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Matches the earlier Python -> Go rewrites of the other mautrix-* bridges. Related to: - https://github.com/mautrix/telegram/releases/tag/v0.2604.0 - https://mau.fi/blog/2026-04-mautrix-release/ The bridge is now a Go binary with upstream-handled automatic database and config migration on first start, so in-place upgrades on Postgres should Just Work for users on the defaults. The lottieconverter sidecar container is gone (bundled upstream), and the public web-based login endpoint is gone (login happens inside Matrix now). Upstream v0.2604.0 has a known bug in the legacy SQLite migration that can corrupt data. The role detects legacy Python-bridge SQLite databases (via the `telethon_sessions` table signature) and refuses to upgrade, pointing users to switch to Postgres (playbook-managed pgloader migration) or wait for the next upstream release. The guard is isolated in its own `validate_config_sqlite_legacy_migration_bug.yml` so it can be deleted cleanly once upstream fixes the bug. Removed variables (all caught by the deprecation check in `validate_config.yml` with actionable rename/removal hints): the entire `_hostname` / `_path_prefix` / `_scheme` / `_public_endpoint` / `_appservice_public_*` / `_container_labels_public_endpoint_*` / `_container_http_host_bind_port` family (web login endpoint is gone); `_bot_token` (old-style relaybot is gone, use the common bridgev2 relay mode); `_filter_mode` (dropped upstream); `_bridge_login_shared_secret_map*` (use Appservice Double Puppet); `_username_template`, `_alias_template`, `_displayname_template` (templates moved under `network:`, new Go-template syntax, exposed via `_network_displayname_template`); all `_lottieconverter_*` variables; `_appservice_database` (renamed to `_appservice_database_uri`). Added playbook-time validation that catches legacy permission values (`relaybot`, `puppeting`, `full`) in the fully-merged config (so overrides via `matrix_mautrix_telegram_configuration_extension_yaml` are caught too), with a mapping hint in the error message. Other notes: - The legacy sqlite->postgres relocation of `{base_path}/mautrix-telegram.db` to `{data_path}/mautrix-telegram.db` now happens BEFORE the pgloader migration step, so users who flip to Postgres as part of this upgrade get their data imported correctly. - The Ketesa managed-user regex for the telegram namespace is updated to match both regular IDs and the new `channel-<id>` form used by bridgev2. - `matrix_playbook_migration_expected_version` bumped to v2026.04.24.0, with a new breaking-change entry pointing at the CHANGELOG section. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
91 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
91 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
<!--
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SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2018 - 2026 Slavi Pantaleev
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SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2018 Hugues Morisset
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SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2019 - 2022 MDAD project contributors
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SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2021 Panagiotis Georgiadis
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SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2022 Dennis Ciba
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SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2022 Iikka Järvenpää
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SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2022 Marko Weltzer
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SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2024 - 2025 Suguru Hirahara
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SPDX-License-Identifier: AGPL-3.0-or-later
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-->
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# Setting up Mautrix Telegram bridging (optional)
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<sup>Refer the common guide for configuring mautrix bridges: [Setting up a Generic Mautrix Bridge](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md)</sup>
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The playbook can install and configure [mautrix-telegram](https://github.com/mautrix/telegram) for you.
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See the project's [documentation](https://docs.mau.fi/bridges/go/telegram/index.html) to learn what it does and why it might be useful to you.
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## Prerequisites
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### Obtain a Telegram API key
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To use the bridge, you'd need to obtain an API key from [https://my.telegram.org/apps](https://my.telegram.org/apps).
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### Enable Appservice Double Puppet (optional)
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If you want to set up [Double Puppeting](https://docs.mau.fi/bridges/general/double-puppeting.html) (hint: you most likely do) for this bridge automatically, you need to have enabled [Appservice Double Puppet](configuring-playbook-appservice-double-puppet.md) service for this playbook.
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See [this section](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md#set-up-double-puppeting-optional) on the [common guide for configuring mautrix bridges](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md) for details about setting up Double Puppeting.
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## Adjusting the playbook configuration
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To enable the bridge, add the following configuration to your `inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml` file. Make sure to replace `YOUR_TELEGRAM_APP_ID` and `YOUR_TELEGRAM_API_HASH`.
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```yaml
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matrix_mautrix_telegram_enabled: true
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matrix_mautrix_telegram_api_id: YOUR_TELEGRAM_APP_ID
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matrix_mautrix_telegram_api_hash: YOUR_TELEGRAM_API_HASH
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```
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### Relaying
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This bridge supports the common [mautrix bridge relay mode](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md#enable-relay-mode-optional). Once enabled, any authenticated user can be turned into a relaybot for a chat by sending `!tg set-relay` in that chat.
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### Configure a user as an administrator of the bridge (optional)
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You might also want to give permissions to a user to administrate the bot. See [this section](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md#configure-bridge-permissions-optional) on the common guide for details about it.
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### Extending the configuration
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There are some additional things you may wish to configure about the bridge.
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See [this section](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md#extending-the-configuration) on the [common guide for configuring mautrix bridges](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md) for details about variables that you can customize and the bridge's default configuration, including [bridge permissions](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md#configure-bridge-permissions-optional), [encryption support](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md#enable-encryption-optional), [bot's username](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-bridges.md#set-the-bots-username-optional), etc.
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## Installing
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After configuring the playbook, run it with [playbook tags](playbook-tags.md) as below:
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<!-- NOTE: let this conservative command run (instead of install-all) to make it clear that failure of the command means something is clearly broken. -->
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```sh
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ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all,start
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```
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The shortcut commands with the [`just` program](just.md) are also available: `just install-all` or `just setup-all`
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`just install-all` is useful for maintaining your setup quickly ([2x-5x faster](../CHANGELOG.md#2x-5x-performance-improvements-in-playbook-runtime) than `just setup-all`) when its components remain unchanged. If you adjust your `vars.yml` to remove other components, you'd need to run `just setup-all`, or these components will still remain installed. Note these shortcuts run the `ensure-matrix-users-created` tag too.
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## Usage
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To use the bridge, you need to start a chat with `@telegrambot:example.com` (where `example.com` is your base domain, not the `matrix.` domain).
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You can then follow instructions on the bridge's [official documentation on Authentication](https://docs.mau.fi/bridges/go/telegram/authentication.html).
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After logging in, the bridge will create portal rooms for all of your Telegram groups and invite you to them.
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## Troubleshooting
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As with all other services, you can find the logs in [systemd-journald](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-journald.service.html) by logging in to the server with SSH and running `journalctl -fu matrix-mautrix-telegram`.
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### Increase logging verbosity
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The default logging level for this component is `warn`. If you want to increase the verbosity, add the following configuration to your `vars.yml` file and re-run the playbook:
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```yaml
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# Valid values: fatal, error, warn, info, debug, trace
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matrix_mautrix_telegram_logging_level: debug
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```
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