7.8 KiB
Why should I self host?
Self-hosting gives you the whole power over the service and the data. You can set up a server for your own personal use or share it with friends and family. Or, why not go further and share it with the whole world?
When you self-host you make internet stronger and more censorship resistant. If one Yotter instance goes down for any reason, there will be all other instances online and ready to host new users.
Pre-Installation
You will need a server of your own, or you can rent a VPS server on any service you like. Minimum requirements for up to 15 users are 2GB of RAM and a Linux Server. It is better if the server is dedicated as whole to Yotter as it will improve performance and security.
First of all, you will need to set up a new user on the server. For security reasons you should never use a root
user to set up a service. If you already have a non-root server you can use that one and skip the following steps.
We will create a user named ubuntu
as I will be setting this up on an ubuntu machine. So, if you choose a different username make sure you replace it on future commands. We will create and login to the user as follows:
$ adduser --gecos "" ubuntu
$ usermod -aG sudo ubuntu
$ su ubuntu
Now you should be logged in. Make sure to set up a good password. It is recommended to use ssh keys to log-in remotelly and disable the password login on all users.
Step 1: Base setup
-
Connect to your server via SSH or direct access.
- (Recommended) Set up password-less login with ssh-keys.
-
Install base dependencies:
-
sudo apt-get -y update
-
sudo apt-get -y install python3 python3-venv python3-dev
-
sudo apt-get -y install mysql-server supervisor nginx git
When installing MySQL-server it will prompt for a root password. Set up a password of your like, this will be the MySQL databases master password and will be required later, so don't forget it!
If after the MySQL-server installation you have not been prompted a password for the
root
user, runsudo mysql_secure_installation
- Clone this repository and acccess folder:
-
git clone https://github.com/pluja/Yotter
-
cd Yotter
- Create a Python virtual environment and populate it with dependencies:
-
python3 -m venv venv
-
source venv/bin/activate
-
pip install wheel
-
pip install cryptography
-
pip install -r requirements.txt
You can edit the
yotter-config.json
file
-
Install gunicorn (production web server for Python apps) and pymysql:
pip install gunicorn pymysql
-
Set up the database tables:
flask db init
flask db migrate
flask db upgrade
- Set up
.env
-
(PRE) Generate a random string and copy it to clipboard:
python3 -c "import uuid; print(uuid.uuid4().hex)"
-
Create a
.env
file on the root folder of the project (/home/ubuntu/Yotter/.env
):SECRET_KEY=<RandomString> DATABASE_URL=mysql+pymysql://yotter:<db-password>@localhost:3306/yotter
-
Make sure you change <RandomString>
and >db-password>
. <db-password>
should be different from the password of the database root user (the one you set up on step 1.2). This password will be needed later.
Step 2: Setting up the MySQL Database:
- Open the MySQL prompt line (Use the previously set MySQL root password!)
mysql -u root -p
If you have problems with the root password try running
sudo mysql
and then run this query:ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'YOUR_PASSWORD';
. This changes the password for the userroot
byYOUR_PASSWORD
Now you should be on the MySQL prompt line (mysql>
). So let's create the databases:
Change
<db-password>
for a password of your like. It will be the password for the dabase useryotter
. Don't choose the same password as the root user of MySQL for security.
The password
<db-password>
for the yotter user needs to match the password that you included in theDATABASE_URL
variable in the.env
file. If you want to change it, you can change it now.
mysql> create database yotter character set utf8 collate utf8_bin;
mysql> create user 'yotter'@'localhost' identified by '<db-password>';
mysql> grant all privileges on yotter.* to 'yotter'@'localhost';
mysql> flush privileges;
mysql> quit;
If your set up was correct, you should now be able to run:
flask db upgrade
Step 3: Setting up Gunicorn and Supervisor
When you run the server with flask run, you are using a web server that comes with Flask. This server is very useful during development, but it isn't a good choice to use for a production server because it wasn't built with performance and robustness in mind. Instead of the Flask development server, for this deployment I decided to use gunicorn, which is also a pure Python web server, but unlike Flask's, it is a robust production server that is used by a lot of people, while at the same time it is very easy to use. ref
- Start yotter under Gunicorn and check it has no errors:
gunicorn -b localhost:8000 -w 4 yotter:app
Once you see that no errors appear, you can stop gunicorn by pressing Ctrl+C
.
The supervisor utility uses configuration files that tell it what programs to monitor and how to restart them when necessary. Configuration files must be stored in /etc/supervisor/conf.d. Here is a configuration file for Yotter, which I'm going to call yotter.conf ref.
- Create a yotter.conf file on
/etc/supervisor/conf.d/
:
You can run
nano /etc/supervisor/conf.d/yotter.conf
and paste the text below:
Make sure to fit any path and user to your system.
[program:yotter]
command=/home/ubuntu/Yotter/venv/bin/gunicorn -b localhost:8000 -w 4 yotter:app
directory=/home/ubuntu/Yotter
user=ubuntu
autostart=true
autorestart=true
stopasgroup=true
killasgroup=true
After you write this configuration file, you have to reload the supervisor service for it to be imported:
sudo supervisorctl reload
Step 4: Set up Nginx
The Yotter application server powered by gunicorn is now running privately port 8000. Now we need to expose the application to the outside world by enabling public facing web server on ports 80 and 443, the two ports too need to be opened on the firewall to handle the web traffic of the application. I want this to be a secure deployment, so I'm going to configure port 80 to forward all traffic to port 443, which is going to be encrypted. ref.
sudo rm /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default
Create a new Nginx site, you can run sudo nano /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/yotter
And write this on it:
server {
server_name <yourdomain>;
location / {
proxy_pass http://localhost:8000;
}
location /static {
# handle static files directly, without forwarding to the application
alias /home/ubuntu/Yotter/app/static;
expires 30d;
}
}
- Run
sudo service nginx reload
Updating the server
Updating the server should always be pretty easy:
(venv) $ git pull
(venv) $ sudo supervisorctl stop yotter
(venv) $ flask db upgrade
(venv) $ pip install -r requirements.txt
(venv) $ sudo supervisorctl start yotter