# Synapse maintenance This document shows you how to perform various maintenance tasks related to the Synapse chat server. Table of contents: - [Purging old data with the Purge History API](#purging-old-data-with-the-purge-history-api), for when you wish to delete in-use (but old) data from the Synapse database - [Compressing state with rust-synapse-compress-state](#compressing-state-with-rust-synapse-compress-state) - [Browse and manipulate the database](#browse-and-manipulate-the-database), for when you really need to take matters into your own hands - [Make Synapse faster](#make-synapse-faster) ## Purging old data with the Purge History API You can use the **[Purge History API](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/admin_api/purge_history_api.md)** to delete old messages on a per-room basis. **This is destructive** (especially for non-federated rooms), because it means **people will no longer have access to history past a certain point**. To make use of this API, **you'll need an admin access token** first. Refer to the documentation on [how to obtain an access token](obtaining-access-tokens.md). Synapse's Admin API is not exposed to the internet by default. To expose it you will need to add `matrix_nginx_proxy_proxy_matrix_client_api_forwarded_location_synapse_admin_api_enabled: true` to your `vars.yml` file. Follow the [Purge History API](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/admin_api/purge_history_api.md) documentation page for the actual purging instructions. After deleting data, you may wish to run a [`FULL` Postgres `VACUUM`](./maintenance-postgres.md#vacuuming-postgresql). ## Compressing state with rust-synapse-compress-state [rust-synapse-compress-state](https://github.com/matrix-org/rust-synapse-compress-state) can be used to optimize some `_state` tables used by Synapse. If your server participates in large rooms this is the most effective way to reduce the size of your database. **Note**: besides running the `rust-synapse-compress-state` tool manually, you can also enable its `synapse-auto-compressor` tool by [Setting up synapse-auto-compressor](configuring-playbook-synapse-auto-compressor.md). The automatic tool will run on a schedule every day and you won't have to compress state manually ever again. `rust-synapse-compress-state` should be safe to use (even when Synapse is running), but it's always a good idea to [make Postgres backups](./maintenance-postgres.md#backing-up-postgresql) first. To ask the playbook to run rust-synapse-compress-state, execute: ``` ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=rust-synapse-compress-state ``` By default, all rooms with more than `100000` state group rows will be compressed. If you need to adjust this, pass: `--extra-vars='matrix_synapse_rust_synapse_compress_state_min_state_groups_required=SOME_NUMBER_HERE'` to the command above. After state compression, you may wish to run a [`FULL` Postgres `VACUUM`](./maintenance-postgres.md#vacuuming-postgresql). ## Browse and manipulate the database When the [Synapse Admin API](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/tree/master/docs/admin_api) and the other tools do not provide a more convenient way, having a look at synapse's postgresql database can satisfy a lot of admins' needs. Editing the database manually is not recommended or supported by the Synapse developers. If you are going to do so you should [make a database backup](./maintenance-postgres.md#backing-up-postgresql). First, set up an SSH tunnel to your matrix server (skip if it is your local machine): ``` # you may replace 1799 with an arbitrary port unbound on both machines ssh -L 1799:localhost:1799 matrix.DOMAIN ``` Then start up an ephemeral [adminer](https://www.adminer.org/) container on the Matrix server, connecting it to the `matrix` network and linking the postgresql container: ``` docker run --rm --publish 1799:8080 --link matrix-postgres --net matrix adminer ``` You should then be able to browse the adminer database administration GUI at http://localhost:1799/ after entering your DB credentials (found in the `host_vars` or on the server in `{{matrix_synapse_config_dir_path}}/homeserver.yaml` under `database.args`) ⚠️ Be **very careful** with this, there is **no undo** for impromptu DB operations. ## Make Synapse faster Synapse's presence feature which tracks which users are online and which are offline can use a lot of processing power. You can disable presence by adding `matrix_synapse_presence_enabled: false` to your `vars.yml` file. Tuning Synapse's cache factor can help reduce RAM usage. [See the upstream documentation](https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse#help-synapse-is-slow-and-eats-all-my-ram-cpu) for more information on what value to set the cache factor to. Use the variable `matrix_synapse_caches_global_factor` to set the cache factor. Tuning your PostgreSQL database will also make Synapse run significantly faster. See [maintenance-postgres.md##tuning-postgresql](maintenance-postgres.md##tuning-postgresql). See also [How do I optimize this setup for a low-power server?](faq.md#how-do-i-optimize-this-setup-for-a-low-power-server).