Update Nginx setup docs for Fedora and Red Hat OTP

This commit is contained in:
Norm 2024-04-20 21:31:48 -04:00
parent 39b8e73532
commit c493769364
2 changed files with 25 additions and 37 deletions

View file

@ -135,23 +135,6 @@ If you want to open your newly installed instance to the world, you should run n
sudo dnf install nginx
```
* Setup your SSL cert, using your method of choice or certbot. If using certbot, first install it:
```shell
sudo dnf install certbot
```
and then set it up:
```shell
sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/letsencrypt/
sudo certbot certonly --email <your@emailaddress> -d <yourdomain> --standalone
```
If that doesnt work, make sure, that nginx is not already running. If it still doesnt work, try setting up nginx first (change ssl “on” to “off” and try again).
---
* Copy the example nginx configuration and activate it:
```shell
@ -165,12 +148,23 @@ sudo cp /opt/akkoma/installation/nginx/akkoma.nginx /etc/nginx/conf.d/akkoma.con
sudo systemctl enable --now nginx.service
```
If you need to renew the certificate in the future, uncomment the relevant location block in the nginx config and run:
* Setup your SSL cert, using your method of choice or certbot. If using certbot, first install it:
```shell
sudo certbot certonly --email <your@emailaddress> -d <yourdomain> --webroot -w /var/lib/letsencrypt/
sudo dnf install certbot python3-certbot-nginx
```
and then set it up:
```shell
sudo certbot --email <your@emailaddress> -d <yourdomain> -d <media_domain> --nginx
```
If that doesn't work the first time, add `--dry-run` to further attempts to avoid being ratelimited as you identify the issue, and do not remove it until the dry run succeeds. A common source of problems are nginx config syntax errors; this can be checked for by running `nginx -t`.
Certificate renewal should be handled automatically by Certbot from now on.
#### Other webserver/proxies
You can find example configurations for them in `/opt/akkoma/installation/`.

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@ -82,6 +82,7 @@ Other than things bundled in the OTP release Akkoma depends on:
* 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)
* If you are using certbot, also install the `python3-certbot-nginx` package for the nginx plugin
* libmagic/file
First, update your system, if not already done:
@ -169,12 +170,6 @@ sudo -Hu akkoma ./bin/pleroma stop
### Setting up nginx and getting Let's Encrypt SSL certificaties
#### Get a Let's Encrypt certificate
```shell
certbot certonly --standalone --preferred-challenges http -d yourinstance.tld
```
#### Copy Akkoma nginx configuration to the nginx folder
```shell
@ -195,8 +190,15 @@ sudo nginx -t
sudo systemctl start nginx
```
At this point if you open your (sub)domain in a browser you should see a 502 error, that's because Akkoma is not started yet.
#### Get a Let's Encrypt certificate
```shell
sudo certbot --email <your@emailaddress> -d <yourdomain> -d <media_domain> --nginx
```
If that doesn't work the first time, add `--dry-run` to further attempts to avoid being ratelimited as you identify the issue, and do not remove it until the dry run succeeds. A common source of problems are nginx config syntax errors; this can be checked for by running `nginx -t`.
If you're successful with obtaining the certificates, opening your (sub)domain in a browser will result in a 502 error, since Akkoma hasn't been started yet.
### Setting up a system service
@ -239,19 +241,11 @@ sudo nginx -t
# Restart nginx
sudo systemctl restart nginx
# Ensure the webroot menthod and post hook is working
sudo certbot renew --cert-name yourinstance.tld --webroot -w /var/lib/letsencrypt/ --dry-run --post-hook 'systemctl reload nginx'
# Add it to the daily cron
echo '#!/bin/sh
certbot renew --cert-name yourinstance.tld --webroot -w /var/lib/letsencrypt/ --post-hook "systemctl reload nginx"
' > /etc/cron.daily/renew-akkoma-cert
sudo chmod +x /etc/cron.daily/renew-akkoma-cert
# If everything worked the output should contain /etc/cron.daily/renew-akkoma-cert
sudo run-parts --test /etc/cron.daily
# Test that renewals work properly
sudo certbot renew --cert-name yourinstance.tld --nginx --dry-run
```
Assuming the commands were run successfully, certbot should be able to renew your certificates automatically via the `certbot-renew.timer` systemd unit.
## Create your first user and set as admin
```shell