Confirmed package exists by testing an OpenBSD 7.6 arm64 VM
12 KiB
Installing on OpenBSD
This guide describes the installation and configuration of pleroma (and the required software to run it) on a single OpenBSD 6.6 server.
For any additional information regarding commands and configuration files mentioned here, check the man pages online or directly on your server with the man command.
{! backend/installation/generic_dependencies.include !}
Preparing the system
Required software
To install them, run the following command (with doas or as root):
pkg_add elixir gmake git postgresql-server postgresql-contrib cmake ffmpeg ImageMagick libvips
Pleroma requires a reverse proxy, OpenBSD has relayd in base (and is used in this guide) and packages/ports are available for nginx (www/nginx) and apache (www/apache-httpd). Independently of the reverse proxy, acme-client(1) can be used to get a certificate from Let's Encrypt.
Optional software
Per docs/installation/optional/media_graphics_packages.md
:
- ImageMagick
- ffmpeg
- exiftool
To install the above:
pkg_add ImageMagick ffmpeg p5-Image-ExifTool
Creating the pleroma user
Pleroma will be run by a dedicated user, _pleroma. Before creating it, insert the following lines in login.conf:
pleroma:\
:datasize-max=1536M:\
:datasize-cur=1536M:\
:openfiles-max=4096
This creates a "pleroma" login class and sets higher values than default for datasize and openfiles (see login.conf(5)), this is required to avoid having pleroma crash some time after starting.
Create the _pleroma user, assign it the pleroma login class and create its home directory (/home/_pleroma/): useradd -m -L pleroma _pleroma
Clone pleroma's directory
Enter a shell as the _pleroma user. As root, run su _pleroma -;cd
. Then clone the repository with git clone -b stable https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma.git
. Pleroma is now installed in /home/_pleroma/pleroma/, it will be configured and started at the end of this guide.
PostgreSQL
Start a shell as the _postgresql user (as root run su _postgresql -
then run the initdb
command to initialize postgresql:
You will need to specify pgdata directory to the default (/var/postgresql/data) with the -D <path>
and set the user to postgres with the -U <username>
flag. This can be done as follows:
initdb -D /var/postgresql/data -U postgres
If you are not using the default directory, you will have to update the datadir
variable in the /etc/rc.d/postgresql script.
When this is done, enable postgresql so that it starts on boot and start it. As root, run:
rcctl enable postgresql
rcctl start postgresql
To check that it started properly and didn't fail right after starting, you can run ps aux | grep postgres
, there should be multiple lines of output.
httpd
httpd will have three functions:
- redirect requests trying to reach the instance over http to the https URL
- serve a robots.txt file
- get Let's Encrypt certificates, with acme-client
Insert the following config in httpd.conf:
# $OpenBSD: httpd.conf,v 1.17 2017/04/16 08:50:49 ajacoutot Exp $
ext_inet="<IPv4 address>"
ext_inet6="<IPv6 address>"
server "default" {
listen on $ext_inet port 80 # Comment to disable listening on IPv4
listen on $ext_inet6 port 80 # Comment to disable listening on IPv6
listen on 127.0.0.1 port 80 # Do NOT comment this line
log syslog
directory no index
location "/.well-known/acme-challenge/*" {
root "/acme"
request strip 2
}
location "/robots.txt" { root "/htdocs/local/" }
location "/*" { block return 302 "https://$HTTP_HOST$REQUEST_URI" }
}
types {
}
Do not forget to change <IPv4/6 address> to your server's address(es). If httpd should only listen on one protocol family, comment one of the two first listen options.
Create the /var/www/htdocs/local/ folder and write the content of your robots.txt in /var/www/htdocs/local/robots.txt.
Check the configuration with httpd -n
, if it is OK enable and start httpd (as root):
rcctl enable httpd
rcctl start httpd
acme-client
acme-client is used to get SSL/TLS certificates from Let's Encrypt. Insert the following configuration in /etc/acme-client.conf:
#
# $OpenBSD: acme-client.conf,v 1.4 2017/03/22 11:14:14 benno Exp $
#
authority letsencrypt-<domain name> {
#agreement url "https://letsencrypt.org/documents/LE-SA-v1.2-November-15-2017.pdf"
api url "https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory"
account key "/etc/acme/letsencrypt-privkey-<domain name>.pem"
}
domain <domain name> {
domain key "/etc/ssl/private/<domain name>.key"
domain certificate "/etc/ssl/<domain name>.crt"
domain full chain certificate "/etc/ssl/<domain name>.fullchain.pem"
sign with letsencrypt-<domain name>
challengedir "/var/www/acme/"
}
Replace <domain name> by the domain name you'll use for your instance. As root, run acme-client -n
to check the config, then acme-client -ADv <domain name>
to create account and domain keys, and request a certificate for the first time.
Make acme-client run everyday by adding it in /etc/daily.local. As root, run the following command: echo "acme-client <domain name>" >> /etc/daily.local
.
Relayd will look for certificates and keys based on the address it listens on (see next part), the easiest way to make them available to relayd is to create a link, as root run:
ln -s /etc/ssl/<domain name>.fullchain.pem /etc/ssl/<IP address>.crt
ln -s /etc/ssl/private/<domain name>.key /etc/ssl/private/<IP address>.key
This will have to be done for each IPv4 and IPv6 address relayd listens on.
relayd
relayd will be used as the reverse proxy sitting in front of pleroma. Insert the following configuration in /etc/relayd.conf:
# $OpenBSD: relayd.conf,v 1.4 2018/03/23 09:55:06 claudio Exp $
ext_inet="<IPv4 address>"
ext_inet6="<IPv6 address>"
table <pleroma_server> { 127.0.0.1 }
table <httpd_server> { 127.0.0.1 }
http protocol plerup { # Protocol for upstream pleroma server
#tcp { nodelay, sack, socket buffer 65536, backlog 128 } # Uncomment and adjust as you see fit
tls ciphers "ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305"
tls ecdhe secp384r1
# Forward some paths to the local server (as pleroma won't respond to them as you might want)
pass request quick path "/robots.txt" forward to <httpd_server>
# Append a bunch of headers
match request header append "X-Forwarded-For" value "$REMOTE_ADDR" # This two header and the next one are not strictly required by pleroma but adding them won't hurt
match request header append "X-Forwarded-By" value "$SERVER_ADDR:$SERVER_PORT"
match response header append "X-XSS-Protection" value "1; mode=block"
match response header append "X-Permitted-Cross-Domain-Policies" value "none"
match response header append "X-Frame-Options" value "DENY"
match response header append "X-Content-Type-Options" value "nosniff"
match response header append "Referrer-Policy" value "same-origin"
match response header append "X-Download-Options" value "noopen"
match response header append "Content-Security-Policy" value "default-src 'none'; base-uri 'self'; form-action 'self'; img-src 'self' data: https:; media-src 'self' https:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self'; script-src 'self'; connect-src 'self' wss://CHANGEME.tld; upgrade-insecure-requests;" # Modify "CHANGEME.tld" and set your instance's domain here
match request header append "Connection" value "upgrade"
#match response header append "Strict-Transport-Security" value "max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains" # Uncomment this only after you get HTTPS working.
# If you do not want remote frontends to be able to access your Pleroma backend server, comment these lines
match response header append "Access-Control-Allow-Origin" value "*"
match response header append "Access-Control-Allow-Methods" value "POST, PUT, DELETE, GET, PATCH, OPTIONS"
match response header append "Access-Control-Allow-Headers" value "Authorization, Content-Type, Idempotency-Key"
match response header append "Access-Control-Expose-Headers" value "Link, X-RateLimit-Reset, X-RateLimit-Limit, X-RateLimit-Remaining, X-Request-Id"
# Stop commenting lines here
}
relay wwwtls {
listen on $ext_inet port https tls # Comment to disable listening on IPv4
listen on $ext_inet6 port https tls # Comment to disable listening on IPv6
protocol plerup
forward to <pleroma_server> port 4000 check http "/" code 200
forward to <httpd_server> port 80 check http "/robots.txt" code 200
}
Again, change <IPv4/6 address> to your server's address(es) and comment one of the two listen options if needed. Also change wss://CHANGEME.tld to wss://<your instance's domain name>.
Check the configuration with relayd -n
, if it is OK enable and start relayd (as root):
rcctl enable relayd
rcctl start relayd
(Strongly recommended) serve media on another domain
Refer to the Hardening your instance document on how to serve media on another domain. We STRONGLY RECOMMEND you to do this to minimize attack vectors.
pf
Enabling and configuring pf is highly recommended. In /etc/pf.conf, insert the following configuration:
# Macros
if="<network interface>"
authorized_ssh_clients="any"
# Skip traffic on loopback interface
set skip on lo
# Default behavior
set block-policy drop
block in log all
pass out quick
# Security features
match in all scrub (no-df random-id)
block in log from urpf-failed
# Rules
pass in quick on $if inet proto icmp to ($if) icmp-type { echoreq unreach paramprob trace } # ICMP
pass in quick on $if inet6 proto icmp6 to ($if) icmp6-type { echoreq unreach paramprob timex toobig } # ICMPv6
pass in quick on $if proto tcp to ($if) port { http https } # relayd/httpd
pass in quick on $if proto tcp from $authorized_ssh_clients to ($if) port ssh
Replace <network interface> by your server's network interface name (which you can get with ifconfig). Consider replacing the content of the authorized_ssh_clients macro by, for example, your home IP address, to avoid SSH connection attempts from bots.
Check pf's configuration by running pfctl -nf /etc/pf.conf
, load it with pfctl -f /etc/pf.conf
and enable pf at boot with rcctl enable pf
.
Configure and start pleroma
Enter a shell as _pleroma (as root su _pleroma -
) and enter pleroma's installation directory (cd ~/pleroma/
).
Then follow the main installation guide:
- run
mix deps.get
- run
MIX_ENV=prod mix pleroma.instance gen
and enter your instance's information when asked - copy config/generated_config.exs to config/prod.secret.exs. The default values should be sufficient but you should edit it and check that everything seems OK.
- exit your current shell back to a root one and run
psql -U postgres -f /home/_pleroma/pleroma/config/setup_db.psql
to setup the database. - return to a _pleroma shell into pleroma's installation directory (
su _pleroma -;cd ~/pleroma
) and runMIX_ENV=prod mix ecto.migrate
As _pleroma in /home/_pleroma/pleroma, you can now run LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 MIX_ENV=prod mix phx.server
to start your instance.
In another SSH session/tmux window, check that it is working properly by running ftp -MVo - http://127.0.0.1:4000/api/v1/instance
, you should get json output. Double-check that uri's value is your instance's domain name.
Starting pleroma at boot
An rc script to automatically start pleroma at boot hasn't been written yet, it can be run in a tmux session (tmux is in base).
Create administrative user
If your instance is up and running, you can create your first user with administrative rights with the following command as the _pleroma user.
LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8 MIX_ENV=prod mix pleroma.user new <username> <your@emailaddress> --admin
Further reading
{! backend/installation/further_reading.include !}
Questions
Questions about the installation or didn’t it work as it should be, ask in #pleroma:libera.chat via Matrix or #pleroma on libera.chat via IRC.