use correct versions for oban migrations
[akkoma] / docs / installation / otp_en.md
1 # Installing on Linux using OTP releases
2
3 ## Pre-requisites
4 * A machine running Linux with GNU (e.g. Debian, Ubuntu) or musl (e.g. Alpine) libc and `x86_64`, `aarch64` or `armv7l` CPU, you have root access to. If you are not sure if it's compatible see [Detecting flavour section](#detecting-flavour) below
5 * A (sub)domain pointed to the machine
6
7 You will be running commands as root. If you aren't root already, please elevate your priviledges by executing `sudo su`/`su`.
8
9 While in theory OTP releases are possbile to install on any compatible machine, for the sake of simplicity this guide focuses only on Debian/Ubuntu and Alpine.
10
11 ### Detecting flavour
12
13 Paste the following into the shell:
14 ```sh
15 arch="$(uname -m)";if [ "$arch" = "x86_64" ];then arch="amd64";elif [ "$arch" = "armv7l" ];then arch="arm";elif [ "$arch" = "aarch64" ];then arch="arm64";else echo "Unsupported arch: $arch">&2;fi;if getconf GNU_LIBC_VERSION>/dev/null;then libc_postfix="";elif [ "$(ldd 2>&1|head -c 9)" = "musl libc" ];then libc_postfix="-musl";elif [ "$(find /lib/libc.musl*|wc -l)" ];then libc_postfix="-musl";else echo "Unsupported libc">&2;fi;echo "$arch$libc_postfix"
16 ```
17
18 If your platform is supported the output will contain the flavour string, you will need it later. If not, this just means that we don't build releases for your platform, you can still try installing from source.
19
20 ### Installing the required packages
21
22 Other than things bundled in the OTP release Pleroma depends on:
23
24 * curl (to download the release build)
25 * unzip (needed to unpack release builds)
26 * ncurses (ERTS won't run without it)
27 * PostgreSQL (also utilizes extensions in postgresql-contrib)
28 * nginx (could be swapped with another reverse proxy but this guide covers only it)
29 * certbot (for Let's Encrypt certificates, could be swapped with another ACME client, but this guide covers only it)
30 * libmagic/file
31
32 === "Alpine"
33 ```
34 echo "http://nl.alpinelinux.org/alpine/latest-stable/community" >> /etc/apk/repositories
35 apk update
36 apk add curl unzip ncurses postgresql postgresql-contrib nginx certbot file-dev
37 ```
38
39 === "Debian/Ubuntu"
40 ```
41 apt install curl unzip libncurses5 postgresql postgresql-contrib nginx certbot libmagic-dev
42 ```
43
44 ### Installing optional packages
45
46 Per [`docs/installation/optional/media_graphics_packages.md`](optional/media_graphics_packages.md):
47 * ImageMagick
48 * ffmpeg
49 * exiftool
50
51 === "Alpine"
52 ```
53 echo "http://nl.alpinelinux.org/alpine/latest-stable/community" >> /etc/apk/repositories
54 apk update
55 apk add imagemagick ffmpeg exiftool
56 ```
57
58 === "Debian/Ubuntu"
59 ```
60 apt install imagemagick ffmpeg libimage-exiftool-perl
61 ```
62
63 ## Setup
64 ### Configuring PostgreSQL
65 #### (Optional) Installing RUM indexes
66
67 !!! warning
68 It is recommended to use PostgreSQL v11 or newer. We have seen some minor issues with lower PostgreSQL versions.
69
70 RUM indexes are an alternative indexing scheme that is not included in PostgreSQL by default. You can read more about them on the [Configuration page](../configuration/cheatsheet.md#rum-indexing-for-full-text-search). They are completely optional and most of the time are not worth it, especially if you are running a single user instance (unless you absolutely need ordered search results).
71
72 === "Alpine"
73 ```
74 apk add git build-base postgresql-dev
75 git clone https://github.com/postgrespro/rum /tmp/rum
76 cd /tmp/rum
77 make USE_PGXS=1
78 make USE_PGXS=1 install
79 cd
80 rm -r /tmp/rum
81 ```
82
83 === "Debian/Ubuntu"
84 ```
85 # Available only on Buster/19.04
86 apt install postgresql-11-rum
87 ```
88
89 #### (Optional) Performance configuration
90 It is encouraged to check [Optimizing your PostgreSQL performance](../configuration/postgresql.md) document, for tips on PostgreSQL tuning.
91
92 === "Alpine"
93 ```
94 rc-service postgresql restart
95 ```
96
97 === "Debian/Ubuntu"
98 ```
99 systemctl restart postgresql
100 ```
101
102 If you are using PostgreSQL 12 or higher, add this to your Ecto database configuration
103
104 ```elixir
105 #
106 config :pleroma, Pleroma.Repo,
107 prepare: :named,
108 parameters: [
109 plan_cache_mode: "force_custom_plan"
110 ]
111 ```
112
113 ### Installing Pleroma
114 ```sh
115 # Create a Pleroma user
116 adduser --system --shell /bin/false --home /opt/pleroma pleroma
117
118 # Set the flavour environment variable to the string you got in Detecting flavour section.
119 # For example if the flavour is `amd64-musl` the command will be
120 export FLAVOUR="amd64-musl"
121
122 # Clone the release build into a temporary directory and unpack it
123 su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "
124 curl 'https://git.pleroma.social/api/v4/projects/2/jobs/artifacts/stable/download?job=$FLAVOUR' -o /tmp/pleroma.zip
125 unzip /tmp/pleroma.zip -d /tmp/
126 "
127
128 # Move the release to the home directory and delete temporary files
129 su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "
130 mv /tmp/release/* /opt/pleroma
131 rmdir /tmp/release
132 rm /tmp/pleroma.zip
133 "
134 # Create uploads directory and set proper permissions (skip if planning to use a remote uploader)
135 # Note: It does not have to be `/var/lib/pleroma/uploads`, the config generator will ask about the upload directory later
136
137 mkdir -p /var/lib/pleroma/uploads
138 chown -R pleroma /var/lib/pleroma
139
140 # Create custom public files directory (custom emojis, frontend bundle overrides, robots.txt, etc.)
141 # Note: It does not have to be `/var/lib/pleroma/static`, the config generator will ask about the custom public files directory later
142 mkdir -p /var/lib/pleroma/static
143 chown -R pleroma /var/lib/pleroma
144
145 # Create a config directory
146 mkdir -p /etc/pleroma
147 chown -R pleroma /etc/pleroma
148
149 # Run the config generator
150 su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "./bin/pleroma_ctl instance gen --output /etc/pleroma/config.exs --output-psql /tmp/setup_db.psql"
151
152 # Create the postgres database
153 su postgres -s $SHELL -lc "psql -f /tmp/setup_db.psql"
154
155 # Create the database schema
156 su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "./bin/pleroma_ctl migrate"
157
158 # If you have installed RUM indexes uncommend and run
159 # su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "./bin/pleroma_ctl migrate --migrations-path priv/repo/optional_migrations/rum_indexing/"
160
161 # Start the instance to verify that everything is working as expected
162 su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "export $(cat /opt/pleroma/config/pleroma.env); ./bin/pleroma daemon"
163
164 # Wait for about 20 seconds and query the instance endpoint, if it shows your uri, name and email correctly, you are configured correctly
165 sleep 20 && curl http://localhost:4000/api/v1/instance
166
167 # Stop the instance
168 su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "./bin/pleroma stop"
169 ```
170
171 ### Setting up nginx and getting Let's Encrypt SSL certificaties
172
173 #### Get a Let's Encrypt certificate
174 ```sh
175 certbot certonly --standalone --preferred-challenges http -d yourinstance.tld
176 ```
177
178 #### Copy Pleroma nginx configuration to the nginx folder
179
180 The location of nginx configs is dependent on the distro
181
182 === "Alpine"
183 ```
184 cp /opt/pleroma/installation/pleroma.nginx /etc/nginx/conf.d/pleroma.conf
185 ```
186
187 === "Debian/Ubuntu"
188 ```
189 cp /opt/pleroma/installation/pleroma.nginx /etc/nginx/sites-available/pleroma.conf
190 ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/pleroma.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/pleroma.conf
191 ```
192
193 If your distro does not have either of those you can append `include /etc/nginx/pleroma.conf` to the end of the http section in /etc/nginx/nginx.conf and
194 ```sh
195 cp /opt/pleroma/installation/pleroma.nginx /etc/nginx/pleroma.conf
196 ```
197
198 #### Edit the nginx config
199 ```sh
200 # Replace example.tld with your (sub)domain
201 $EDITOR path-to-nginx-config
202
203 # Verify that the config is valid
204 nginx -t
205 ```
206 #### Start nginx
207
208 === "Alpine"
209 ```
210 rc-service nginx start
211 ```
212
213 === "Debian/Ubuntu"
214 ```
215 systemctl start nginx
216 ```
217
218 At this point if you open your (sub)domain in a browser you should see a 502 error, that's because Pleroma is not started yet.
219
220 ### Setting up a system service
221
222 === "Alpine"
223 ```
224 # Copy the service into a proper directory
225 cp /opt/pleroma/installation/init.d/pleroma /etc/init.d/pleroma
226
227 # Start pleroma and enable it on boot
228 rc-service pleroma start
229 rc-update add pleroma
230 ```
231
232 === "Debian/Ubuntu"
233 ```
234 # Copy the service into a proper directory
235 cp /opt/pleroma/installation/pleroma.service /etc/systemd/system/pleroma.service
236
237 # Start pleroma and enable it on boot
238 systemctl start pleroma
239 systemctl enable pleroma
240 ```
241
242 If everything worked, you should see Pleroma-FE when visiting your domain. If that didn't happen, try reviewing the installation steps, starting Pleroma in the foreground and seeing if there are any errrors.
243
244 Still doesn't work? Feel free to contact us on [#pleroma on freenode](https://irc.pleroma.social) or via matrix at <https://matrix.heldscal.la/#/room/#freenode_#pleroma:matrix.org>, you can also [file an issue on our Gitlab](https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma-support/issues/new)
245
246 ## Post installation
247
248 ### Setting up auto-renew of the Let's Encrypt certificate
249 ```sh
250 # Create the directory for webroot challenges
251 mkdir -p /var/lib/letsencrypt
252
253 # Uncomment the webroot method
254 $EDITOR path-to-nginx-config
255
256 # Verify that the config is valid
257 nginx -t
258 ```
259
260 === "Alpine"
261 ```
262 # Restart nginx
263 rc-service nginx restart
264
265 # Start the cron daemon and make it start on boot
266 rc-service crond start
267 rc-update add crond
268
269 # Ensure the webroot menthod and post hook is working
270 certbot renew --cert-name yourinstance.tld --webroot -w /var/lib/letsencrypt/ --dry-run --post-hook 'rc-service nginx reload'
271
272 # Add it to the daily cron
273 echo '#!/bin/sh
274 certbot renew --cert-name yourinstance.tld --webroot -w /var/lib/letsencrypt/ --post-hook "rc-service nginx reload"
275 ' > /etc/periodic/daily/renew-pleroma-cert
276 chmod +x /etc/periodic/daily/renew-pleroma-cert
277
278 # If everything worked the output should contain /etc/cron.daily/renew-pleroma-cert
279 run-parts --test /etc/periodic/daily
280 ```
281
282 === "Debian/Ubuntu"
283 ```
284 # Restart nginx
285 systemctl restart nginx
286
287 # Ensure the webroot menthod and post hook is working
288 certbot renew --cert-name yourinstance.tld --webroot -w /var/lib/letsencrypt/ --dry-run --post-hook 'systemctl reload nginx'
289
290 # Add it to the daily cron
291 echo '#!/bin/sh
292 certbot renew --cert-name yourinstance.tld --webroot -w /var/lib/letsencrypt/ --post-hook "systemctl reload nginx"
293 ' > /etc/cron.daily/renew-pleroma-cert
294 chmod +x /etc/cron.daily/renew-pleroma-cert
295
296 # If everything worked the output should contain /etc/cron.daily/renew-pleroma-cert
297 run-parts --test /etc/cron.daily
298 ```
299
300 ## Create your first user and set as admin
301 ```sh
302 cd /opt/pleroma/bin
303 su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "./bin/pleroma_ctl user new joeuser joeuser@sld.tld --admin"
304 ```
305 This will create an account withe the username of 'joeuser' with the email address of joeuser@sld.tld, and set that user's account as an admin. This will result in a link that you can paste into the browser, which logs you in and enables you to set the password.
306
307 ## Further reading
308
309 {! backend/installation/further_reading.include !}
310
311 ## Questions
312
313 Questions about the installation or didn’t it work as it should be, ask in [#pleroma:matrix.org](https://matrix.heldscal.la/#/room/#freenode_#pleroma:matrix.org) or IRC Channel **#pleroma** on **Freenode**.