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132 lines
5.1 KiB
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132 lines
5.1 KiB
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Installation
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============
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We recommend running using the Docker/OCI image; this contains all of the
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necessary dependencies and static file handling preconfigured for you.
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All configuration is done via either environment variables, or online through
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the web interface.
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Prerequisites
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-------------
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* SSL support (Takahē *requires* HTTPS)
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* Something that can run Docker/OCI images
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* A PostgreSQL 14 (or above) database
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* One of these to store uploaded images and media:
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* Amazon S3
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* Google Cloud Storage
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* Writable local directory (must be accessible by all running copies!)
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Note that ActivityPub is a chatty protocol that has a lot of background
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activity, so you will need a platform that can run *background tasks*, in
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order to fetch profiles, retry delivery of posts, and more.
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This means that a "serverless" platform like AWS Lambda or Google Cloud Run is
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not enough by itself; while you can use these to serve the web pages if you
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like, you will need to run the Stator runner somewhere else as well.
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The flagship Takahē instance, [takahe.social](https://takahe.social), runs
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inside of Kubernetes, with one Deployment for the webserver and one for the
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Stator runner.
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What To Run
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-----------
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You need to run at least two copies of the Docker image:
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* One with no command or arguments specified, which will serve web traffic
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* One with the arguments (command) ``python manage.py runstator``, which will
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run the background worker that handles asynchronous communication with other
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servers.
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Both of these can have as many copies run as needed. Note that the image has
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required environment variables before it will boot, and this is the only way
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to configure it - see below.
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Environment Variables
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---------------------
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All of these variables are *required* for a working installation, and should
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be provided from the first boot.
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* ``PGHOST``, ``PGPORT``, ``PGUSER``, ``PGDATABASE``, and ``PGPASSWORD`` are the
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standard PostgreSQL environment variables for configuring your database.
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* ``TAKAHE_SECRET_KEY`` must be a fixed, random value (it's used for internal
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cryptography). Don't change this unless you want to invalidate all sessions.
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* ``TAKAHE_MEDIA_BACKEND`` must be one of ``local``, ``s3`` or ``gcs``.
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* If it is set to ``local``, you must also provide ``TAKAHE_MEDIA_ROOT``,
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the path to the local media directory, and ``TAKAHE_MEDIA_URL``, a
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fully-qualified URL prefix that serves that directory.
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* If it is set to ``gcs``, you must also provide ``TAKAHE_MEDIA_BUCKET``,
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the name of the bucket to store files in. The bucket must be publically
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readable and have "uniform access control" enabled.
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* If it is set to ``s3``, you must also provide ``TAKAHE_MEDIA_BUCKET``,
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the name of the bucket to store files in.
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* ``TAKAHE_MAIN_DOMAIN`` should be the domain name (without ``https://``) that
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will be used for default links (such as in emails). It does *not* need to be
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the same as any domain you are hosting user accounts on.
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* ``TAKAHE_EMAIL_HOST`` and ``TAKAHE_EMAIL_PORT`` (along with
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``TAKAHE_EMAIL_USER`` and ``TAKAHE_EMAIL_PASSWORD``, if needed) should point
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to an SMTP server Takahe can use for sending email. Email is *required*, to
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allow account creation and password resets.
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* If you are using SendGrid, you can just set an API key in
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``TAKAHE_EMAIL_SENDGRID_KEY`` instead.
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* ``TAKAHE_EMAIL_FROM`` is the email address that emails from the system will
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appear to come from.
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* ``TAKAHE_AUTO_ADMIN_EMAIL`` should be an email address that you would like to
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be automatically promoted to administrator when it signs up. You only need
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this for initial setup, and can unset it after that if you like.
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* ``TAKAHE_STATOR_TOKEN`` should be a random string that you are using to
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protect the stator (task runner) endpoint. You'll use this value later.
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* If your installation is behind a HTTPS endpoint that is proxying it, set
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``TAKAHE_SECURE_HEADER`` to the header name used to signify that HTTPS is
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being used (usually ``X-Forwarded-Proto``)
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* If you want to receive emails about internal site errors, set
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``TAKAHE_ERROR_EMAILS`` to a comma-separated list of email addresses that
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should get them.
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Making An Admin Account
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-----------------------
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Once the webserver is up and working, go to the "create account" flow and
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create a new account using the email you specified in
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``TAKAHE_AUTO_ADMIN_EMAIL``.
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Once you set your password using the link emailed to you, you will have an
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admin account.
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If your email settings have a problem and you don't get the email, don't worry;
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fix them and then follow the "reset my password" flow on the login screen, and
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you'll get another password reset email that you can use.
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If you have shell access to the Docker image and would rather use that, you
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can run ``python3 manage.py createsuperuser`` instead and follow the prompts.
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Adding A Domain
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---------------
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When you login you'll be greeted with the "make an identity" screen, but you
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won't be able to as you will have no domains yet.
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You should select the "Domains" link in the sidebar and create one, and then
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you will be able to make your first identity.
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