diff --git a/docs/configuring-playbook-bot-draupnir.md b/docs/configuring-playbook-bot-draupnir.md index bbf04217b..f95e3b3c5 100644 --- a/docs/configuring-playbook-bot-draupnir.md +++ b/docs/configuring-playbook-bot-draupnir.md @@ -20,8 +20,6 @@ It is possible to make the management room encrypted (E2EE). If doing so, then y Once you have created the room you need to copy the room ID so you can specify it on your `inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml` file. In Element Web you can check the ID by going to the room's settings and clicking "Advanced". The room ID will look something like `!qporfwt:example.com`. -Finally invite the `@bot.draupnir:example.com` account that the playbook will create for you to the management room. Please note that clients can issue a warning that you are attempting to invite a user that does not have a profile and might not exist. This warning is expected as your inviting the bot before its user account exists. - ## End-to-End Encryption support Decide whether you want to support having an encrypted management room or not. Draupnir can still protect encrypted rooms without encryption support enabled. @@ -163,6 +161,8 @@ ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all,ensure-matrix-use ## Usage +To use Draupnir, you need to invite the bot (`@bot.draupnir:example.com`) to its management room which you have created earlier. + You can refer to the upstream [documentation](https://the-draupnir-project.github.io/draupnir-documentation/) for additional ways to use and configure Draupnir and for a more detailed usage guide. Below is a **non-exhaustive quick-start guide** for the impatient.