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.
putty
That’s your problem. Putty does keys differently to normal ssh.
ansible
docker
.
So, why can’t you install lemmy? I’m going to assume you’re using ubuntu. If you are willing to swap to arch (which I think DO offers), I recommend it. Get an AUR helper installed (a bit of hassle, I like trizen) and install lemmy from AUR. You’ll need to bump the commit unless you like 0.17.3. I’ll be doing that tonight so I can post relevant bits. If not, post errors.
Or just keep doing containers so you can have weird and wonderful errors like no dns.
Why does every Linux problem solution involve installing a different distro
It’s just that ubuntu, and everything in the debian family, sucks massive ass, and few people acknowledge it.
Apparently including the people who developed Lemmy who chose to recommend Ubuntu…
There is a disturbingly large number of people that haven’t figured out how much ubuntu sucks.
I am willing to try any method you prefer. I’ve failed at all of them and have no preference. I don’t care how I get it working, I just need to see something work. Please, please, please help!!!
Have you tried Lemmy-Easy-Deploy? This is not the method I used to deploy my own instance but I heard from some that this one is easy to use. It might be worth trying.
Yes, it worked, but as I’ve told others, the dev did not make it for a production use case. They said they intended it to be used by “people in college that are just testing”. Several features don’t work and are not going to be supported, like SMTP, which I will require. They also said they didn’t intend to have more than one user of the instance… No idea who this usecase is for…
The usecase is for people who want a single-user/small instance or those who are completely new to selfhosting. I’m pretty sure SMTP works if you configure an external one (like Mailgun or SendGrid) which is what most people do (including me) since the SMTP config is done via
lemmy.hjson
(or in the case of Lemmy-Easy-Deploy, theconfig.env
file). IMO, the only thing that makes Lemmy-Easy-Deploy worse for production use is Caddy which performs worse than nginx in some benchmarks. But I don’t think it’s that bad.But if you don’t want to use Lemmy-Easy-Deploy, then here’s my own documentation on how I installed Lemmy on my server. It’s different from the standard Lemmy docker or ansible install where I use nginx natively instead of containerized as this fixes my certbot issues. I’m not an expert on any of this but this is how I got it running.
Thanks for the link. I tried it out and had a problem with the “lemmy.hjson” file. It doesn’t look like I would expect, there is a bunch of non-sense. I did the wget command again and checked “config.hjson” and it is identical. So I think there is something wrong with that file.
Whoops. Sorry about that. I used the wrong link. I fixed it and it should pull the correct config.hjson file now. Feel free to try again if you wish.
Lots of people actually. Part of self-hosting is to be in control of your own stuff. My instance is for exclusive use of myself and my friends for example. That way if lemmy.ml or lemmy.world have problems, mine keeps working and will eventually resync when those come back online. I also have my own emails and my own Matrix and my own IRC bouncer and my own lots of things. That way I’m in full control of my experience, and I own all my data.
There’s a fair bit of single user lemmy instances out there. It’s a valid use case, just not yours.
Oh okay, that makes sense. Thanks for the perspective!
The only way I could get Lemmy running was to use yunohost
Could you tell us what has failed / did not work on your previous attempts? Also, what setup did you use, what reverse proxy you had in front of Lemmy if any, etc.
Okay, so it looks like nginx is a reverse proxy. That is the step I was on. It doesn’t work. Last thing I did was to modify the docker-compose.yml file and change the port from 80 to 1236. I was told to do that by someone who has been trying to troubleshoot with me for 2 weeks now. It doesn’t say to do that anywhere, but they told me to so I did. Then they said to “add this to my upstream” but I haven’t a fucking clue what that means so I don’t know what to do next. There is a config file in etc/nginx/sites-enabled/nginx.conf that the guide directed me to edit. This is the guide that I was directed to use to set up nginx. I was on the step where it requests the nginx status and mine just says “inactive”. I promise, I am following these guides PRECISELY. I don’t know what I am doing wrong, but all the solutions that I have received are things that the guide DOES NOT say to do. So I don’t know where I am. I am happy to start fresh. You just let me know.
It doesn’t tell you to actually run nginx, it assumes it will automatically run when installed. I don’t know why, that sounds like dumb behaviour even if it were correct. You are right about the guides being trash.
I recommend getting used to package manager (apt, dpkg) and system daemon/init system (systemd - accessed via systemctl) and then ignoring that guide. Installing and running nginx isn’t complex enough to warrant a guide; installing packages and running services, in general, are just. Configuring nginx, however… If you know the concepts, it’s pretty easy. The concepts are hard.
It doesn’t tell you to actually run nginx
That may be so, but the link that they give references a digital ocean guide that DOES (it’s literally step 2). So, am I just ignoring that part? How do I figure out which parts of a guide should be followed and which ones shouldn’t?
running nginx isn’t complex enough to warrant a guide
I haven’t gotten it to work yet so I disagree.
Do you have a local device you can try all this on first so you’re not wasting money?
I agree the guides aren’t great, but they assume you have some experience doing this stuff.
but they assume you have some experience doing this stuff
I can appreciate that, but I don’t. So, if you are saying that I should just quit because I’m not an experience web developer, then thanks, and no thanks.
For the better part of the last two decades, once or twice a year I throw a linux distro on a computer to see how it is. And of those several dozen times, EVERY SINGLE TIME, I have encountered an issue that needed troubleshooting and was never resolved. And every single time, I have found myself being advised that “you just have to know how to do this already”. So I get what you are saying, but I don’t. I don’t have experience with this because it always ends up like this. I fucking hate windows, but it works. I can google a problem and find a solution within minutes. Literally any problem has a solution. Not so with linux. Just a lot of people telling me I just need to “know more”.
I’m sorry you’ve had this experience. It’s not nice to be told that you shouldn’t even try. I think though, that this poster does have a point in that it might be a good idea to stop paying for the hosting of the VPS, practice installing on a local device you have at home, spare laptop etc.(a VM on your own PC would probably work too) and then when you have that going smoothly, try on the VPS again. I haven’t personally used the Ansible install so not sure of it’s quirks, but I’ll try and answer some of your questions.
I am not telling you to quit I’m not telling you to know more. I was merely suggesting that the devs put out the minimal required documentation for an experienced admin to get it up and running, while also suggesting a way to not waste money.
Sorry it came out wrong.
It seems like you have the keys configured for putty but not whatever SSH client Ansible uses.
It’s going to sound unhelpful, but have you tried running the Ansible stuff from WSL? This is tested on Linux (and macOS probably), but probably not Windows.
You may also want to nuke the box of any previous state if you can. The NGINX errors you’re getting are that it expects to find a LetsEncrypt certificate that doesn’t exist yet. Typically you need to start NGINX without it first then certbot will generate it and update the NGINX config to use it.
Some people have been using Lemmy-Easy-Deploy, it might be worth a try. It’s supposed to be easier and more turnkey. The author is also very open to suggestions and help if the instructions are unclear.
The docs are definitely geared towards people with existing server admin experience at the moment. There’s talk on Matrix to improve those.
Please post full logs of what you’re running, it will be easier for people to troubleshoot, including everything before. The extra context can be very helpful to know what Ansible did before and give clues as to what it did previously that might fail. That stuff is a moving target, it gets updated frequently and may fail under some unanticipated conditions.
It’s going to sound unhelpful, but have you tried running the Ansible stuff from WSL? This is tested on Linux (and macOS probably), but probably not Windows. That’s exactly what I’m using, WSL Ubuntu.
And I’ve tried Lemmy-Easy-Deploy, and it worked fine, but the developer told me that they didn’t intend for this to be used for an actual deployment instance with many users. I plan to scale this as large as I need. They also said that it did not support SMTP and that they had no intention of supporting SMTP. But without SMTP, users won’t be able to confirm emails or reset passwords… So it just won’t work.
Please post full logs of what you’re running, it will be easier for people to troubleshoot, including everything before. The extra context can be very helpful to know what Ansible did before and give clues as to what it did previously that might fail. That stuff is a moving target, it gets updated frequently and may fail under some unanticipated conditions.
Good point. I can do that. I have made so many impromptu modifications to my current server that troubleshooting it any further would surely cause errors. So I will blow up the droplet, start fresh, and get it to the first error and post back. Thanks for the advice!
Hmm, I see. In that case I’m afraid you will definitely need to get familiar with a lot of stuff really fast, because there’s a lot of rough edges right now. It’s super beta software after all. Even the admins of lemmy.world and beehaw.org are hitting pretty complex problems that needs a lot of digging. You’ll definitely need to become fairly intimate with how Lemmy works under the hood if you want to scale up to hundreds of users. Especially the pict-rs storage as it grows pretty fast. People have been having to migrate it to object-storage.
You can always join the install support Matrix room for additional help: https://matrix.to/#/#lemmy-support-new-instance:discuss.online. Or the whole Lemmy Matrix Space at #lemmy-space:matrix.org.
I don’t want to demotivate you or anything - it’s a great learning experience! But beware you’ll definitely have to troubleshoot and spend some time to keep it running smoothly. It’s far from set and forget at the moment, particularly at scale.
But one thing at a time, lets see how Ansible does on a blank droplet, and lets figure out how to fix your Ansible problems first before getting into manual installs and scaling up.
I can’t even get that far.
I used a different PC, installed WSL, created a new rsa key stored at “/home/wsl/.ssh”. Added the public key to my DO droplet. Rebuilt the droplet to ensure that the keys transferred.
ssh -i /home/wsl/.ssh/id-rsa root@ip Permission denied (public key)
every 👏 fucking 👏 time 👏
I would love to try the ansible method, but apparently I’m the only person to not just instinctively know how to ssh from another pc. I’ve searched for a reference to this and none of them help. Any advice?
I think that’s supposed to be an underscore in
id_rsa
, notid-rsa
, unless you changed it from the default.I figured out the problem, digital ocean was only applying the top RSA key, which is my Putty key. The keys I added to DO via WSL were not getting added to the authorized key list. So I added my key to the authorized keys file and it worked. Well, it let ansible access the server. I’m having other issues but will work on them later.
No to demotivate you from trying it, but if you really want to use your instance instead of working on it, may I suggest you try a managed hosting provider?
Communick has managed lemmy instances which are affordable, you don’t need to worry about updates or backups and offer a free 14-day trial.
(Obvious disclosure, I run this service)