David Baker 5dc8edcae0 Build the published shared components (#30986)
* Move shared components to a packages/ directory

so they can be publish more sensibly

* Iterate towards split out shared-components module

 * Move shared component source into src/ subdir
 * Fix up imports
 * Include shared components in babel-ing (again)

* Remove now unused dependencies

* Update import in storybook preview

* ...except of course they aren't unused

if we import the shared components by source

* Ignore shared components deps

* Add shared-components to i18n paths

and upgrade web-i18n to version that supports doing so

* Move storybook stuff to shared-components

* Seems we don't need this anymore...

* Remove unused deps

and remove storybook plugin from eslint

* Presumably working-directory is only valid on run steps

* Ignore dep & run prettier

* Prettier on knips.ts

* Hopefully run in right dir

* Remember how to software write

* Okay... how about THIS way?

* Oh right, they were git ignored. Sigh.

* Add concurrently

* Ignore in knip

* Better?

* Paaaaaaaackageeeeeeees

* More packages

* Move playwright snapshots

* Still need a custom snapshots dir

* Build shared components in their separate package

Port https://github.com/element-hq/element-web/pull/30963
to https://github.com/element-hq/element-web/pull/30962

* Add prepare script

* try making it a postinstall

* no, this probably does want to be prepare

postinstall doesn't really make sense since you would not have the
dev dependencies at that point

* Add workflow to publish shared components

* Put in the namespace

* Add eslint back

* Oh, now knip sees them

* Fix another import

* Don't lint shared-components with everything else

Okay, eslint & tsconfig are tied too closely for this to work and
running tsc on the shared components will need its deps installing

* Maybe lint shared components

please?

* Not quite

* Fix name, add main, move patch-package to dependencies

Although the only patched package is a dev dependency, but the postinstall
will fail if patch-package isn't there.

* Switch to npm for publishing

Mostly because knip seems to this that yarn publish doesn't exist,
although actually it seems super confused about versioning so let's
just skip it.

* Also hopefully enable provenance

because why not

* Maybe get exports right

* Add richlist

* Yeah, of course the keys are ordered

why would the keys not be ordered

* Build web resources first

Otherwise yarn prepare won't work

* Fix exports

and add web-i18n as a dep

* prettier

* build res for static analysis

* more build:res

* ViewModel is only an interface

so export type

* Prettier

* Bump to 5

as I'll do at least one test with the publish action
2025-10-14 10:04:23 +00:00
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Element

Element (formerly known as Vector and Riot) is a Matrix web client built using the Matrix JS SDK.

Supported Environments

Element has several tiers of support for different environments:

  • Supported
    • Definition:
      • Issues actively triaged, regressions block the release
    • Last 2 major versions of Chrome, Firefox, and Edge on desktop OSes
    • Last 2 versions of Safari
    • Latest release of official Element Desktop app on desktop OSes
    • Desktop OSes means macOS, Windows, and Linux versions for desktop devices that are actively supported by the OS vendor and receive security updates
  • Best effort
    • Definition:
      • Issues accepted, regressions do not block the release
      • The wider Element Products (including Element Call and the Enterprise Server Suite) do still not officially support these browsers.
      • The element web project and its contributors should keep the client functioning and gracefully degrade where other sibling features (E.g. Element Call) may not function.
    • Last major release of Firefox ESR and Chrome/Edge Extended Stable
  • Community Supported
    • Definition:
      • Issues accepted, regressions do not block the release
      • Community contributions are welcome to support these issues
    • Mobile web for current stable version of Chrome, Firefox, and Safari on Android, iOS, and iPadOS
  • Not supported
    • Definition: Issues only affecting unsupported environments are closed
    • Everything else

The period of support for these tiers should last until the releases specified above, plus 1 app release cycle(2 weeks). In the case of Firefox ESR this is extended further to allow it land in Debian Stable.

For accessing Element on an Android or iOS device, we currently recommend the native apps element-android and element-ios.

Getting Started

The easiest way to test Element is to just use the hosted copy at https://app.element.io. The develop branch is continuously deployed to https://develop.element.io for those who like living dangerously.

To host your own instance of Element see Installing Element Web.

To install Element as a desktop application, see Running as a desktop app below.

Important Security Notes

Separate domains

We do not recommend running Element from the same domain name as your Matrix homeserver. The reason is the risk of XSS (cross-site-scripting) vulnerabilities that could occur if someone caused Element to load and render malicious user generated content from a Matrix API which then had trusted access to Element (or other apps) due to sharing the same domain.

We have put some coarse mitigations into place to try to protect against this situation, but it's still not good practice to do it in the first place. See https://github.com/element-hq/element-web/issues/1977 for more details.

Configuration best practices

Unless you have special requirements, you will want to add the following to your web server configuration when hosting Element Web:

  • The X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN header, to prevent Element Web from being framed and protect from clickjacking.
  • The frame-ancestors 'self' directive to your Content-Security-Policy header, as the modern replacement for X-Frame-Options (though both should be included since not all browsers support it yet, see this).
  • The X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff header, to disable MIME sniffing.
  • The X-XSS-Protection: 1; mode=block; header, for basic XSS protection in legacy browsers.

If you are using nginx, this would look something like the following:

add_header X-Frame-Options SAMEORIGIN;
add_header X-Content-Type-Options nosniff;
add_header X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block";
add_header Content-Security-Policy "frame-ancestors 'self'";

For Apache, the configuration looks like:

Header set X-Frame-Options SAMEORIGIN
Header set X-Content-Type-Options nosniff
Header set X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block"
Header set Content-Security-Policy "frame-ancestors 'self'"

Note: In case you are already setting a Content-Security-Policy header elsewhere, you should modify it to include the frame-ancestors directive instead of adding that last line.

Building From Source

Element is a modular webapp built with modern ES6 and uses a Node.js build system. Ensure you have the latest LTS version of Node.js installed.

Using yarn instead of npm is recommended. Please see the Yarn install guide if you do not have it already.

  1. Install or update node.js so that your node is at least the current recommended LTS.
  2. Install yarn if not present already.
  3. Clone the repo: git clone https://github.com/element-hq/element-web.git.
  4. Switch to the element-web directory: cd element-web.
  5. Install the prerequisites: yarn install.
  6. Configure the app by copying config.sample.json to config.json and modifying it. See the configuration docs for details.
  7. yarn dist to build a tarball to deploy. Untaring this file will give a version-specific directory containing all the files that need to go on your web server.

Note that yarn dist is not supported on Windows, so Windows users can run yarn build, which will build all the necessary files into the webapp directory. The version of Element will not appear in Settings without using the dist script. You can then mount the webapp directory on your web server to actually serve up the app, which is entirely static content.

Running as a Desktop app

Element can also be run as a desktop app, wrapped in Electron. You can download a pre-built version from https://element.io/get-started or, if you prefer, build it yourself.

To build it yourself, follow the instructions at https://github.com/element-hq/element-desktop.

Many thanks to @aviraldg for the initial work on the Electron integration.

The configuration docs show how to override the desktop app's default settings if desired.

config.json

Element supports a variety of settings to configure default servers, behaviour, themes, etc. See the configuration docs for more details.

Labs Features

Some features of Element may be enabled by flags in the Labs section of the settings. Some of these features are described in labs.md.

Caching requirements

Element requires the following URLs not to be cached, when/if you are serving Element from your own webserver:

/config.*.json
/i18n
/home
/sites
/index.html

We also recommend that you force browsers to re-validate any cached copy of Element on page load by configuring your webserver to return Cache-Control: no-cache for /. This ensures the browser will fetch a new version of Element on the next page load after it's been deployed. Note that this is already configured for you in the nginx config of our Dockerfile.

Development

Please read through the following:

  1. Developer guide
  2. Code style
  3. Contribution guide

Translations

To add a new translation, head to the translating doc.

For a developer guide, see the translating dev doc.

Triaging issues

Issues are triaged by community members and the Web App Team, following the triage process.

We use issue labels to sort all incoming issues.

Copyright (c) 2014-2017 OpenMarket Ltd Copyright (c) 2017 Vector Creations Ltd Copyright (c) 2017-2025 New Vector Ltd

This software is multi licensed by New Vector Ltd (Element). It can be used either:

(1) for free under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License (as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version); OR

(2) for free under the terms of the GNU General Public License (as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version); OR

(3) under the terms of a paid-for Element Commercial License agreement between you and Element (the terms of which may vary depending on what you and Element have agreed to). Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the Licenses is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the Licenses for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the Licenses.

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