snac.8 12 KB

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  1. .Dd $Mdocdate$
  2. .Dt SNAC 8
  3. .Os
  4. .Sh NAME
  5. .Nm snac
  6. .Nd snac administration
  7. .Sh DESCRIPTION
  8. The
  9. .Nm
  10. daemon processes messages from other servers in the Fediverse
  11. using the ActivityPub protocol.
  12. .Pp
  13. This is the admin manual. For user operation, see
  14. .Xr snac 1 .
  15. For file and data formats, see
  16. .Xr snac 5 .
  17. .Ss Special cares about your snac you must know beforehand
  18. .Nm
  19. makes heavy use of hard links and link reference counts for its work, so
  20. don't even think of using it on a filesystem that doesn't support this
  21. feature. Most UNIX-like operating systems (Linux, the BSDs, the old DEC
  22. Ultrix machine in your grandfather basement, probably MacOS) support hard
  23. links on their native filesystems. Don't do fancy things like moving the
  24. subdirectories to different filesystems. Also, if you move your
  25. .Nm
  26. installation to another server, do it with a tool that respect hard
  27. link counts. Remember:
  28. .Nm
  29. is a very UNIXy program that loves hard links.
  30. .Ss Building and Installation
  31. A C compiler must be installed in the system, as well as the development
  32. headers and libraries for OpenSSL (or compatible) and curl. To build
  33. .Nm ,
  34. run
  35. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  36. make
  37. .Ed
  38. .Pp
  39. And, after that, run as root
  40. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  41. make install
  42. .Ed
  43. .Ss Data storage Initialization
  44. Once
  45. .Nm
  46. is properly installed on the system, designate a directory where
  47. the server and user data are to be stored. This directory
  48. must not exist yet.
  49. .Nm
  50. must always be run as a regular user; you can create one for
  51. it or use your own. To initialize the data storage, execute
  52. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  53. snac init $HOME/snac-data
  54. .Ed
  55. .Pp
  56. A small set of questions will be asked regarding the installation,
  57. specially the host name it will run under, the local network address
  58. and port
  59. .Nm
  60. will listen to, the optional path prefix and possibly other things.
  61. .Pp
  62. You can launch the
  63. .Nm
  64. process by running
  65. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  66. snac httpd $HOME/snac-data
  67. .Ed
  68. .Pp
  69. Use a web browser to connect to the specified address and port. You
  70. should see a greeting page.
  71. .Pp
  72. Log messages are sent to the standard error stream. By default, only
  73. relevant information is written there. You can increase the debugging
  74. level by editing the 'dbglevel' field in the
  75. .Pa server.json
  76. file or by setting a numeric value between 0 and 3 to the DEBUG
  77. environment variable, see below.
  78. .Pp
  79. If you operate a Linux systemd-enabled system or OpenBSD, there are
  80. startup scripts and configuration data in the
  81. .Pa examples
  82. directory.
  83. For other operating systems, please read the appropriate documentation
  84. on how to install a daemon as a non-root service.
  85. .Ss Upgrading to a new version
  86. Sometimes, the data storage disk layout changes between versions. If there
  87. is such a change,
  88. .Nm
  89. will refuse to run and require an upgrade. Do this by running
  90. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  91. snac upgrade $HOME/snac-data
  92. .Ed
  93. .Pp
  94. Take special care to execute this upgrade operation without any
  95. .Nm
  96. processes serving on the same folder. You can break everything. I know
  97. this because Tyler knows this.
  98. .Pp
  99. .Ss Server Setup
  100. .Pp
  101. An http server with TLS and proxying support must already be
  102. installed and configured.
  103. .Nm
  104. runs as a daemon and listens on a TCP/IP socket, preferrably
  105. on a local interface. It can serve the full domain or only
  106. a directory. The http server must be configured to route to the
  107. .Nm
  108. socket all related traffic and also the webfinger standard
  109. address. The Host header must be propagated.
  110. See the examples below.
  111. .Ss Adding Users
  112. .Pp
  113. Users must be created from the command line.
  114. You can do it by running
  115. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  116. snac adduser $HOME/snac-data
  117. .Ed
  118. .Pp
  119. All needed data will be prompted for. There is no artificial limit
  120. on the number of users that can be created.
  121. .Ss Customization
  122. The
  123. .Pa server.json
  124. configuration file allows some behaviour tuning:
  125. .Bl -tag -width tenletters
  126. .It Ic host
  127. The host name.
  128. .It Ic prefix
  129. The URL path prefix.
  130. .It Ic address
  131. The listen network address.
  132. .It Ic port
  133. The listen network port.
  134. .It Ic dbglevel
  135. The debug level. An integer value, being 0 the less verbose (the default).
  136. .It Ic layout
  137. The disk storage layout version. Never touch this.
  138. .It Ic queue_retry_max
  139. Messages sent out are stored in a queue. If the posting of a messages fails,
  140. it's re-enqueued for later. This integer configures the maximum count of
  141. times the sending will be retried.
  142. .It Ic queue_retry_minutes
  143. The number of minutes to wait before the failed posting of a message is
  144. retried. This is not linear, but multipled by the number of retries
  145. already done.
  146. .It Ic max_timeline_entries
  147. This is the maximum timeline entries shown in the web interface.
  148. .It Ic timeline_purge_days
  149. Entries in the timeline older that this number of days are purged.
  150. If you don't want any timeline purging and enjoy your data drives
  151. fill up with old crap and finally burst in flames, you can disable
  152. purging by setting this to 0.
  153. .It Ic local_purge_days
  154. Same as before, but for the user-generated entries in the local timeline.
  155. .It Ic cssurls
  156. This is a list of URLs to CSS files that will be inserted, in this order,
  157. in the HTML before the user CSS. Use these files to configure the global
  158. site layout.
  159. .It Ic disable_cache
  160. If set to true, timeline caching is not done. This is only useful for
  161. debugging purposes; don't enable it unless you know what do you want, as
  162. it makes everything slower.
  163. .It Ic disable_openbsd_security
  164. If running under OpenBSD,
  165. .Nm
  166. makes use of the enhanced security functions
  167. .Xr unveil 2
  168. and
  169. .Xr pledge 2 .
  170. Setting this to true disables their usage. These functions limit severely
  171. what an intruder can do in case of a security vulnerability, so only enable
  172. this option if something is very broken.
  173. .It Ic num_threads
  174. By setting this value, you can specify the exact number of threads
  175. .Nm
  176. will use when processing connections. Values lesser than 4 will be ignored.
  177. .It Ic disable_email_notifications
  178. By setting this to true, no email notification will be sent for any user.
  179. .It Ic disable_inbox_collection
  180. By setting this to true, no inbox collection is done. Inbox collection helps
  181. being discovered from remote instances, but also increases network traffic.
  182. .It Ic admin_email
  183. The email address of the instance administrator (optional).
  184. .It Ic admin_account
  185. The user name of the instance administrator (optional, used only in the
  186. Mastodon API).
  187. .El
  188. .Pp
  189. You must restart the server to make effective these changes.
  190. .Pp
  191. If a file named
  192. .Pa greeting.html
  193. is present in the server base directory, it will be returned whenever
  194. the base URL of the server is requested. Fill it with whatever
  195. information about the instance you want to supply to people
  196. visiting the server, like sign up requirements, site policies
  197. and such. The special %userlist% mark in the file will cause
  198. the list of users in this instance to be inserted.
  199. .Pp
  200. Users can change a bit of information about themselves from the
  201. web interface. See
  202. .Xr snac 1
  203. for details. Further, every user can have a private CSS file in their
  204. .Pa static/style.css
  205. that will be served instead of the server-wide one.
  206. It's not modifiable from the web interface to avoid users
  207. shooting themselves in the foot by destroying everything.
  208. .Ss Old Data Purging
  209. From version 2.06, there is no longer a need to add a special
  210. cron job for purging old data, as this is managed internally.
  211. .Ss ActivityPub Support
  212. These are the following activities and objects that
  213. .Nm
  214. supports:
  215. .Bl -tag -width tenletters
  216. .It Vt Follow
  217. Complete support, on input and output.
  218. .It Vt Undo
  219. For
  220. .Vt Follow
  221. objects, on input and output.
  222. .It Vt Create
  223. For
  224. .Vt Note
  225. objects, on input and output; for
  226. .Vt Question
  227. objects, on input.
  228. .It Vt Accept
  229. For
  230. .Vt Follow
  231. objects, on input and output.
  232. .It Vt Like
  233. For
  234. .Vt Note
  235. objects, on input and output.
  236. .It Vt Announce
  237. For
  238. .Vt Note
  239. objects, on input and output.
  240. .It Vt Update
  241. For
  242. .Vt Person
  243. and
  244. .Vt Note
  245. objects, on input and output; for
  246. .Vt Question
  247. objects, on input.
  248. .It Vt Delete
  249. Supported for
  250. .Vt Note
  251. and
  252. .Vt Tomsbtone
  253. objects on input, and for
  254. .Vt Note
  255. objects on output.
  256. .El
  257. .Pp
  258. The rest of activities and objects are dropped on input.
  259. .Pp
  260. There is partial support for
  261. .Vt OrderedCollection
  262. objects in the
  263. .Pa /outbox
  264. (with the last 20 entries of the local timeline shown). No pagination
  265. is supported. Intentionally, the
  266. .Pa /followers
  267. and
  268. .Pa /following
  269. paths return empty lists.
  270. .Ss Migrating from Mastodon
  271. User migration from different Fediverse instances is a pain in the ass
  272. that has been implemented everywhere as a kludgy afterthought. There is
  273. not much that can be done, other than importing the list of people you
  274. follow to your new
  275. .Nm
  276. account.
  277. .Pp
  278. To do this, download the user's list of accounts being followed (in CSV
  279. format) from the Mastodon web interface and execute this:
  280. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  281. awk -F, 'NR > 1 { print $1 }' /path/to/following_accounts.csv | \\
  282. xargs -n 1 snac follow $SNAC_BASEDIR $SNAC_USER
  283. .Ed
  284. .Ss Other Considerations
  285. .Nm
  286. stores all the messages it receives as JSON files, which are usually
  287. bloated and filled with redundant information. Using a filesystem with
  288. file compression enabled (like btrfs or zfs) will probably be a good
  289. choice to store the
  290. .Nm
  291. data storage into.
  292. .Sh ENVIRONMENT
  293. .Bl -tag -width Ds
  294. .It Ev DEBUG
  295. Overrides the debugging level from the server 'dbglevel' configuration
  296. variable. Set it to an integer value. The higher, the deeper in meaningless
  297. verbiage you'll find yourself into.
  298. .El
  299. .Sh EXAMPLES
  300. You want to install the
  301. .Nm
  302. Fediverse daemon in the host example.com, that is correctly configured
  303. with a valid TLS certificate and running the nginx httpd server.
  304. The service will be installed under the
  305. .Pa fedi
  306. location. Two users, walter and jessie, will be hosted in the system.
  307. Their Fediverse presence addresses will be
  308. .Lk https://example.com/fedi/walter
  309. and
  310. .Lk https://example.com/fedi/jesse ,
  311. respectively. They will be known
  312. in the Fediverse as @walter@example.com and @jesse@example.com. The
  313. .Nm
  314. daemon will run as the user snacusr in the system and listen to the
  315. localhost:8001 network socket. All data will be stored in the
  316. .Pa /home/snacusr/fedidata
  317. directory.
  318. .Pp
  319. Log into the system as snacusr and execute:
  320. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  321. snac init /home/snacusr/fedidata
  322. .Ed
  323. .Pp
  324. Answer "example.com" to the host name question, "/fedi" to the path
  325. prefix question, "localhost" to the address and "8001" to the port.
  326. .Pp
  327. Create the users
  328. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  329. snac adduser /home/snacusr/fedidata walter
  330. snac adduser /home/snacusr/fedidata jesse
  331. .Ed
  332. .Pp
  333. Answer the questions with reasonable values.
  334. .Pp
  335. Execute the server:
  336. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  337. snac httpd /home/snacusr/fedidata
  338. .Ed
  339. .Pp
  340. Edit the nginx configuration and add the following snippet to the
  341. example.com server section:
  342. .Bd -literal -offset indent
  343. # main web access point
  344. location /fedi {
  345. proxy_pass http://localhost:8001;
  346. proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
  347. }
  348. # webfinger
  349. location /.well-known/webfinger {
  350. proxy_pass http://localhost:8001;
  351. proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
  352. }
  353. # Mastodon API (entry points)
  354. location /api/v1/ {
  355. proxy_pass http://localhost:8001;
  356. proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
  357. }
  358. location /api/v2/ {
  359. proxy_pass http://localhost:8001;
  360. proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
  361. }
  362. # Mastodon API (OAuth support)
  363. location /oauth {
  364. proxy_pass http://localhost:8001;
  365. proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
  366. }
  367. # optional
  368. location /.well-known/nodeinfo {
  369. proxy_pass http://localhost:8001;
  370. proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
  371. }
  372. .Ed
  373. .Pp
  374. Restart the nginx daemon and connect to
  375. .Lk https://example.com/fedi/walter .
  376. The empty, default screen will be shown. Enter the admin section with the
  377. credentials defined for this user. Search people, start following
  378. them, engage in arid discussions and generally enjoy the frustrating
  379. experience of Social Media.
  380. .Sh SEE ALSO
  381. .Xr snac 1 ,
  382. .Xr snac 5
  383. .Sh AUTHORS
  384. .An grunfink Lk https://comam.es/snac/grunfink @grunfink@comam.es
  385. .Sh LICENSE
  386. See the LICENSE file for details.
  387. .Sh CAVEATS
  388. JSON files are fragile when modified by hand. Take care.