An alternative Documentation to setup LNbits on a VPS, connected to your Lightning Network Node through a secured tunnel
This is a simpler fork / alternative to my Guide provided here, but instead of OpenVPN, we're using WireGuard here. The Problem statement remains the same, you may prefer one solution over the other. Have a read through both and see what fits better. But in either case, you're coming here for the following reasons:
- have a dynamic IP from your Internet Service Provider
- want to hide your home IP from the world, for whatever reason
- desire to decrease your Lightning Node HTLC Routing times, so instead of running Tor only, you want Clearnet availability, too
- want others to leverage the LN Services you want to offer, via LNBits, BTCPay or others
- get a domain-name or use a free-domain host such as DuckDNS to point to your LNBits instance
- are just curious and want to tinker around a bit, because it's good to have those skills when demand for experience continues to rise
- Pre-Amble
- Pre-Reads
- Pre-Requisites
- Preperations
- Let's get started (LFG!)
- Into the Tunnel
- Connect VPS LNBits to your LND Node
- Appendix & FAQ
Your LNbits instance installed on a cheap, but anonymous Virtual Private Server (VPS), connected to your own, non-custodial Lightning-Network Node running on both Tor and Clearnet (Hybrid-Mode).
We want payment options with βΏitcoin to be fast, reliable, non-custodial - but the service should ideally not be easily to be identifiable. LNBits provides a quick and simple setup today, for instance on your Raspiblitz oder Umbrel, however, if you want to build the setup from scratch on your own, you have to bypass a number of technical discovery and hurdles.
There are plenty of ways how to solve for this. This creates hesitance to implement, especially when you're not very technical. This guide is supposed to provide one approach, whilst there remain many other ways to Rome. Take your time following this through. It might take you 1-2hrs, depending highly on your skill. So don't go in here in a rush.
This guide heavily relies on the intelligence and documentation of others π, but putting those together to one picture creates the last 10% hurdle which is sometimes the highest. Have a careful read through the following articles, to get a deeper understanding on some of the lighter references we'll be using further below
- Hybrid-Mode for LND
- Expose server behind NAT with WireGuard and a VPS
- How To Set Up WireGuard on Ubuntu 22.04
- How to configure Umbrel LNbits app without Tor
- running
lnd-0.14.2-beta
or later. This can either be a pre-0.5 Umbrel, Raspiblitz, MyNode or even a bare RaspiBolt - Technical curiosity and not too shy to use the command-line
- A domain name or a subdomain registered at DuckDNS
- An SSH connection to your node, and to the VPS as well. On Windows, use something like putty and get putty-gen, too
- VPS Account at DigitalOcean or any alternative VPS Solution out there offering similar capabilities (it's critical they offer a public IP for you)
Disclaimer: this is a ref link, gets you $100 in credit over 60 days, while the cheapest option we use here comes at a cost of $5/month.
The better we prepare, the more we can deal with blindspots and the unexpected.
It's generally advised to document your own steps. Make a bucket-list of things you've done, and a ToDo to go through in case your environment changes. Imagine yourself 18 months from now, you want to setup this new hardware-node: Will you remember all the steps or extra corners you've taken? Suggested Laundry-List, you can tick them off while you go through this guide
- IP-Adresses of VPS external, VPS Tunnel, Node Tunnel
- Ports which needs forwarding
- ToDos
- Questions / open items
Some of us are visual people. Draw your diagram to get an idea how you want things to flow
It goes without saying, but this guide doesn't go into the necessary security steps in detail, and can't take on liability for any things breaking or losing funds. Ensure you don't get reckless, start with small funds you're ok to lose. Keep an eye on developments or in touch with the active Telegram Groups, to get news and updates with low delays. Also, would recommend to do those steps with a peer, so you follow a second pair of eye review. Lastly, 2fa / yubikeys are your friends!
Well, let's get into it, shall we?!
We will consider you have your Lightning Node up and running, connected via Tor and some funds on it. You also have SSH access to it and administrative privileges.
In case you don't have a VPS provider already, sign-up with my referal or pick another which provides you with a static IP and cheap costs. Maybe you even prefer one payable with Lightning β‘. In case you go for DigitalOcean, here are the steps to create a Droplet, shouldn't take longer than a few minutes:
- add a new Droplet on the left hand navigation
- chose an OS of your preference, I have Ubuntu 20.04 (LTS) x64
- take the Basic Plan with a shared CPU, that's enough power. You can upgrade anytime if necessary
- Switch the CPU option to "Regular Intel with SSD", which should get you down to $5/month
- You don't need an extra volume, but pick a datacenter region of your liking
- Authentication: Chose the SSH keys option and follow the next steps to add your public keys in here for secure access. For Windows, with putty and putty-gen referenced above, you should be relatively quick to use those keys instead of a password. For Linux users, you probably know your ways already.
- Add backups (costs), Monitoring or IPv6 if you wish to, however this guide won't use any of those items
- Lastly, chose a tacky hostname, something which resonates with you, eg myLNBits-VPS
After a few magic cloud things happening, you have your Droplet initiated and it provides you with a public IPv4 Adress. Add it to your notes! In this guide, I'll refer to it as VPS Public IP: 207.154.241.101
Connect to your VPS via SSH [email protected]
and you will be welcomed on your new, remote server. Next steps are critical to do right away, harden your setup:
- Update your packages:
apt-get update
andapt-get upgrade
- Add a new Sudo User
- Enable Uncomplicated Firewall (UFW) and add ports to be allowed to connected to:
$ apt install ufw
$ ufw default deny incoming
$ ufw default allow outgoing
$ ufw allow OpenSSH
$ ufw allow 80 comment 'Standard Webserver'
$ ufw allow 443 comment 'SSL Webserver'
$ ufw allow 9735 comment 'LND Main Node 1'
$ ufw enable
- Follow further hardening steps, especially step 2) and 3) in the link, to set up non-root users for additional security enhancements. We consider in this guide you have added a user "admin" with sudo rights from this step forward.
- Install fail2ban to protect your SSH user, it runs automatically on it's own
sudo apt install fail2ban
We basically follow the guide Digital Ocean provides here. Read the full article and follow the steps for fully detailed context on commands listed below. We'll also skip IPv6 for now, as it'll make things unneccessarily complex to follow
sudo apt update && sudo apt install wireguard
# install WGwg genkey | sudo tee /etc/wireguard/private.key
# create private keysudo chmod go= /etc/wireguard/private.key
# change permissions of private key to this user only, otherwise it won't worksudo cat /etc/wireguard/private.key | wg pubkey | sudo tee /etc/wireguard/public.key
# create public-key from your private one. Remember the location or make a node of it now, we'll need it soon- choose an IP range which isn't used in your network now. We'll pick
10.8.0.0 to 10.255.255.255 (10/8 prefix)
, and dedicate10.8.0.1
to the VPS, and10.8.0.2
to your node later - edit your VPS WG configuration:
sudo nano /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf
and ensure you add your previously generated privkey fromcat /etc/wireguard/private.key
into the configuration file below:
[Interface]
PrivateKey = ***base64_encoded_private_key_goes_here***
Address = 10.8.0.1/24
ListenPort = 51820
SaveConfig = true
CTRL+X
, thenY
andEnter
to save your settings.- You want to forward all traffic, so edit your sysctl with
sudo nano /etc/sysctl.conf
and add / uncommentnet.ipv4.ip_forward=1
, then save your changes and refresh it withsudo sysctl -p
.
To activate packet forwarding, we need to add the first set of rules to the WireGuard configuration file. This will ensure that packages from your node get forwarded to the dev (device) which your VPS provider reserved for the internet connection.
- identify this device with
ip route list default
, which should show you something likeeth0
,enps
just before the protocol. - Make a note of this device, it's your link to the internet, and substitute it in the code below if necessary.
- Copy this code below at the bottom of the file after the SaveConfig = true line:
sudo nano /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf
PostUp = ufw route allow in on wg0 out on eth0
PostUp = iptables -t nat -I POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
PreDown = ufw route delete allow in on wg0 out on eth0
PreDown = iptables -t nat -D POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
Save your changes again with CTRL+X
, then Y
and Enter
Following the above section about packets going out, we want to ensure LND and LNBits packets coming into your VPS will get forwarded to your node. We do this step now already, even though the Node isn't connected to the tunnel yet. The following pre-requisite is important to check, in case your system is different, please alter the LND port accordingly:
- Assumption: your current LND Node configuration is listening on port 9735, which you can verify by looking into your
cat ~/.lnd/lnd.conf
=>[Application Options]
=>listen=0.0.0.0:9735
or just do acat .lnd/lnd.conf | grep restlisten
- add the following forwarding and routing rules to your iptables
sudo iptables -P FORWARD DROP
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i eth0 -o wg0 -p tcp --syn --dport 9735 -m conntrack --ctstate NEW -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i eth0 -o wg0 -m conntrack --ctstate ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i wg0 -o eth0 -m conntrack --ctstate ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 9735 -j DNAT --to-destination 10.8.0.2
sudo iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o wg0 -p tcp --dport 9735 -d 10.8.0.2 -j SNAT --to-source 10.8.0.1
- Now don't forget to allow SSH access and the WG UDP port:
sudo ufw allow 51820/udp
andsudo ufw allow OpenSSH
- Second critical reminder in case you adjust ports above, or forward additional ports, ensure that your Node's firewall (nf or Iptables, ufw) accepts those incoming. Eg if your node rejects 8080 or 9736, your services connections will likely fail even though going through the tunnel
- Best Practice: Only allow SSH in from your home-IP:
sudo ufw allow from 185.111.222.0/24 proto tcp to any port 22 comment 'SSH from Home'
. Stay connected with two terminals and try to login once you do the below, to ensure you don't lock yourself out. In case you have a dynamic IP at home, either follow this guide to use a dynamic-host and resolve it every x-minutes, or tighten your SSH differently. - Ensure to do the next step again with two terminals logged in, so you can test if your UFW setting let's you login. In case you lock yourself out, you need to reimage the machine, and we want to avoid that learning exercise.
sudo ufw disable
andsudo ufw enable
# Refresh uncomplicated firewall, and check the status withsudo ufw status verbose
To keep those rules active after a reboot, another little nifty toolset is necessary to install:
sudo apt install netfilter-persistent
sudo apt install iptables-persistent
sudo netfilter-persistent save
sudo systemctl enable netfilter-persistent
sudo systemctl enable [email protected]
# to add it as a servicesudo systemctl start [email protected]
# to start the servicesudo systemctl status [email protected]
# to check whether it's running fine
Your Wireguard Server is now running, which means the Internet can now connect to your VPS via ports 80, 443, 9735 (and 22 SSH from your home), and it has a closed tunnel established on port 51820. You need to doublecheck your notes with these 3 items essential for your new running frontend server.
- VPS Wireguard IP: Run
ip address
and you typically find 3 devices listed with IPs assigned. Yourlo/loopback
which you can ignore, youreth0
being your link to the internet, and the newwg0
IP which we have assigned ourselves in the wg0.conf earlier - The port you have defined in your wg0.conf,
51820
if you just followed the guide above - Your Wireguard Server Public Key
Next we will install LNBits on this server, since it'll allow to keep your node independent and light-weight. It also allows to change nodes swiftly in-case you need to move things. We won't install it via Docker (like Umbrel does), but do the implementation based on their Github Installation Guide. You can also follow their own, excellent video walkthrough here. Just don't use Ben's commands, since these are a little dated.
Since we assume you have followed the hardening guide above to add additional users, we will now have to use sudo
in our commands.
$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt-get install git -y
$ git clone https://github.com/lnbits/lnbits-legend
$ cd lnbits-legend/
# for making sure python 3.9 is installed, check with python3 --version, skip this block if installed 3.9 or newer
$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install software-properties-common
$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:deadsnakes/ppa
$ sudo apt install python3.9 python3.9-distutils
$ curl -sSL https://install.python-poetry.org | python3 -
$ export PATH="/home/admin/.local/bin:$PATH" # or whatever is suggested in the poetry install notes printed to terminal. this is important!
$ poetry env use python3.9 # or reference 3.10 if you have a newer version installed
$ poetry install --only main
$ poetry run python build.py
$ mkdir data && cp .env.example .env
$ poetry run lnbits --port 5000
If you run into trouble, check out the original troubleshooting hints. Now when this is successfully starting, you can abort with CTRL-C. We will come back to this for further configuration editing LNBits' config-file to our desired setup.
We have installed the tunnel through the mountain, but need to get our LND Node to use it.
Now switch to another terminal window, and SSH into your Lightning Node. We want to connect to the VPS, for that, we basically replicate the steps installing wg, creating a private and public key, and connect and establish the tunnel.
Later, we will work with the assumption that your LND RestLNDWallet is listening on port 8080, check your lnd.conf again, under [Application Options]
=> restlisten=0.0.0.0:8080
, or $ cat .lnd/lnd.conf | grep restlisten
$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install wireguard -y
$ sudo apt install resolvconf -y # we need that to successfully tunnel our DNS requests via the tunnel
$ wg genkey | sudo tee /etc/wireguard/private.key
$ sudo chmod go= /etc/wireguard/private.key
# make a note of your private key, and keep it secret. We'll need it for the wg0.conf on your node again
$ sudo cat /etc/wireguard/private.key | wg pubkey | sudo tee /etc/wireguard/public.key
# make a note of your public key, we will need it for the server later to allow this node to connect to it.
Now we'll create the wg0.conf on your node. The upper interface part is your node, the Peer section are the details of your VPS WG-Server. Replace the PrivateKey on Top from your node details, and add the PublicKey and the Endpoint attributes with your WG-Server you noted down earlier.
- Open up the
sudo nano /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf
[Interface]
PrivateKey = ***base64_encoded_peer_private_key_goes_here***
Address = 10.8.0.2/24
[Peer]
PublicKey = U9uE2kb/nrrzsEU58GD3pKFU3TLYDMCbetIsnV8eeFE=
AllowedIPs = 0.0.0.0/0
Endpoint = 207.154.241.101:51820
PersistentKeepalive = 25
Important element: Since we want to route all traffic from your node through the tunnel, the next steps are important to follow through. This ensures that you can still access your node in your LAN at home, otherwise you'd always need to connect to your VPS, to get through the tunnel back to your node. Not desirable!
- Identify your node main IP gateway to the internet with
ip route list table main default
- Make a note of the IP, eg
203.0.113.1
and the dev, egeth0
- Now identify your node's own IP with
ip -brief address show eth0
, eg203.0.113.5
(at home, it's more likely something like192.168.1.20
) - Lastly, in your other terminal window, make a note of your VPS' DNS Servers. Since your node will go through the tunnel, we want to ensure it can use the VPS for DNS resolving:
resolvectl dns eth0
. It'll show you one or two IPv4 IPs, use them both to be sure, eg67.207.67.2 67.207.67.3
sudo nano /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf
, and before the [Peer] line, add the following 4 lines:
PostUp = ip rule add table 200 from 203.0.113.5
PostUp = ip route add table 200 default via 203.0.113.1
PreDown = ip rule delete table 200 from 203.0.113.5
PreDown = ip route delete table 200 default via 203.0.113.1
DNS = 67.207.67.2 67.207.67.3
- For the next step, let's remind ourselves about the publicKey of our node:
sudo cat /etc/wireguard/public.key
With this completed, the node is ready to engage in the tunnel. But the server won't accept a connection. So let's add us to the allow-list, shall we? Open up the terminal window on your VPS, and add your node as a friendly peer.
- Ensure to replace the PublicKey of your node here:
sudo wg set wg0 peer NodePublicKey allowed-ips 10.8.0.2
- Validate that your settings have been added successfully:
sudo wg
Important Warning: Be aware that the next step basically reroutes all your node traffic going out from home through the tunnel instead, so if you're running your LND node, there might be a small down-time following. Be patient! Now comes the first test-run. π
sudo wg-quick up wg0
which will activate your tunnel temporarily.sudo wg
will show you the status on both the Node terminal, as well as on the VPS. Check if you have a handshake, and traffic is recorded- On your node, check if DNS resolving works with
ip route get 1.1.1.1
, the DNS service by Cloudflare. - To deactivate your WG-Tunnel, just call
sudo wg-quick down wg0
- If you like the results, you can make the WG-Tunnel permanent and activate itself automatically after a reboot, with the following two commands similar to the server setting earlier: first deactivate the current tunnel if running, with
sudo wg-quick down wg0
, then add it to your systemd startup-routine withsudo systemctl enable [email protected]
andsudo systemctl start [email protected]
, and check the status withsudo systemctl status [email protected]
The tunnel between your LND Node and your VPS VPN is established. If you need to troubleshoot, call the systemctl journal via sudo wg show
We switch Terminal windows again, going back to your LND Node. A quick disclaimer again, since we are fortunate enough to have plenty of good LND node solutions out there, we cannot cater for every configuration out there. Feel free to leave comments or log issues if you get stuck for your node, we'll be looking at the two most different setups here. But this should work very similar on MyNode, Raspibolt or Citadel.
Be very cautious with your lnd.conf
. Make a backup before with cp /mnt/hdd/lnd/lnd.conf /mnt/hdd/lnd/lnd.bak
so you can revert back when things don't work out.
The brackets below indicate the section where each line needs to be added to. Don't place anything anywhere else, as it will cause your LND constrain from starting properly.
Adjust ports and IPs accordingly!
Click here to expand Raspibolt settings
LND.conf adjustments, open with sudo nano /mnt/hdd/lnd/lnd.conf
[Application Options]
Command | Description |
---|---|
externalip=207.154.241.101:9735 |
# to add your VPS Public-IP |
nat=false |
# deactivate NAT |
tlsextraip=10.8.0.2 |
# allow later LNbits-access to your rest-wallet API |
[tor]
Command | Description |
---|---|
tor.active=true |
# ensure Tor is active |
tor.v3=true |
# with the latest version. v2 is going to be deprecated this summer |
tor.streamisolation=false |
# this needs to be false, otherwise hybrid mode doesn't work |
tor.skip-proxy-for-clearnet-targets=true |
# activate hybrid mode |
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
LND Systemd Startup adjustment
Command | Description |
---|---|
sudo systemctl restart lnd.service |
apply changes and restart your lnd.service. It will ask you to reload the systemd services, copy the command, and run it with sudo. This can take a while, depends how long your last restart was. Be patient. |
sudo tail -n 30 -f /mnt/hdd/lnd/logs/bitcoin/mainnet/lnd.log |
to check whether LND is restarting properly |
lncli getinfo |
to validate that your node is now online with two uris, your pub-id@VPS-IP and pub-id@Tor-onion |
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@207.154.241.101:9736",
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@vsryyejeizfx4vylexg3qvbtwlecbbtdgh6cka72gnzv5tnvshypyvqd.onion:9735"
Click here to expand Raspiblitz 1.7.x settings
LND.conf adjustments, open with sudo nano /mnt/hdd/lnd/lnd.conf
[Application Options]
Command | Description |
---|---|
externalip=207.154.241.101:9735 |
# to add your VPS Public-IP |
nat=false |
# deactivate NAT |
tlsextraip=10.8.0.2 |
# allow later LNbits-access to your rest-wallet API |
[tor]
Command | Description |
---|---|
tor.active=true |
# ensure Tor is active |
tor.v3=true |
# with the latest version. v2 is going to be deprecated this summer |
tor.streamisolation=false |
# this needs to be false, otherwise hybrid mode doesn't work |
tor.skip-proxy-for-clearnet-targets=true |
# activate hybrid mode |
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
RASPIBLITZ CONFIG FILE
sudo nano /mnt/hdd/raspiblitz.conf
since Raspiblitz has some LND pre-check scripts which otherwise overwrite your settings.
Command | Description |
---|---|
publicIP='207.154.241.101' |
# add your VPS Public-IP |
lndPort='9735' |
# define the LND port |
lndAddress='207.154.241.101' |
# define your LND public IP address |
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
LND Systemd Startup adjustment
Command | Description |
---|---|
sudo systemctl restart lnd.service |
apply changes and restart your lnd.service. It will ask you to reload the systemd services, copy the command, and run it with sudo. This can take a while, depends how long your last restart was. Be patient. |
sudo tail -n 30 -f /mnt/hdd/lnd/logs/bitcoin/mainnet/lnd.log |
to check whether LND is restarting properly |
lncli getinfo |
to validate that your node is now online with two uris, your pub-id@VPS-IP and pub-id@Tor-onion |
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@207.154.241.101:9736",
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@vsryyejeizfx4vylexg3qvbtwlecbbtdgh6cka72gnzv5tnvshypyvqd.onion:9735"
Click here to expand Raspiblitz 1.8.x settings
LND.conf adjustments, open with sudo nano /mnt/hdd/lnd/lnd.conf
[Application Options]
Command | Description |
---|---|
externalip=207.154.241.101:9735 |
# to add your VPS Public-IP |
nat=false |
# deactivate NAT |
tlsextraip=10.8.0.2 |
# allow later LNbits-access to your rest-wallet API |
[tor]
Command | Description |
---|---|
tor.active=true |
# ensure Tor is active |
tor.v3=true |
# with the latest version. v2 is going to be deprecated this summer |
tor.streamisolation=false |
# this needs to be false, otherwise hybrid mode doesn't work |
tor.skip-proxy-for-clearnet-targets=true |
# activate hybrid mode |
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
RASPIBLITZ LND-checkup FILE
sudo nano /home/admin/config.scripts/lnd.check.sh
since Raspiblitz has some LND pre-check scripts which otherwise overwrite your settings. Go to line 184 or search for enforce PublicIP if (if not running Tor)
. Uncomment those 5 lines indicated here:
# if [ "${runBehindTor}" != "on" ]; then
# setting ${lndConfFile} ${insertLine} "externalip" "${publicIP}:${lndPort}"
# else
# when running Tor a public ip can make startup problems - so remove
# sed -i '/^externalip=*/d' ${lndConfFile}
# fi
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
LND Systemd Startup adjustment
Command | Description |
---|---|
sudo systemctl restart lnd.service |
apply changes and restart your lnd.service. It will ask you to reload the systemd services, copy the command, and run it with sudo. This can take a while, depends how long your last restart was. Be patient. |
sudo tail -n 30 -f /mnt/hdd/lnd/logs/bitcoin/mainnet/lnd.log |
to check whether LND is restarting properly |
lncli getinfo |
to validate that your node is now online with two uris, your pub-id@VPS-IP and pub-id@Tor-onion |
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@207.154.241.101:9736",
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@vsryyejeizfx4vylexg3qvbtwlecbbtdgh6cka72gnzv5tnvshypyvqd.onion:9735"
Click here to expand Umbrel Pre-0.5 & Citadel settings
LND.conf adjustments, open with sudo nano /home/umbrel/umbrel/lnd/lnd.conf
[Application Options]
Command | Description |
---|---|
externalip=207.154.241.101:9735 |
# to add your VPS Public-IP |
nat=false |
# deactivate NAT |
tlsextraip=10.8.0.2 |
# allow later LNbits-access to your rest-wallet API |
[tor]
Command | Description |
---|---|
tor.active=true |
# ensure Tor is active |
tor.v3=true |
# with the latest version. v2 is going to be deprecated this summer |
tor.streamisolation=false |
# this needs to be false, otherwise hybrid mode doesn't work |
tor.skip-proxy-for-clearnet-targets=true |
# activate hybrid mode |
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
LND Restart to incorporate changes to lnd.conf
Command | Description |
---|---|
cd umbrel && docker-compose restart lnd |
This can take a while. Be patient. |
tail -n 30 -f ~/umbrel/lnd/logs/bitcoin/mainnet/lnd.log |
check whether LND is restarting properly |
~/umbrel/bin/lncli getinfo |
validate that your node is now online with two uris, your pub-id@VPS-IP and pub-id@Tor-onion |
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@207.154.241.101:9736",
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@vsryyejeizfx4vylexg3qvbtwlecbbtdgh6cka72gnzv5tnvshypyvqd.onion:9735"
Click here to expand Umbrel Version 0.5.x settings
LND.conf adjustments, open with sudo nano /home/umbrel/umbrel/lnd/lnd.conf
[Application Options]
Command | Description |
---|---|
externalip=207.154.241.101:9735 |
# to add your VPS Public-IP |
nat=false |
# deactivate NAT |
tlsextraip=10.8.0.2 |
# allow later LNbits-access to your rest-wallet API |
[tor]
Command | Description |
---|---|
tor.active=true |
# ensure Tor is active |
tor.v3=true |
# with the latest version. v2 is going to be deprecated this summer |
tor.streamisolation=false |
# this needs to be false, otherwise hybrid mode doesn't work |
tor.skip-proxy-for-clearnet-targets=true |
# activate hybrid mode |
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
LND Restart to incorporate changes to lnd.conf
Command | Description |
---|---|
~/umbrel/scripts/app stop lightning && ~/umbrel/scripts/app start lightning |
same applies here: Be patient. |
tail -f ~/umbrel/app-data/lightning/data/lnd/logs/bitcoin/mainnet/lnd.log |
Check the logs |
~/umbrel/scripts/app compose lightning exec lnd lncli getinfo |
Check the two Uris looking like below |
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@207.154.241.101:9736",
"03502e39bb6ebfacf4457da9ef84cf727fbfa37efc7cd255b088de426aa7ccb004@vsryyejeizfx4vylexg3qvbtwlecbbtdgh6cka72gnzv5tnvshypyvqd.onion:9735"
The traffic line between the two connection points is established. Worth noting that this can be extended: In case you run more than one node, just repeat the steps above for additional clients. Now, let's get LNBits talk to your node.
Assuming LND restarted well on your LND Node, your LND is now listening and connectable via VPS Clearnet IP and Tor. That's quite an achievement already. But we want to setup LNBits as well, right? So go grab another beverage, now we'll get LNBits running. For that, let's climb another tricky obstacle; to respect the excellent security feats the LND engineering team has implemented. Since we don't want to rely on a custodial wallet provider, which would be super easy to add into LNBits, we have some more tinkering to do. Follow along to basically provide two things to your VPS from your LND Node.
Note of warning again: Both of those files are highly sensitive. Don't show them to anyone, don't transfer them via Email, just follow the secure channel below and you should be fine, as long you keep the security barriers installed in Section "Secure" intact.
- your tls.cert. Be aware that this file changes only after you have added the
tlsextraip
settings inlnd.conf
, and restarted LND. Check it's creation date withls -la ~/.lnd/tls.cert
to ensure it's quite recent. Otherwise your changes are not implemented and the certificate not valid. Only with access to this file, your VPS is going to be allowed to leverage your LND Wallet via Rest-API. Switch terminals to your VPS,
- create a new folder, which we'll secure with
mkdir ~/.secret
- pull the file via
scp [email protected]:/home/admin/.lnd/tls.cert ~/.secret
to your VPS - lock it up
chmod 600 ~/.secret/tls.cert
- your admin.macaroon. Only with that, your VPS can send and receive payments
xxd -ps -u ~/.lnd/data/chain/bitcoin/mainnet/admin.macaroon
will provide you with a long, hex-encoded string. Keep that terminal window open, since we need to copy that code and use it in our next step on the VPS.
Now since we're back in the VPS terminal, keep your LND Node Terminal open. We'll adjust the LNBits environment settings, and we'll distinguish between necessary and optional adjustments. First, send the following commands to move the cert, restrict it's access, and start editing the environment settings for LNBits: nano ~/lnbits-legend/.env
Worth noting, the directory data
will hold all your database SQLite3 files. So in case you consider proper backup or migration procedures, this directory is the key to be kept. For the real deal, check out this guide how to setup your LNBits with PostgreSQL, which is highly reocmmended by the LNBits Dev Team. They just migrated their SQLite db to postgres as well.
Variable | Description |
---|---|
LNBITS_DATA_FOLDER="/home/admin/lnbits-legend/data" |
enter the absolute path to the data folder you created above |
LNBITS_BACKEND_WALLET_CLASS=LndRestWallet |
Specify that we want to use our LND Node Wallet Rest-API |
LND_REST_ENDPOINT="https://10.8.0.2:8080" |
Add your Lightning Node WG-Peer IP: 10.8.0.2 on port 8080 |
LND_REST_CERT="/home/admin/.secret/tls.cert" |
Add the link to the tls.cert file copied over earlier |
LND_REST_MACAROON="HEXSTRING" |
Copy the hex-encoded snippet from your LND Node Terminal output from Section 11.2 in here |
Variable | Description |
---|---|
LNBITS_SITE_TITLE="HODLmeTight LNbits" |
Give your Website a tacky title |
LNBITS_SITE_TAGLINE="free and open-source lightning wallet" |
Define the sub-title in the body |
LNBITS_SITE_DESCRIPTION="Offering free and easy Lightning Bitcoin Payment options for Friends & Family" |
Outline your offering |
LNBITS_THEME_OPTIONS="classic, bitcoin, flamingo, mint, autumn, monochrome, salvador" |
Provide different color themes, or keep it simple |
CTRL-X => Yes => Enter to save |
As soon you got here, we got the most complex things done πͺ. The next few steps will be a walk in the park. Get another beverage, and then we will add LNBits to your systemd service to automatically start / restart it after reboots.
Create a new config file with sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/lnbits.service
and add the following content. Please adjust the lnbits working directory accordingly
# Systemd unit for lnbits
# /etc/systemd/system/lnbits.service
[Unit]
Description=LNbits
[Service]
# replace with the absolute path of your lnbits installation
WorkingDirectory=/home/admin/lnbits-legend
ExecStart=/home/admin/.local/bin/poetry run lnbits --port 5000
User=admin
Restart=always
TimeoutSec=120
RestartSec=30
Environment=PYTHONUNBUFFERED=1
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Save and then enable it
sudo systemctl enable lnbits.service
sudo systemctl start lnbits.service
When this is successful, it'll report your wallet balance of your node, and you can move on. If not, a good debugging approach is to connect from the VPS to your node via curl https://10.8.0.2:8080 -v --cacert ~/admin/.secret/tls.cert
.
LNBits should now be running and listening on all incoming requests on port 5000. If you're impatient, you can curl https://127.0.0.1:5000
and you should see a text-version of the LNBits UI. Note that because the way we run LNBits only locally, you can't test external access just yet. If curl
doesn't provide meaningful response, check with the command netstat -tulpen | grep 5000
to see if your process listening on port 5000.
If it looks all good, we'll go to the last, final endboss.
(new version with caddy web server)
We don't want to share our IP-Adress for others to pay us, a domain name is a much better brand. And we want to keep it secure, so we need to get us an SSL certificate. Good for you, both options are available for free, just needs some further work.
While there are plenty of domain-name providers out there, we are going to use a free, easy and secure provider: duckdns.org. They do their own elevator pitch why to use them on their site. Feel free to pick another, such as Cloudflare or Ahnames, but this guide will use the former for simplicity
- make an account on DuckDNS with GH or Email
- add 1 of 5 free subdomains, eg. paymeinsats
- point this domain to your
VPS Public IP: 207.154.241.101
- Make a note of your Token in case you chose nginx as webserver below
In this guide, you can chose either Caddy or Nginx as webserver install. The former is way simpler, but in case you're more familiar with Nginx, go for the latter:
Click here to expand the web-server setup with Caddy as a web server
Caddy is an open source web server with automatic HTTPS certification and brings the web interface of your LNbits instance to the clearnet. It really takes care of everything very efficiently. You only have to point the DNS entry of the (sub)domain to the IP address of the VPS, and Caddy takes care of the rest.
Check beforehand whether the DNS entry also works and forwards the web domain directly to your VPS IP address. With DNS Lookup or whatsmydns.net.
$ cd ~
$ sudo apt install -y debian-keyring debian-archive-keyring apt-transport-https
$ curl -1sLf 'https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/caddy/stable/gpg.key' | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /usr/share/keyrings/caddy-stable-archive-keyring.gpg
$ curl -1sLf 'https://dl.cloudsmith.io/public/caddy/stable/debian.deb.txt' | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/caddy-stable.list
$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install caddy
$ sudo caddy stop
$ sudo nano /etc/caddy/Caddyfile
paymeinsats.duckdns.org {
handle /api/v1/payments/sse* {
reverse_proxy 0.0.0.0:5000 {
header_up X-Forwarded-Host paymeinsats.duckdns.org
transport http {
keepalive off
compression off
}
}
}
reverse_proxy 0.0.0.0:5000 {
header_up X-Forwarded-Host paymeinsats.duckdns.org
}
}
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
$ sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/caddy.service
# caddy.service
[Unit]
Description=Caddy
Documentation=https://caddyserver.com/docs/
After=network.target network-online.target
Requires=network-online.target
[Service]
Type=notify
User=caddy
Group=caddy
ExecStart=/usr/bin/caddy run --environ --config /etc/caddy/Caddyfile
ExecReload=/usr/bin/caddy reload --config /etc/caddy/Caddyfile --force
TimeoutStopSec=5s
LimitNOFILE=1048576
LimitNPROC=512
PrivateDevices=yes
PrivateTmp=true
ProtectSystem=full
AmbientCapabilities=CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
$ sudo systemctl enable caddy.service
$ sudo systemctl start caddy.service
$ sudo systemctl status caddy.service
Click here to expand if you prefer to use nginx web-server setup, which is more complex but also battle-tested
You want your secure https:// site to confirm to your visitor's browser that you're legit. For this, we will use Certbot to manage our SSL certificate management, even though LNBits recommends caddy. Use your own preference, we'll walk through certbot with wildcard here:
$ sudo snap install core; sudo snap refresh core
$ sudo snap install --classic certbot
$ sudo ln -s /snap/bin/certbot /usr/bin/certbot
$ sudo snap set certbot trust-plugin-with-root=ok
$ sudo certbot certonly --manual --preferred-challenges dns
Next to a few other things, Certbot will ask you for your domain, so add your paymeinsats.duckdns.org
. Then it'll prompt you to place a TXT record for \_acme-challenge.paymeinsats.duckdns.org
, which is basically their way to verify whether you really own this domain.
To achieve this, leave the certbot alone without touching anything, and follow those steps in parallel:
- Open a text editor, and add this URL:
https://www.duckdns.org/update?domains={YOURVALUE}&token={YOURVALUE}&txt={YOURVALUE}[&verbose=true]
- replace each variable 1
domains={YOURVALUE}
with your subdomain only, in our casedomains=paymeinsats
token={YOURVALUE}
with your token from your duckdns.org overviewtxt={YOURVALUE}
with the random text-snippet certbot provided you to fill in- optional: set
verbose=true
if you want 2 lines more info as a response
- Copy that whole string into a new Webbrowser window, and if verbose isn't set as true, it'll be as crisp as
OK
- In a new Terminal window, install dig
sudo apt-get install dnsutils
to check if the world knows about you solved the challenge:dig -t txt _acme-challenge.paymeinsats.duckdns.org
. Compare the TXT record entry with what Certbot provided you. If both are similar, confirm withEnter
in the Certbot Terminal, so it can do it's own verification - Once successful, you got your SSL certificates. Make a note in your calendar when the validation time is over, so you renew early enough. Also take note of the absolute paths of those two certificates you received.
Uvicorn is working fine, but we'll add a more robust solution, to be able to do some caching and better log-management: nginx (engine-x). We'll add a new configuration file for your website.
Please don't forget to adjust domain names and paths below accordingly!
sudo nano /etc/nginx/sites-available/paymeinsats.conf
to create and edit your new configuration file nginx will use and add the following entries
server {
# Binds the TCP port 80
listen 80;
# Defines the domain or subdomain name
server_name paymeinsats.duckdns.org;
# Redirect the traffic to the corresponding
# HTTPS server block with status code 301
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 443 ssl; # tell nginx to listen on port 443 for SSL connections
server_name paymeinsats.duckdns.org; # tell nginx the expected domain for requests
access_log /var/log/nginx/paymeinsats-access.log; # Your first go-to for troubleshooting
error_log /var/log/nginx/paymeinsats-error.log; # Same as above
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:5000; # This is your uvicorn LNbits local host IP and port
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection 'upgrade';
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto https;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_http_version 1.1; # headers to ensure replies are coming back and forth through your domain
}
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/paymeinsats.duckdns.org/fullchain.pem; # Point to the fullchain.pem from Certbot
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/paymeinsats.duckdns.org/privkey.pem; # Point to the private key from Certbot
}
CTRL-X
=> Yes
=> Enter
to save
Next we'll test the configuration and enable it by creating a symlink from sites-available to sites-enabled.
$ sudo nginx -t
nginx: the configuration file /etc/nginx/nginx.conf syntax is ok
nginx: configuration file /etc/nginx/nginx.conf test is successful
$ sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/paymeinsats.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/
$ sudo systemctl restart nginx
Now the moment of truth: Go to your Website https://paymeinsats.duckdns.org and either celebrate π» or troubleshoot where things could have gone wrong. If the former: Congratulations - you made it!
Hope you enjoyed this article. Please do share feedback and suggestions for improvement. If this guide was of any help, I'd appreciate if you share the article with others, give me a follow on X or nostr, perhaps even donating some sats to [email protected]
I'm also always grateful for incoming channels to my node: HODLmeTight
Once you have created your first user wallet, and you want only this to be accessible, go to the user-section in LNBits and notice the user-ID in the URL: /usermanager/?usr=[32-digit-user-ID]
. Copy the user-id and add it to your .env
file: nano ~/lnbits-legend/.env
and add this to the variable LNBITS_ALLOWED_USERS=""
. You can comma-seperate a list of user-ids.
Please add an issue on Github with your question and provide as much detail as possible. Keep it safe though, no macaroon or user-ids!
Head over to LNBits Website and check out the plethora of options you could do. For instance, I've built a donation wallet, which is shared 50:50 between the main author and my own wallet. All automated.
Consider this guide a work-in-progress. I've picked DigitalOcean since I know what I'm doing there. Heard good things about Luna Node, it's cheaper and you can pay with sats, so will test this out next. Also happy to add further alternatives, leave comments if you think these can accomplish the same results. Fee free to provide suggestions here.
In fact, I have more than one node connected to the tunnel. You need to handle your port-forwarding appropriately, since every node needs their unique LND listen port. Eg Node 1 has 9735, Node 2 9736 and so on. IPtable rules and UFW needs to be adjusted. But once you got this guide internalised, the principle should be clear. Otherwise, let me know.