Refer the common guide for configuring mautrix bridges: Setting up a Generic Mautrix Bridge
The playbook can install and configure mautrix-gmessages for you, for bridging to Google Messages.
See the project's documentation to learn what it does and why it might be useful to you.
If you want to set up Double Puppeting (hint: you most likely do) for this bridge automatically, you need to have enabled Appservice Double Puppet for this playbook.
See this section on the common guide for configuring mautrix bridges for details about setting up Double Puppeting.
To enable the bridge, add the following configuration to your inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml
file:
matrix_mautrix_gmessages_enabled: true
There are some additional things you may wish to configure about the bridge.
See this section on the common guide for configuring mautrix bridges for details about variables that you can customize and the bridge's default configuration, including bridge permissions, encryption support, bot's username, etc.
After configuring the playbook, run it with playbook tags as below:
ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all,ensure-matrix-users-created,start
Notes:
-
The
ensure-matrix-users-created
playbook tag makes the playbook automatically create the bot's user account. -
The shortcut commands with the
just
program are also available:just install-all
orjust setup-all
just install-all
is useful for maintaining your setup quickly (2x-5x faster thanjust setup-all
) when its components remain unchanged. If you adjust yourvars.yml
to remove other components, you'd need to runjust setup-all
, or these components will still remain installed.
To use the bridge, you need to start a chat with @gmessagesbot:example.com
(where example.com
is your base domain, not the matrix.
domain).
You can then follow instructions on the bridge's official documentation on Authentication.
After logging in, the bridge will create portal rooms for recent chats.