66218fde30 | ||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
README.md | ||
authorized_keys | ||
bashrc | ||
health-checker.py | ||
letsencrypt-setup.sh | ||
setup-health-check-scripts.sh | ||
setup.sh | ||
sia.env | ||
siad-upload.service | ||
siad.service | ||
skynet-nginx.conf | ||
source-upload.sh | ||
ssh_config | ||
stats-logger.sh | ||
tmux.conf |
README.md
Skynet Portal Setup Scripts
This directory contains a setup guide and scripts that will install and configure some basic requirements for running a Skynet Portal. The assumption is that we are working with a Debian Buster Minimal system or similar.
Initial Setup
(Assumes we are logged in as root on a fresh installation of Debian)
You may want to fork this repository and add your ssh pubkey to
authorized_keys
and optionally edit the tmux
and bash
configurations.
- SSH in a freshly installed Debian machine.
apt-get update && apt-get install sudo
adduser user
usermod -a -G sudo user
- Quit the ssh session.
You a can now ssh into your machine as the user user
.
- On your local machine:
ssh-copy-id user@ip-addr
- On your local machine:
ssh user@ip-addr
- Now logged in as
user
:sudo apt-get install git
git clone https://github.com/NebulousLabs/skynet-webportal
cd skynet-webportal/setup-scripts
./setup.sh
- Once DNS records are set you can run:
./letsencrypt-setup.sh
- This should edit your nginx configuration for you. If not, you should check
that keys were created by letsencrypt in
/etc/letsencrypt/live/
and add the following lines into your nginx configuration. Make sure to replaceYOUR-DOMAIN
with your domain name.ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/YOUR-DOMAIN/fullchain.pem; ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/YOUR-DOMAIN/privkey.pem;
- Finally make sure to check your nginx conf and reload nginx:
sudo nginx -t
sudo systemctl reload nginx
Running siad
NOTE: You must be running siad
and siac
by building from a version at least
as recent as v1.4.3
.
You still need to setup siad
for the backend to be complete.
The setup script creates a systemd user service that will run siad
in the
background and automatically restart upon failure. The siad.service
file must
be placed in ~/.config/systemd/user/
To use the siad.service
, first fill out ~/.sia/sia.env
environment variables with the
correct values. You will need to initialize your wallet if you have not already
done so.
To enable the service: systemctl --user enable siad.service
Running 2 siad instances
In some cases, portal operators may want to run 2 siad
nodes on the same
server. One node to prioritize downloads and one to prioritze uploads The
scripts here also do the initial setup for a 2nd siad
instance running as a
systemd service siad-upload.service
in the ~/siad-upload/
directory with
environment variables in sia-upload.env
. You must fill out the correct values
for those environment variables.
The bashrc
file in this repository also provides an alias siac-upload
that
loads the correct environment variables and sets the correct ports to interact
with the 2nd siad
node.
siac
is used to operate node 1, and siac-upload
is used to operate node 2.
To enable the 2nd service: systemctl --user enable siad-upload.service
Useful Commands
To start the service: systemctl --user start siad
To stop it: systemctl --user stop siad
To check the status of it: systemctl --user status siad
To check standard err/standard out: journalctl --user-unit siad
Portal Setup
When siad
is done syncing, create a new wallet and unlock the wallet.
Then set an allowance (siac renter setallowance
), with the suggested values
below:
- 10 KS (keep 25 KS in your wallet)
- default period
- default number of hosts
- 8 week renewal time
- 500 GB expected storage
- 500 GB expected upload
- 5 TB expected download
- default redundancy
Once your allowance is set you need to set your node to be a viewnode with the
following command:
siac renter setallowance --payment-contract-initial-funding 10SC
Now your node will begin making 10 contracts per block with many hosts so it can potentially view the whole network's files.
Running the Portal
Make sure you have nodejs and yarn installed.
You can check that with node -v
and yarn -v
commands respectively.
- run
cd /home/user/skynet-webportal
- run
yarn
to build dependencies - run
yarn build
to build the client package
Client package will be outputted to /public
and nginx configuration will pick it up automatically.