funkwhale/docs/installation/external_dependencies.rst

99 wiersze
2.9 KiB
ReStructuredText

External dependencies
=====================
.. note::
Those dependencies are handled automatically if you are
:doc:`deploying using docker <./docker>`
Database setup (PostgreSQL)
---------------------------
Funkwhale requires a PostgreSQL database to work properly. Please refer
to the `PostgreSQL documentation <https://www.postgresql.org/download/>`_
for installation instructions specific to your os.
On Debian-like systems, you would install the database server like this:
.. code-block:: shell
sudo apt-get install postgresql postgresql-contrib
On Arch Linux and its derivatives:
.. code-block:: shell
sudo pacman -S postgresql
On Arch, you'll also need to initialize the database. See `the Arch Linux wiki <https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Postgresql#Initial_configuration>`_.
The remaining steps are heavily inspired from `this Digital Ocean guide <https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-django-with-postgres-nginx-and-gunicorn-on-ubuntu-16-04>`_.
Open a database shell:
.. code-block:: shell
sudo -u postgres psql
Create the project database and user:
.. code-block:: shell
CREATE DATABASE "funkwhale"
WITH ENCODING 'utf8';
CREATE USER funkwhale;
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE funkwhale TO funkwhale;
.. warning::
It's important that you use utf-8 encoding for your database,
otherwise you'll end up with errors and crashes later on when dealing
with music metedata that contains non-ascii chars.
Assuming you already have :ref:`created your funkwhale user <create-funkwhale-user>`,
you should now be able to open a postgresql shell:
.. code-block:: shell
sudo -u funkwhale -H psql
Unless you give a superuser access to the database user, you should also
enable some extensions on your database server, as those are required
for Funkwhale to work properly:
.. code-block:: shell
sudo -u postgres psql funkwhale -c 'CREATE EXTENSION "unaccent";'
Cache setup (Redis)
-------------------
Funkwhale also requires a cache server:
- To make the whole system faster, by caching network requests or database
queries
- To handle asynchronous tasks such as music import
On Debian-like distributions, a redis package is available, and you can
install it:
.. code-block:: shell
sudo apt-get install redis-server
On Arch Linux and its derivatives:
.. code-block:: shell
sudo pacman -S redis
This should be enough to have your redis server set up.
External Authentication (LDAP)
----------------------
LDAP support requires some additional dependencies to enable. On the OS level both ``libldap2-dev`` and ``libsasl2-dev`` are required, and the Python modules ``python-ldap`` and ``django-auth-ldap`` must be installed. These dependencies are all included in the ``requirements.*`` files so deploying with those will install these dependencies by default. However, they are not required unless LDAP support is explicitly enabled. See :doc:`./ldap` for more details.