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62 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
62 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
# Pleroma
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## About Pleroma
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Pleroma is an OStatus-compatible social networking server written in Elixir, compatible with GNU Social and Mastodon. It is high-performance and can run on small devices like a Raspberry Pi.
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For clients it supports both the [GNU Social API with Qvitter extensions](https://twitter-api.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html) and the [Mastodon client API](https://github.com/tootsuite/documentation/blob/master/Using-the-API/API.md).
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Mobile clients that are known to work well:
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* Twidere
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* Tusky
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* Pawoo (Android + iOS)
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* Subway Tooter
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* Amaroq (iOS)
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* Tootdon (Android + iOS)
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No release has been made yet, but several servers have been online for months already. If you want to run your own server, feel free to contact us at @lain@pleroma.soykaf.com or in our dev chat at #pleroma on freenode or via matrix at https://matrix.heldscal.la/#/room/#freenode_#pleroma:matrix.org.
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## Installation
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### Dependencies
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* Postgresql version 9.6 or newer
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* Elixir version 1.4 or newer (you will also need erlang-dev, erlang-parsetools, erlang-xmerl packages)
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* Build-essential tools
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### Configuration
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* Run `mix deps.get` to install elixir dependencies.
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* Run `mix generate_config`. This will ask you a few questions about your instance and generate a configuration file in `config/generated_config.exs`. Check that and copy it to either `config/dev.secret.exs` or `config/prod.secret.exs`. It will also create a `config/setup_db.psql`, which you need to run as PostgreSQL superuser (i.e. `sudo su postgres -c "psql -f config/setup_db.psql"`). It will setup a pleroma db user, database and will setup needed extensions that need to be set up once as superuser.
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* Run `mix ecto.migrate` to run the database migrations. You will have to do this again after certain updates.
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* You can check if your instance is configured correctly by running it with `mix phx.server` and checking the instance info endpoint at `/api/v1/instance`. If it shows your uri, name and email correctly, you are configured correctly. If it shows something like `localhost:4000`, your configuration is probably wrong, unless you are running a local development setup.
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* The common and convenient way for adding HTTPS is by using Nginx as a reverse proxy. You can look at example Nginx configuration in `installation/pleroma.nginx`. If you need TLS/SSL certificates for HTTPS, you can look get some for free with letsencrypt: https://letsencrypt.org/
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On Debian you can use `certbot` package and command to manage letsencrypt certificates.
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* [Not tested with system reboot yet!] You'll also want to set up Pleroma to be run as a systemd service. Example .service file can be found in `installation/pleroma.service` you can put it in `/etc/systemd/system/`.
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## Running
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By default, it listens on port 4000 (TCP), so you can access it on http://localhost:4000/ (if you are on the same machine). In case of an error it will restart automatically.
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### As systemd service (with provided .service file)
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Running `service pleroma start`
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Logs can be watched by using `journalctl -fu pleroma.service`
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### Standalone/run by other means
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Run `mix phx.server` in repository's root, it will output log into stdout/stderr
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### Using an upstream proxy for federation
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Add the following to your `dev.secret.exs` or `prod.secret.exs` if you want to proxify all http requests that pleroma makes to an upstream proxy server:
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config :pleroma, :http,
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proxy_url: "127.0.0.1:8123"
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This is useful for running pleroma inside Tor or i2p.
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