I have tried the docker, ansible, and scratch methods. I have been troubleshooting for a month now. I have gotten nowhere. I need someone to help walk me through how to deploy a lemmy server because the guides are absolute trash.
Please help. I’m wasting money running this VPS and for literally nothing.
Edit: So, I’ve tried the ansible method, but I can’t access my server this way. It just keeps saying “UNREACHABLE”. I have generated a dozen keys, none of them work. I have NO PROBLEMS with ssh in Putty. I can use Putty all day. Putty works fine using my ssh key. Ansible does not. No amount of new keys has made any difference. I have countless keys in my stupid droplet because of this hacky garbage.
In my opinion its best not to touch the nginx that’s set up by Lemmy and it’s better to have another reverse-proxy in front of it.
I’ll try to come up with an solution later in the day, gotta do my daily at work.
No problem at all. Thanks for getting back to me. I really do appreciate it!!! I have a busy day today too but I’ll try to be vigilant about responding.
So, here’s something that might work. I tested it on my local machine, up to Caddy but without HTTPS, but I’m confident it’ll work once deployed on a server.
Prerequisites:
Setup
First, create a folder and download the following files:
nginx.conf
Then, generate passwords for PostgreSQL and your admin user, store them somewhere safe.
Config changes
lemmy.hjson
You’ll want to change the
admin_username
,admin_password
andsite_name
to match your primary user’s credentials and the name you want to give your instance.Then, change
hostname
to match your domain name: if it issub.domain.tld
then it should readhostname: "sub.domain.tld"
.The base config file does not have proper configuration for the database, so you’ll have to edit the
database
field as follows with the password you previously created:database: { host: postgres database: "lemmy" user: "lemmy" password: "POSTGRES_PWD" # Change for your password }
Additionally, if you want to send emails for registration confirmation and password resets, add the following before the closing
}
and change to match your email provider configuration.email: { # Hostname and port of the smtp server smtp_server: "SMTP_SERVER" # Login name for smtp server smtp_login: "SMTP_LOGIN" # Password to login to the smtp server smtp_password: "SMTP_PASSWORD" # Address to send emails from, eg "noreply@your-instance.com" smtp_from_address: "SMTP_LOGIN" # Whether or not smtp connections should use tls. Can be none, tls, or starttls tls_type: "starttls" }
docker-compose.yml
By default the compose file is meant to build a development version of Lemmy, we will change this by removing the blocks with
build
and uncomment those withimage
. Note: think to update the images to0.18.2
since it fixes some vulnerabilities.Also, since we will use a reverse proxy and I don’t now if your server has a firewall, we should remove the
ports
blocks which are used to expose the services’ ports on the host.Finally, make sure to change the
POSTGRES_PASSWORD
field to match the PostgreSQL password you set inlemmy.hjson
.It should look something like that:
Reverse-proxy
For the final touch, we are going to setup Caddy, a reverse proxy with HTTPS support out of the box. You could use pretty much any reverse proxy you want, but I chose Caddy for its easy setup.
First, create a file nammed
Caddyfile
and write the following in it:Make sure to match your actual domain name.
Finally, update the
docker-compose.yml
file to add the following at the end (make sure that it’s correctly tabulated)Launching the instance
Before starting the stack, we have a few things left to do:
mkdir -p volumes/postgres volumes/pictrs
volumes/pictrs
:sudo chown -R 991:991 pictrs
Finally, to start everything:
docker compose up -d
Weird, my comment does not seem to be picked up by lemmy.world, even after deleting and re-submitting it 🤔
https://lemmy.blackeco.com/comment/150520
So, here’s something that might work. I tested it on my local machine, up to Caddy but without HTTPS, but I’m confident it’ll work once deployed on a server.
Prerequisites:
Setup
First, create a folder and download the following files:
nginx.conf
Then, generate passwords for PostgreSQL and your admin user, store them somewhere safe.
Config changes
lemmy.hjson
You’ll want to change the
admin_username
,admin_password
andsite_name
to match your primary user’s credentials and the name you want to give your instance.Then, change
hostname
to match your domain name: if it issub.domain.tld
then it should readhostname: "sub.domain.tld"
.The base config file does not have proper configuration for the database, so you’ll have to edit the
database
field as follows with the password you previously created:database: { host: postgres database: "lemmy" user: "lemmy" password: "POSTGRES_PWD" # Change for your password }
Additionally, if you want to send emails for registration confirmation and password resets, add the following before the closing
}
and change to match your email provider configuration.email: { # Hostname and port of the smtp server smtp_server: "SMTP_SERVER" # Login name for smtp server smtp_login: "SMTP_LOGIN" # Password to login to the smtp server smtp_password: "SMTP_PASSWORD" # Address to send emails from, eg "noreply@your-instance.com" smtp_from_address: "SMTP_LOGIN" # Whether or not smtp connections should use tls. Can be none, tls, or starttls tls_type: "starttls" }
docker-compose.yml
By default the compose file is meant to build a development version of Lemmy, we will change this by removing the blocks with
build
and uncomment those withimage
. Note: think to update the images to0.18.2
since it fixes some vulnerabilities.Also, since we will use a reverse proxy and I don’t now if your server has a firewall, we should remove the
ports
blocks which are used to expose the services’ ports on the host.Finally, make sure to change the
POSTGRES_PASSWORD
field to match the PostgreSQL password you set inlemmy.hjson
.It should look something like that:
Reverse-proxy
For the final touch, we are going to setup Caddy, a reverse proxy with HTTPS support out of the box. You could use pretty much any reverse proxy you want, but I chose Caddy for its easy setup.
First, create a file nammed
Caddyfile
and write the following in it:Make sure to match your actual domain name.
Finally, update the
docker-compose.yml
file to add the following at the end (make sure that it’s correctly tabulated)Launching the instance
Before starting the stack, we have a few things left to do:
mkdir -p volumes/postgres volumes/pictrs
volumes/pictrs
:sudo chown -R 991:991 pictrs
Finally, to start everything:
docker compose up -d