# Setting up MX Puppet Slack (optional) **Note**: bridging to [Slack](https://slack.com) can also happen via the [matrix-appservice-slack](configuring-playbook-bridge-appservice-slack.md) and [mautrix-slack](configuring-playbook-bridge-mautrix-slack.md) bridges supported by the playbook. The playbook can install and configure [Beeper](https://www.beeper.com/)-maintained fork of [mx-puppet-slack](https://gitlab.com/beeper/mx-puppet-monorepo) for you. See the project page to learn what it does and why it might be useful to you. ## Setup To enable the [Slack](https://slack.com/) bridge: 1. Follow the [OAuth credentials](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-slack#option-2-oauth) instructions to create a new Slack app, setting the redirect URL to `https://matrix.YOUR_DOMAIN/slack/oauth`. 2. Update your `vars.yml` with the following: ```yaml matrix_mx_puppet_slack_enabled: true # Client ID must be quoted so YAML does not parse it as a float. matrix_mx_puppet_slack_oauth_client_id: "" matrix_mx_puppet_slack_oauth_client_secret: "" ``` 3. Run playbooks with `setup-all` and `start` tags: ``` ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all,start ``` ## Usage Once the bot is enabled you need to start a chat with `Slack Puppet Bridge` with the handle `@_slackpuppet_bot:YOUR_DOMAIN` (where `YOUR_DOMAIN` is your base domain, not the `matrix.` domain). Three authentication methods are available, Legacy Token, OAuth and xoxc token. See mx-puppet-slack [documentation](https://github.com/Sorunome/mx-puppet-slack) for more information about how to configure the bridge. Once logged in, send `list` to the bot user to list the available rooms. Clicking rooms in the list will result in you receiving an invitation to the bridged room. Also send `help` to the bot to see the commands available.