# Installing on Linux using OTP releases ## Pre-requisites * 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 * A (sub)domain pointed to the machine You will be running commands as root. If you aren't root already, please elevate your priviledges by executing `sudo su`/`su`. 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/Alpine. ### Detecting flavour Paste the following into the shell: ```sh arch="$(arch)";if [ "$arch" = "x86_64" ];then arch="amd64";elif [ "$arch" = "armv7l" ];then arch="arm";elif [ "$arch" = "aarch64" ];then arch="arm64";else echo "Unsupported arch: $arch">&2;exit 1;fi;if getconf GNU_LIBC_VERSION>/dev/null;then libc_postfix="";elif [ "$(ldd 2>&1|head -c 9)" = "musl libc" ];then libc_postfix="-musl";elif [ "$(find /lib/libc.musl*|wc -l)" ];then libc_postfix="-musl";else echo "Unsupported libc">&2;exit 1;fi;echo "$arch$libc_postfix" ``` 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 the regular install. ### Installing the required packages Other than things bundled in the OTP release Pleroma depends on: * curl (to download the release build) * unzip (needed to unpack release builds) * ncurses (ERTS won't run without it) * PostgreSQL (also utilizes extensions in postgresql-contrib) * nginx (could be swapped with another reverse proxy but this guide covers only it) * certbot (for Let's Encrypt certificates, could be swapped with another ACME client, but this guide covers only it) Debian/Ubuntu: ```sh apt install curl unzip libncurses5 postgresql postgresql-contrib nginx certbot ``` Alpine: ```sh apk add curl unzip ncurses postgresql posqtgresql-contrib nginx certbot ``` ## Setup ### Configuring PostgreSQL #### (Optional) Installing RUM indexes 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](config.html#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). Debian/Ubuntu (available only on Buster/19.04): ```sh apt install postgresql-11-rum ``` Alpine: ```sh apk install gcc make git clone https://github.com/postgrespro/rum /tmp/rum cd /tmp/rum make USE_PGXS=1 make USE_PGXS=1 install make USE_PGXS=1 installcheck cd rm -r /tmp/rum ``` #### (Optional) Performance configuration For optimal performance, you may use [PGTune](https://pgtune.leopard.in.ua), don't forget to restart postgresql after editing the configuration Debian/Ubuntu: ```sh systemctl restart postgresql ``` Alpine: ```sh rc-service postgresql restart ``` ### Installing Pleroma ```sh # Create the Pleroma user adduser --system --shell /bin/false --home /opt/pleroma pleroma # Set the flavour environment variable to the string you got in Detecting flavour section. # For example if the flavour is `arm64-musl` the command will be export FLAVOUR="arm64-musl" # Clone the release build into a temporary directory and unpack it su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc " curl 'https://git.pleroma.social/api/v4/projects/2/jobs/artifacts/master/download?job=$FLAVOUR' -o /tmp/pleroma.zip unzip /tmp/pleroma.zip -d /tmp/ " # Move the release to the home directory and delete temporary files su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc " mv /tmp/release/* /opt/pleroma rmdir /tmp/release rm /tmp/pleroma.zip " # Create uploads directory and set proper permissions (skip if planning to use a remote uploader) # Note: It does not have to be `/var/lib/pleroma/uploads`, the config generator will ask about the upload directory later mkdir -p /var/lib/pleroma/uploads chown -R pleroma /var/lib/pleroma # Create custom public files directory (custom emojis, frontend bundle overrides, robots.txt, etc.) # Note: It does not have to be `/var/lib/pleroma/static`, the config generator will ask about the custom public files directory later mkdir -p /var/lib/pleroma/static chown -R pleroma /var/lib/pleroma # Create a config directory mkdir -p /etc/pleroma chown -R pleroma /etc/pleroma # Run the config generator su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "./bin/pleroma_ctl instance gen --output /etc/pleroma/config.exs --output-psql /tmp/setup_db.psql" # Create the postgres database psql -U postgres -d postgres -f /tmp/setup_db.psql # If you have installed RUM indexes add # `config :pleroma, :database, rum_enabled: true` # to the end of /etc/pleroma/config.exs before proceeding # Create the database schema ./bin/pleroma_ctl create ./bin/pleroma_ctl migrate # If you have installed RUM indexes also run # ./bin/pleroma_ctl migrate --migrations-path priv/repo/optional_migrations/rum_indexing/ # Start the instance to verify that everything is working as expected ./bin/pleroma daemon # Wait for about 20 seconds and query the instance endpoint, if it shows your uri, name and email correctly, you are configured correctly sleep 20 && curl http://localhost:4000/api/v1/instance # Stop the instance ./bin/pleroma stop ``` ### Setting up nginx and getting Let's Encrypt SSL certificaties ```sh # Get a Let's Encrypt certificate certbot certonly --standalone --preferred-challenges http -d yourinstance.tld # Copy the Pleroma nginx configuration to the nginx folder # The location of nginx configs is dependent on the distro # For Debian/Ubuntu: cp /opt/pleroma/installation/pleroma.nginx /etc/nginx/sites-available/pleroma.nginx ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/pleroma.nginx /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/pleroma.nginx # For Alpine cp /opt/pleroma/installation/pleroma.nginx /etc/nginx/conf.d/pleroma.conf # 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 cp /opt/pleroma/installation/pleroma.nginx /etc/nginx/pleroma.conf # Edit the nginx config replacing example.tld with your (sub)domain $EDITOR path-to-the-config # Verify that the config is valid nginx -t # Start nginx # For Debian/Ubuntu: systemctl start nginx # For Alpine rc-service nginx start ``` 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. ### Setting up a system service Debian/Ubuntu: ```sh # Copy the service into a proper directory cp /opt/pleroma/installation/pleroma.service /etc/systemd/system/pleroma.service # Start pleroma and enable it on boot systemctl start pleroma systemctl enable pleroma ``` Alpine: ```sh # Copy the service into a proper directory cp /opt/pleroma/installation/init.d/pleroma /etc/init.d/pleroma # Start pleroma and enable it on boot rc-service pleroma start rc-update add pleroma ``` 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. Still doesn't work? Feel free to contact us on [#pleroma on freenode](https://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=%23pleroma) or via matrix at , you can also [file an issue on our Gitlab](https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma/issues/new) ## Post installation ### Setting up auto-renew Let's Encrypt certificate ### Running Mix tasks ### Updating