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Element Starter Core

Copyright 2023 New Vector Ltd

An Operator for managing Matrix stacks

This operator contains CRDs and a controller for managing numerous components from the Matrix stack. The list of the managed components can be found in the watches.yml file.

The operator supports running in any kubernetes cluster, including Openshift.

Architecture

The operator is managing the components CRD to deploy the kubernetes workloads, ingresses, etc.

Each component CRD can be configured independantly from the others. Some components CRDs will be waiting for inputs generated by the deployment of other components.

To make it easier to write coherent and integrated components CRDs, it is possible to deploy the updater. The updater watches ElementDeployment CRD, and generates element resources CRDs to be ingested by the operator.

Installing the Operator

Introduction

This document will walk you through how to get started with our Element Starter Edition Core. We require that you have a kubernetes environment to deploy into. If you do not have a kuberentes environment in which to deploy this, we have had experience deploying into a single node microk8s environment.

Requirements

  • Kubernetes
    • cert-manager will need to be installed and provide an appropriately configured ClusterIssuer named letsencrypt
    • Ingress Controller with an IngressClass (in this case, we are using an ingress controller with a class name of public)
  • PostgreSQL database with a UTF-8 encoding and a C Locale.

Installing the Helm Chart Repositories

The first step is to start on a machine with helm v3 installed and configured with your kubernetes cluster and pull down the two charts that you will need.

helm repo add ess-starter-edition-core https://element-hq.github.io/ess-starter-edition-core

To install the helm charts and actually deploy the element-updater and the element-operator with their default configurations, simply run:

helm install element-updater ess-starter-edition-core/element-updater --namespace element-updater --create-namespace
helm install element-operator ess-starter-edition-core/element-operator --namespace element-operator --create-namespace

N.B. This guide assumes that you are using the element-updater and element-operator namespaces. You can call it whatever you want and if it doesn't exist yet, you can create it with: kubectl create ns <name>.

Generating a TLS secret for the webhook

The conversion webhooks need their own self-signed CA and TLS certificate to be integrated into kubernetes.

For example using easy-rsa :

easyrsa init-pki
easyrsa --batch "--req-cn=ESS-CA`date +%s`" build-ca nopass
easyrsa --san="DNS:element-operator-conversion-webhook" \
        --san="DNS:element-operator-conversion-webhook.element-operator" \
        --san="DNS:element-operator-conversion-webhook.element-operator.svc" \
        --san="DNS:element-operator-conversion-webhook.element-operator.svc.cluster" \
        --san="DNS:element-operator-conversion-webhook.element-operator.svc.cluster.local" \
        --days=10000 \
  build-server-full element-operator-conversion-webhook nopass
easyrsa --san="DNS:element-updater-conversion-webhook" \
        --san="DNS:element-updater-conversion-webhook.element-updater" \
        --san="DNS:element-updater-conversion-webhook.element-updater.svc" \
        --san="DNS:element-updater-conversion-webhook.element-updater.svc.cluster" \
        --san="DNS:element-updater-conversion-webhook.element-updater.svc.cluster.local" \
        --days=10000 \
  build-server-full element-updater-conversion-webhook nopass

Create a secret for each of these two certificates :

kubectl create secret tls element-operator-conversion-webhook --cert=pki/issued/element-operator-conversion-webhook.crt --key=pki/private/element-operator-conversion-webhook.key  --namespace element-operator
kubectl create secret tls element-updater-conversion-webhook --cert=pki/issued/element-updater-conversion-webhook.crt --key=pki/private/element-updater-conversion-webhook.key  --namespace element-updater

Installing the helm chart for the element-updater and the element-operator

Create the following values file to deploy the controller managers in their namespace :

values.element-operator.yml :

clusterDeployment: true
deployCrds: true  # Deploys the CRDs and the Conversion Webhooks
deployCrdRoles: true  # Deploys roles to give permissions to users to manage specific ESS CRs
deployManager: true  # Deploys the controller managers
crds:
  conversionWebhook:
    caBundle: # Paste here the content of `base64 pki/ca.crt -w 0`
    tlsSecretName: element-operator-conversion-webhook

values.element-updater.yml :

clusterDeployment: true
deployCrds: true  # Deploys the CRDs and the Conversion Webhooks
deployCrdRoles: true  # Deploys roles to give permissions to users to manage specific ESS CRs
deployManager: true  # Deploys the controller managers
crds:
  conversionWebhook:
    caBundle: # Paste here the content of `base64 pki/ca.crt -w 0`
    tlsSecretName: element-updater-conversion-webhook

Run the helm install command :

helm install element-operator element-operator/element-operator --namespace element-operator -f values.yaml 
helm install element-updater element-updater/element-updater --namespace element-updater -f values.yaml

Now at this point, you should have the following 4 containers up and running:

[user@helm ~]$ kubectl get pods -n element-operator
NAMESPACE            NAME                                                   READY   STATUS    RESTARTS        AGE
element-operator     element-operator-controller-manager-c8fc5c47-nzt2t     2/2     Running   0               6m5s
element-operator     element-operator-conversion-webhook-7477d98c9b-xc89s   1/1     Running   0               6m5s
[user@helm ~]$ kubectl get pods -n element-updater
NAMESPACE            NAME                                                   READY   STATUS    RESTARTS        AGE
element-updater      element-updater-controller-manager-6f8476f6cb-74nx5    2/2     Running   0               106s
element-updater      element-updater-conversion-webhook-65ddcbb569-qzbfs    1/1     Running   0               81s

Generating the ElementDeployment CRD to Deploy Element Server Suite

  1. Create a CRD definition on your own starting from this base template:

    apiVersion: matrix.element.io/v1alpha1
    kind: ElementDeployment
    metadata:
      name: first-element
      namespace: element-onprem
    spec:
      global:
        k8s:
          ingresses:
            ingressClassName: "public"
        secretName: global
        config:
          genericSharedSecretSecretKey: genericSharedSecret
          domainName: "element.demo"
      components:
        elementWeb:
          secretName: external-elementweb-secrets
          k8s:
            ingress:
              tls:
                certmanager:
                  issuer: letsencrypt
                mode: certmanager
              fqdn: "web.element.demo"
        synapse:
          secretName: external-synapse-secrets
          config:
            additional: |
              enable_registration: True
              enable_registration_without_verification: True
            postgresql:
              host: db.element.demo
              user: postgres
              database: postgres
              passwordSecretKey: pgpassword
              sslMode: disable
          k8s:
            ingress:
              tls:
                certmanager:
                  issuer: letsencrypt
                mode: certmanager
              fqdn: "hs.element.demo"
        wellKnownDelegation:
          secretName: external-wellknowndelegation-secrets
          k8s:
            ingress:
              tls:
                certmanager:
                  issuer: letsencrypt
                mode: certmanager
        slidingSync:
          config:
            postgresql:
              host: web.element.demo
              user: postgres
              database: postgres
              passwordSecretKey: pgpassword
              sslMode: disable
            syncSecretSecretKey: syncSecret
          k8s:
            ingress:
                tls:
                  certmanager:
                    issuer: letsencrypt
                  mode: certmanager
                fqdn: "sync.element.demo"
    

For more information on this option, please see our Element Deployment CRD documentation. Note: At present, this has not been written.

Loading secrets into kubernetes in preparation of deployment

N.B. This guide assumes that you are using the element-onprem namespace for deploying Element. You can call it whatever you want and if it doesn't exist yet, you can create it with: kubectl create ns element-onprem.

Now we need to load secrets into kubernetes so that the deployment can access them. If you built your own CRD from scratch, you will need to follow our Element Deployment CRD documentation.

Here is a basic python script to build the secrets you need to get started:

import os
import base64
import signedjson.key
from datetime import datetime

## Define the secrets file
SECRETS_FILE = 'secrets.yml'

## Function to generate a secret and format it properly
def generate_secret(name):
    value = base64.b64encode(os.urandom(32)).decode('utf-8')
    return f'  {name}: "{value}"'

## Function to format postgres password
def encode_pgpassword(name, pgpassword):
    encoded_value = base64.b64encode(pgpassword.encode('utf-8')).decode('utf-8')
    return f'  {name}: "{encoded_value}"'

## Function to generate unique signing key for Synapse
def generate_signing_key(name):
    signing_key = signedjson.key.generate_signing_key(0)
    value = f'{signing_key.alg} {signing_key.version} {signedjson.key.encode_signing_key_base64(signing_key)}'
    encoded_value = base64.b64encode(value.encode('utf-8')).decode('utf-8')
    return f'  {name}: "{encoded_value}"'

## Check if the secrets file exists
if os.path.isfile(SECRETS_FILE):
    timestamp = datetime.now().strftime("%s")
    backup_file = f"{SECRETS_FILE}.bak.{timestamp}"
    os.rename(SECRETS_FILE, backup_file)
    print(f"Backing up pre-existing {SECRETS_FILE} file to {backup_file}.")

#Prompt user for Postgres Password

pgpassword = input("Enter your Postgres Password: ")


## Populate secrets
print("Populating secrets.")

with open(SECRETS_FILE, 'a') as f:
    f.write('''apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
  name: global
  namespace: element-onprem
data:
''')

    f.write(generate_secret("genericSharedSecret") + '\n')

    f.write('''---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
  name: external-synapse-secrets
  namespace: element-onprem
data:
''')

    f.write(generate_secret("macaroon") + '\n')
    f.write(generate_secret("registrationSharedSecret") + '\n')
    f.write(generate_signing_key("signingKey") + '\n')
    f.write(encode_pgpassword("pgpassword", pgpassword) + '\n')

## Tell the user we are done
print(f"Done. Secrets are in {SECRETS_FILE}.")

create a file build_secrets.py with this content and then run it with python3 ./build_secrets.py to creat a secrets.yml that can be added to the element-onprem namespace with kubectl apply -f secrets.yml

Deploying the actual CRD

At this point, we are ready to deploy the ElementDeployment CRD into our cluster with the following command:

kubectl apply -f ./deployment.yml -n element-onprem

To check on the progress of the deployment, you will first watch the logs of the updater:

kubectl logs -f -n element-updater element-updater-controller-manager-<rest of pod name>

You will have to tab complete to get the correct hash for the element-updater-controller-manager pod name.

Once the updater is no longer pushing out new logs, you can track progress with the operator or by watching pods come up in the element-onprem namespace.

Operator status:

kubectl logs -f -n element-operator element-operator element-operator-controller-manager-<rest of pod name>

Watching pods come up in the element-onprem namespace:

watch kubectl get pods -n element-onprem

Updating the helm charts and the underlying deployment

To install the helm charts and actually deploy the element-updater and the element-operator with their default configurations, simply run:

helm repo update ess-starter-edition-core
helm upgrade element-updater ess-starter-edition-core/element-updater --namespace element-updater
helm upgrade element-operator ess-starter-edition-core/element-operator --namespace element-operator

Registering a new user

If you have registration closed, you will need to be able to create new users. To do that with the starter edition core, you can use kubectl exec to open a shell in the synapse pod and use the register_new_matrix_user command to accomplish this action.

Let's look at how to do this. First, let's find the synapse-main pod:

kubectl get pods -n element-onprem | grep synapse-main

In this case, we get output similar to:

first-element-synapse-main-0                     1/1     Running   0             27m

Now that we know the pod name, we can run the kubectl exec command:

kubectl exec -it -n element-onprem first-element-deployment-synapse-main-0 -- /bin/sh

and once in the shell, we can run:

register_new_matrix_user -c /config/rendered/instance.yaml -u <USER> -p <PASSWORD> -a

and this will allow us to register a new matrix user.

N.B. You will need to register an admin user to perform administrative functions on the server.