7.1 KiB
Installing
If you've configured your DNS and have configured the playbook, you can start the installation procedure.
Before installing and each time you update the playbook in the future, you will need to update the Ansible roles in this playbook by running just roles
. just roles
is a shortcut (a roles
target defined in justfile
and executed by the just
utility) which ultimately runs ansible-galaxy to download Ansible roles. If you don't have just
, you can also manually run the roles
commands seen in the justfile
.
Playbook tags introduction
The Ansible playbook's tasks are tagged, so that certain parts of the Ansible playbook can be run without running all other tasks.
The general command syntax is: ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=COMMA_SEPARATED_TAGS_GO_HERE
Here are some playbook tags that you should be familiar with:
-
setup-all
- runs all setup tasks (installation and uninstallation) for all components, but does not start/restart services -
install-all
- likesetup-all
, but skips uninstallation tasks. Useful for maintaining your setup quickly when its components remain unchanged. If you adjust yourvars.yml
to remove components, you'd need to runsetup-all
though, or these components will still remain installed -
setup-SERVICE
(e.g.setup-bot-postmoogle
) - runs the setup tasks only for a given role, but does not start/restart services. You can discover these additional tags in each role (roles/**/tasks/main.yml
). Running per-component setup tasks is not recommended, as components sometimes depend on each other and running just the setup tasks for a given component may not be enough. For example, setting up the mautrix-telegram bridge, in addition to thesetup-mautrix-telegram
tag, requires database changes (thesetup-postgres
tag) as well as reverse-proxy changes (thesetup-nginx-proxy
tag). -
install-SERVICE
(e.g.install-bot-postmoogle
) - likesetup-SERVICE
, but skips uninstallation tasks. Seeinstall-all
above for additional information. -
start
- starts all systemd services and makes them start automatically in the future -
stop
- stops all systemd services -
ensure-matrix-users-created
- a special tag which ensures that all special users needed by the playbook (for bots, etc.) are created
setup-*
tags and install-*
tags do not start services automatically, because you may wish to do things before starting services, such as importing a database dump, restoring data from another server, etc.
1. Installing Matrix
If you don't use SSH keys for authentication, but rather a regular password, you may need to add --ask-pass
to the all Ansible commands
If you do use SSH keys for authentication, and use a non-root user to become root (sudo), you may need to add -K
(--ask-become-pass
) to all Ansible commands
There 2 ways to start the installation process - depending on whether you're Installing a brand new server (without importing data) or Installing a server into which you'll import old data.
Installing a brand new server (without importing data)
If this is a brand new Matrix server and you won't be importing old data into it, run all these tags:
ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=install-all,ensure-matrix-users-created,start
This will do a full installation and start all Matrix services.
Proceed to Maintaining your setup in the future and Finalize the installation
Installing a server into which you'll import old data
If you will be importing data into your newly created Matrix server, install it, but do not start its services just yet. Starting its services or messing with its database now will affect your data import later on.
To do the installation without starting services, run only the install-all
tag:
ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=install-all
When this command completes, services won't be running yet.
You can now:
-
Importing an existing SQLite database (from another Synapse installation) (optional)
-
Importing an existing Postgres database (from another installation) (optional)
-
Importing
media_store
data files from an existing Synapse installation (optional)
.. and then proceed to starting all services:
ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=start
Proceed to Maintaining your setup in the future and Finalize the installation
2. Maintaining your setup in the future
Feel free to re-run the setup command any time you think something is off with the server configuration. Ansible will take your configuration and update your server to match.
Note that if you remove components from vars.yml
, or if we switch some component from being installed by default to not being installed by default anymore, you'd need to run the setup command with --tags=setup-all
instead of --tags=install-all
. See Playbook tags introduction
A way to invoke these ansible-playbook
commands with less typing in the future is to use just to run them: just install-all
or just setup-all
. See our justfile
for more information.
3. Finalize the installation
Now that services are running, you need to finalize the installation process (required for federation to work!) by Configuring Service Discovery via .well-known.
4. Things to do next
After you have started the services and finalized the installation process (required for federation to work!) by Configuring Service Discovery via .well-known, you can:
- check if services work
- or create your first Matrix user account
- or set up additional services (bridges to other chat networks, bots, etc.)
- or learn how to upgrade services when new versions are released
- or learn how to maintain your server
- or join some Matrix rooms:
- via the Explore rooms feature in Element or some other client, or by discovering them using this matrix-static list. Note: joining large rooms may overload small servers.
- or come say Hi in our support room - #matrix-docker-ansible-deploy:devture.com. You might learn something or get to help someone else new to Matrix hosting.
- or help make this playbook better by contributing (code, documentation, or coffee/beer)