mirror of
https://github.com/superseriousbusiness/gotosocial.git
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116 lines
3 KiB
Markdown
116 lines
3 KiB
Markdown
# Reverse proxy with nginx
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## Requirements
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For this you will need certbot, the certbot nginx plugin and of course nginx.
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These are popular packages so your distro will probably have them.
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### Ubuntu
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```bash
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sudo apt install certbot python3-certbot-nginx nginx
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```
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### Arch
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```bash
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sudo pacman -S certbot certbot-nginx nginx
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```
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### OpenSuse
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```bash
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sudo zypper install nginx python3-certbot python3-certbot-nginx
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```
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## Configure GoToSocial
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In your GoToSocial config turn off letsencrypt.
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First open the file in your text editor.
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```bash
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sudoedit /gotosocial/config.yaml
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```
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Then set `letsencrypt-enabled: false`.
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If GoToSocial is already running, restart it.
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```bash
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sudo systemctl restart gotosocial.service
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```
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Or if you don't have a systemd service just restart it manually.
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## Set up nginx
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First we will set up nginx to serve GoToSocial as unsecured http and then later use certbot to automatically upgrade to https.
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Please do not try to use it until that's done or you'll be transmitting passwords over clear text.
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First we'll write a configuration for nginx and put it in `/etc/nginx/sites-available`.
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```bash
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sudo mkdir /etc/nginx/sites-available/
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sudoedit /etc/nginx/sites-available/yourgotosocial.url.conf
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```
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The file you're about to create should look a bit like this:
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```nginx.conf
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server {
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listen 80;
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listen [::]:80;
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server_name example.com;
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location / {
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proxy_pass http://localhost:8080;
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proxy_set_header Host $host;
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}
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}
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```
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Note: You can remove the line `listen [::]:80;` if your server is not ipv6 capable or you'd rather not use ipv6.
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Change `proxy_pass` to the ip and port that you're actually serving GoToSocial on and change `server_name` to your own domain name.
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If your domain name is `gotosocial.example.com` then `server_name gotosocial.example.com;` would be the correct value.
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If you're running GoToSocial on another machine with the local ip of 192.168.178.69 and on port 8080 then `proxy_pass http://192.168.178.69:8080;` would be the correct value.
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Next we'll need to link the file we just created to the folder that nginx reads configurations for active sites from.
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```bash
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sudo mkdir /etc/nginx/sites-enabled
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sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/yourgotosocial.url.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/
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```
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Now check for configuration errors.
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```bash
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sudo nginx -t
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```
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If everything is fine you should get this as output:
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```text
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nginx: the configuration file /etc/nginx/nginx.conf syntax is ok
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nginx: configuration file /etc/nginx/nginx.conf test is successful
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```
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Everything working? Great! Then restart nginx to load your new config file.
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```bash
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sudo systemctl restart nginx
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```
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## Setting up SSL with certbot
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You should now be able to run certbot and it will guide you through the steps required to enable https for your instance.
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```bash
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sudo certbot --nginx
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```
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After you do, it should have automatically edited your configuration file to enable https.
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Just reload it one last time and after that you should be good to go!
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```bash
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sudo systemctl restart nginx
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```
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