Reviewed-on: https://akkoma.dev/AkkomaGang/akkoma/pulls/55
5.6 KiB
Installing on FreeBSD
This document was written for FreeBSD 12.1, but should be work on future releases.
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Installing software used in this guide
This assumes the target system has pkg(8)
.
# pkg install elixir postgresql12-server postgresql12-client postgresql12-contrib git-lite sudo nginx gmake acme.sh cmake
Copy the rc.d scripts to the right directory:
Setup the required services to automatically start at boot, using sysrc(8)
.
# sysrc nginx_enable=YES
# sysrc postgresql_enable=YES
Initialize postgres
# service postgresql initdb
# service postgresql start
Install media / graphics packages (optional, see docs/installation/optional/media_graphics_packages.md
)
# pkg install imagemagick ffmpeg p5-Image-ExifTool
Configuring Akkoma
Create a user for Akkoma:
# pw add user akkoma -m
# echo 'export LC_ALL="en_US.UTF-8"' >> /home/akkoma/.profile
# su -l akkoma
Clone the repository:
$ cd $HOME # Should be the same as /home/akkoma
$ git clone https://akkoma.dev/AkkomaGang/akkoma.git
Configure Akkoma. Note that you need a domain name at this point:
$ cd /home/akkoma/akkoma
$ mix deps.get # Enter "y" when asked to install Hex
$ MIX_ENV=prod mix pleroma.instance gen # You will be asked a few questions here.
$ cp config/generated_config.exs config/prod.secret.exs
Since Postgres is configured, we can now initialize the database. There should
now be a file in config/setup_db.psql
that makes this easier. Edit it, and
change the password to a password of your choice. Make sure it is secure, since
it'll be protecting your database. As root, you can now initialize the database:
# cd /home/akkoma/akkoma
# sudo -Hu postgres -g postgres psql -f config/setup_db.psql
Postgres allows connections from all users without a password by default. To
fix this, edit /var/db/postgres/data12/pg_hba.conf
. Change every trust
to
password
.
Once this is done, restart Postgres with:
# service postgresql restart
Run the database migrations.
Back as the akkoma user, run the following to implement any database migrations.
# su -l akkoma
$ cd /home/akkoma/akkoma
$ MIX_ENV=prod mix ecto.migrate
You will need to do this whenever you update with git pull
:
Configuring acme.sh
We'll be using acme.sh in Stateless Mode for TLS certificate renewal.
First, as root, allow the user acme
to have access to the acme log file, as follows:
# touch /var/log/acme.sh.log
# chown acme:acme /var/log/acme.sh.log
# chmod 600 /var/log/acme.sh.log
Next, obtain your account fingerprint:
# sudo -Hu acme -g acme acme.sh --register-account
You need to add the following to your nginx configuration for the server running on port 80:
location ~ ^/\.well-known/acme-challenge/([-_a-zA-Z0-9]+)$ {
default_type text/plain;
return 200 "$1.6fXAG9VyG0IahirPEU2ZerUtItW2DHzDzD9wZaEKpqd";
}
Replace the string after after $1.
with your fingerprint.
Start nginx:
# service nginx start
It should now be possible to issue a cert (replace example.com
with your domain name):
# sudo -Hu acme -g acme acme.sh --issue -d example.com --stateless
Let's add auto-renewal to /etc/crontab
(replace example.com
with your domain):
/usr/local/bin/sudo -Hu acme -g acme /usr/local/sbin/acme.sh -r -d example.com --stateless
Configuring nginx
FreeBSD's default nginx configuration does not contain an include directive, which is typically used for multiple sites. Therefore, you will need to first create the required directory as follows:
# mkdir -p /usr/local/etc/nginx/sites-available
Next, add an include
directive to /usr/local/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
, within the http {}
block, as follows:
http {
...
include /usr/local/etc/nginx/sites-available/*;
}
As root, copy /home/akkoma/akkoma/installation/nginx/akkoma.nginx
to
/usr/local/etc/nginx/sites-available/akkoma.nginx
.
Edit the defaults of /usr/local/etc/nginx/sites-available/akkoma.nginx
:
- Change
ssl_trusted_certificate
to/var/db/acme/certs/example.tld/example.tld.cer
. - Change
ssl_certificate
to/var/db/acme/certs/example.tld/fullchain.cer
. - Change
ssl_certificate_key
to/var/db/acme/certs/example.tld/example.tld.key
. - Change all references of
example.tld
to your instance's domain name.
Creating a startup script for Akkoma
Akkoma will need to compile when it initially starts, which typically takes a longer period of time. Therefore, it is good practice to initially run akkoma from the command-line before utilizing the rc.d script. That is done as follows:
# su -l akkoma
$ cd $HOME/akkoma
$ MIX_ENV=prod mix phx.server
Copy the startup script to the correct location and make sure it's executable:
# cp /home/akkoma/akkoma/installation/freebsd/rc.d/akkoma /usr/local/etc/rc.d/akkoma
# chmod +x /usr/local/etc/rc.d/akkoma
Update the /etc/rc.conf
and start akkoma with the following commands:
# sysrc akkoma_enable=YES
# service akkoma start
Create your first user
If your instance is up and running, you can create your first user with administrative rights with the following task:
sudo -Hu akkoma MIX_ENV=prod mix pleroma.user new <username> <your@emailaddress> --admin
Conclusion
Restart nginx with # service nginx restart
and you should be up and running.
Make sure your time is in sync, or other instances will receive your posts with incorrect timestamps. You should have ntpd running.
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