discord:/data -p 9005:9005 halfshot/matrix-appservice-discord
The bridge supports reporting metrics via Prometheus. You can configure metrics support in the config
file. The metrics will be reported under the URL provided in the registration file, on the /metrics
endpoint.
This bridge support searching for rooms within networks via the 3pid system used in clients like Element. Any new servers/guilds you bridge should show up in the network list on Element and other clients.
- Create a new application via https://discordapp.com/developers/applications
- Make sure to create a bot user. Fill in
config.yaml
- Run
npm run addbot
to get a authorisation link. - Give this link to owners of the guilds you plan to bridge.
- Finally, you can join a room with
#_discord_guildid_channelid
- These can be taken from the url ("/$GUILDID/$CHANNELID") when you are in a channel.
- Element (and other clients with third party protocol support) users can directly join channels from the room directory.
- You can use Webhooks to make messages relayed by the bridge not nested by the bot user. This will also display the avatar of the user speaking on matrix with their messages.
- The bot should create this automatically, but if not perform the following:
- Enable
Manage Webhooks
on the role added by the bot. - Add the
_matrix
Webhook for each channel you'd like to enable this feature on.
- Enable
- The bot should create this automatically, but if not perform the following:
- For the bot to appear online on Discord you need to run the bridge itself.
npm start
- Particular configuration keys can be overridden by defining corresponding environment variables. For instance,
auth.botToken
can be set withAPPSERVICE_DISCORD_AUTH_BOT_TOKEN
.
You must get an authorization link from bridge owner. You must be a server admin or get help from server admin on Discord side.
- Invite the Matrix side bot to your room and wait for it to join.
- On Discord side use the authorization link to invite bot to Discord server.
- Find out a serverid and channelid for your server/channel you want to bridge. Search the web for instructions.
- In Matrix room give command
!discord bridge ServerID ChannelID
- The bridge will ask for confirmation from the Discord server admins to complete the bridge. Once approved, you're all set.
- In Matrix room give command
!discord unbridge
In a vague order of what is coming up next
- Matrix -> Discord
- Text content
- Image content
- Audio/Video content
- Typing notifs (Not supported, requires syncing)
- User Profiles
- Discord -> Matrix
- Text content
- Image content
- Audio/Video content
- Typing notifs
- User Profiles
- Presence
- Per-guild display names.
- Group messages
- Third Party Lookup
- Rooms
- Users
- Puppet a user's real Discord account.
- Sending messages
- Direct messages
- UI for setup
- Rooms react to Discord updates
- Integrate Discord into existing rooms
- Feature
- UI
- Manage channel from Matrix (possibly)
- Authorise admin rights from Discord to Matrix users
- Topic
- Room Name
- Provisioning API
- Webhooks (allows for prettier messages to discord)
- VOIP (Hard | Unlikely to be finished anytime soon)
My Matrix ID: @Half-Shot:half-shot.uk