Note: bridging to Twitter can also happen via the mx-puppet-twitter bridge supported by the playbook.
The playbook can install and configure mautrix-twitter for you.
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 or Shared Secret Auth service for this playbook.
For details about configuring Double Puppeting for this bridge, see the section below: Set up Double Puppeting
To enable the bridge, add the following configuration to your inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml
file:
matrix_mautrix_twitter_enabled: true
After configuring the playbook, run the installation command: just install-all
or just setup-all
- You then need to start a chat with
@twitterbot:example.com
(whereexample.com
is your base domain, not thematrix.
domain). - Send login-cookie to start the login. The bot should respond with instructions on how to proceed.
You can learn more here about authentication from the bridge's official documentation on Authentication.
After successfully enabling bridging, you may wish to set up Double Puppeting (hint: you most likely do).
To set it up, you have 2 ways of going about it.
The bridge automatically performs Double Puppeting if Appservice Double Puppet or Shared Secret Auth service is configured and enabled on the server for this playbook.
Enabling Appservice Double Puppet is the recommended way of setting up Double Puppeting, as it's easier to accomplish, works for all your users automatically, and has less of a chance of breaking in the future.
Enabling double puppeting by enabling the Shared Secret Auth service works at the time of writing, but is deprecated and will stop working in the future.
This method is currently not available for the Mautrix-Twitter bridge, but is on the roadmap under Misc/Manual login with login-matrix