This playbook contains several roles for provisioning a ready-to-go Mastodon instance.
- Python 3.10.x
- Virtualenv (>= 20.x)
- pip/python-pip (>= 20.x)
for testing purposes:
- Vagrant >= 2.3.5
$ virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3 env
$ source env/bin/activate
$ git clone https://github.com/mastodon/mastodon-ansible.git
$ cd mastodon-ansible
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
This playbook is intended to be run on a "bare" (virtual) server, with the support for provisioning the Mastodon stack as well as a PostgresSQL and Redis database.
Typing secret content directly at the command line (without a prompt) leaves the secret string in your shell history. You should use Ansible Vault to secure your Mastodon database credentials for the use with Ansible instead.
The /templates/secrets.yml.tpl
contains an example template that you can use.
To encrypt secrets.yml
, use this following command:
$ ansible-vault encrypt secrets.yml
Then run the playbook as following:
$ ansible-playbook bare/playbook.yml --ask-vault-pass -i <your-host-here>, -u <remote-user> --ask-become-pass -e 'ansible_python_interpreter=/usr/bin/python3' --extra-vars="@secrets.yml"
If you prefer not to use Ansible Vault, you can run the playbook as following:
$ ansible-playbook bare/playbook.yml -i <your-host-here>, -u <remote-user> --ask-become-pass -e 'ansible_python_interpreter=/usr/bin/python3' --extra-vars="mastodon_db_password=your-password redis_pass=your-password local_domain=mastodon.local mastodon_host=example.com"
The playbook is using become
for some of its tasks, hence the user you connect to the instance with will have to have access to sudo. It should ask you for the password in due time.
Note: This assumes you're within the virtualenv already.
After the playbook has finished its execution, Mastodon now should be available at the hostname you defined and you're not required run the Mastodon setup wizard. As Email servers differ widely from configuration to configuration you must edit the .env.production file and add your own email server details followed by restart of Mastodon services.
To edit .env.production
, follow these steps:
ssh yourmachine
su - mastodon
cd ~/live
nano .env.production
systemctl restart mastodon-*.service
To see a list of available environment variables for your Mastodon installation, please refer to the Mastodon documentation.
By default, the playbook runs all of the roles defined here in sequence. You can skip any of them by specifying --skip-tags=<role-name>
.
Skipping the postgres
role:
$ ansible-playbook bare/playbook.yml --skip-tags=postgres -i <your-host>, -u <your-user>
This role verifies that when you're running this playbook, that you're not jumping to a new major or minor version to prevent potential destructive operation. You can easily disable this role via a variable.
config setting | explanation |
---|---|
run_preflight_checks | If set to true, it will run verification |
This role contains the following tasks:
repositories.yml
: Adds required package repositories to pull in the latest software (e.g. yarn, nodejs)packages.yml
: Installs all the required packages for Mastodon to run (seevars/<distro>_vars.yml
for a list)ruby.yml
: Installs rbenv/ruby globally so you can run Mastodon (it's a Ruby on Rails app)user.yml
: Adds a user to run Mastodon with since you shouldn't be running Mastodon under a privileged account.firewall-cmd.yml
: Starts and enables firewall for RHEL based systems and permitting SSH, HTTP and HTTPS, as not using a firewall is insecure.ufw.yml
: Starts and enables firewall for Debian based systems and permitting SSH, HTTP and HTTPS, as not using a firewall is insecure.mastodon-preflight.yml
: Downloads latest version of Mastodon and required dependencies for installing Ruby.mastodon-postflight.yml
: Installs latest version of Mastodon and all of its required dependencies. This role generates required secrets and installs env.production file, not requiring to run the Mastodon setup wizard.nginx.yml
: Installs Mastodon configuration for NGINX and sets correct SELinux policies for RHEL systems.nodejs.yml
: Enables NodeJS 16 DNF module for RHEL 8 systems to ensure that we have correct NodeJS version installed.redis.yml
: Secures Redis installation with a password as you shouldn't run redis with no password protection.selfsigned-ssl.yml
: Generates self-signed SSL certificates when LetsEncrypt not used as Mastodon requires SSL to function.
config setting | explanation |
---|---|
mastodon_host | The url where your mastodon instance is reachable. E.g. example.social |
disable_hsts | Per default the system will enable HSTS. You can set this to true if you want to disable it. |
disable_letsencrypt | Per default the system will attempt to obtain SSL certificate via LetsEncrypt. You can set this to true if you want to disable it. |
use_http | Per default the system will use HTTPS and redirect any HTTP traffic to HTTPS. Useful for development or reverse proxy scenarios. You can set this to true if you want to enable it. |
nginx_catch_all | Per default the system will only show Mastodon for a defined url in mastodon_host. Useful for development or reverse proxy scenarios. Recommended to use with use_http. You can set this to true if you want to enable it. |
mastodon_version | Specifies which version of Mastodon you want to download. Default is "latest" |
mastodon_allow_prerelease | Specifies if you want to download release candidate builds of Mastodon when "latest" is specified. Default is "false". |
This role installs PostgresSQL, adds a database (named mastodon_instance
by default) and a user (named mastodon
by default). For connecting to the database it can either use a local socket by setting the variable mastodon_db_login_unix_socket
to the directory the Postgres socket lives in (/var/run/postgresql
by default under Ubuntu 18.04) or a remote PostgreSQL instance you have installed somewhere else. You will than have to set the mastodon_db_login_host
(IP address or hostname of database), mastodon_db_port
(the port the database is accessible on; default 5432
), mastodon_db_login_user
(the administrative user to connect to the database with) and mastodon_db_login_password
.
config setting | explanation |
---|---|
mastodon_db | The database name |
mastodon_db_user | Database user for mastodon |
mastodon_db_password | Database password for mastodon |
mastodon_db_login_unix_socket | Unix socket of the local PostgresSQL instance (not needed when using remote connection) |
If you configure your PostgresSQL on another server, you need to configure these settings additionally:
config setting | explanation |
---|---|
mastodon_db_login_host | Host of the PostgresSQL |
mastodon_db_port | Port of the PostgresSQL |
mastodon_db_login_user | Admin user to connect with |
mastodon_db_login_password | Password of admin user |
- Install PostgresSQL, create the database and user:
$ ansible-playbook bare/playbook.yml -i <your-host-here>, -u <remote-user> --extra-vars="mastodon_db_password=your-password mastodon_db_login_unix_socket='/var/run/postgresql'"
- PostgreSQL installed on host
mastodob-db
, create the database and the user:
$ ansible-playbook bare/playbook.yml -i <your-host-here>, -u <remote-user> --extra-vars="mastodon_db_password=your-password mastodon_db_login_host=mastodon-db mastodon_db_port=5432 mastodon_db_login_user=your-admin-db-user mastodon_db_login_password=your-password"
This role installs the Redis key-value store, used by Mastodon, and its client libraries.
config setting | explanation |
---|---|
redis_pass | Password used to secure the redis server. |
FIXME
Testing is done using Goss. The tests are in the goss.yaml
file and include variables from the vars.yaml
file.
This repository is regularly running tests using GitHub Actions. Its configuration can be found in .github/workflows/test.yml
.
$ vagrant up
This should provision a new instance within VirtualBox and run all the tests necessary to verify the Ansible playbook is valid. By default it runs the bare provisioning.
- Add LB role