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This repository contains configurations and instructions that can be used for deploying Revolt.
[!NOTE] Please consult What can I do with Revolt and how do I self-host? on our developer site for information about licensing and brand use.
[!NOTE] amd64 builds are only available for
backend
andbonfire
images currently, more to come.
Quick Start (for advanced users)
[!CAUTION] This guide is intended for system administrators that wish to know the bare minimum to deploy.
Read full deployment guide here!
Prerequisites before continuing:
Clone this repository.
git clone https://github.com/revoltchat/self-hosted revolt
cd revolt
Copy .env
and download Revolt.toml
, then modify them according to your requirements.
[!WARNING] The default configurations are intended exclusively for testing and will only work locally. If you wish to deploy to a remote server, you must edit the URLs in
.env
andRevolt.toml
. Please reference the section below on configuring a custom domain.
echo "HOSTNAME=http://local.revolt.chat" > .env.web
echo "REVOLT_PUBLIC_URL=http://local.revolt.chat/api" >> .env.web
wget -O Revolt.toml https://raw.githubusercontent.com/revoltchat/backend/main/crates/core/config/Revolt.toml
Then start Revolt:
docker compose up -d
Deployment
To get started, find yourself a suitable server to deploy onto, we recommend starting with at least 2 vCPUs and 2 GB of memory.
When asked, choose Ubuntu Server as your operating system, this is used by us in production and we recommend its use.
After install, SSH into the machine:
# use the provided IP address to connect:
ssh root@<ip address>
# .. if you have a SSH key configured
ssh root@<ip address> -i path/to/id_rsa
And now we can proceed with some basic configuration and securing the system:
# update the system
apt-get update && apt-get upgrade -y
# configure firewall
ufw allow ssh
ufw allow http
ufw allow https
ufw default deny
ufw enable
# if you have configured an SSH key, disable password authentication:
sudo sed -E -i 's|^#?(PasswordAuthentication)\s.*|\1 no|' /etc/ssh/sshd_config
if ! grep '^PasswordAuthentication\s' /etc/ssh/sshd_config; then echo 'PasswordAuthentication no' |sudo tee -a /etc/ssh/sshd_config; fi
# reboot to apply changes
reboot
Your system is now ready to proceed with installation, but before we continue you should configure your domain.
Your domain (or a subdomain) should point to the server's IP (A and AAAA records) or CNAME to the hostname provided.
Next, we must install the required dependencies:
# ensure Git and Docker are installed
apt-get update
apt-get install ca-certificates curl git micro
install -m 0755 -d /etc/apt/keyrings
curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/gpg -o /etc/apt/keyrings/docker.asc
chmod a+r /etc/apt/keyrings/docker.asc
echo \
"deb [arch=$(dpkg --print-architecture) signed-by=/etc/apt/keyrings/docker.asc] https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu \
$(. /etc/os-release && echo "$VERSION_CODENAME") stable" | \
sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/docker.list > /dev/null
apt-get update
apt-get install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io docker-buildx-plugin docker-compose-plugin
Now, we can pull in the configuration for Revolt:
git clone https://github.com/revoltchat/self-hosted revolt
cd revolt
Generate a configuration file by running:
./generate_config.sh your.domain
You can find more options here, some noteworthy configuration options:
- Email verification
- Captcha
- A custom S3 server
If you'd like to edit the configuration, just run:
micro Revolt.toml
Finally, we can start up Revolt:
docker compose up -d
Updating
Before updating, ensure you consult the notices at the top of this README to check if there are any important changes to be aware of as well as the notices.
Pull the latest version of this repository:
git pull
Check if your configuration file is correct by opening the reference config file and your Revolt.toml
and comparing for changes.
Then pull all the latest images:
docker compose pull
Then restart the services:
docker compose up
Additional Notes
Custom domain
To configure a custom domain, you will need to replace all instances of local.revolt.chat
in the Revolt.toml
and .env
files, like so:
# .env
- REVOLT_APP_URL=http://local.revolt.chat
+ REVOLT_APP_URL=http://my.domain
# Revolt.toml
- app = "http://local.revolt.chat"
+ app = "http://my.domain"
You will also want to change the protocols to enable HTTPS:
# .env
- REVOLT_APP_URL=http://my.domain
+ REVOLT_APP_URL=https://my.domain
- REVOLT_EXTERNAL_WS_URL=ws://my.domain/ws
+ REVOLT_EXTERNAL_WS_URL=wss://my.domain/ws
# Revolt.toml
- app = "http://local.revolt.chat"
+ app = "https://my.domain"
- events = "ws://my.domain/ws"
+ events = "wss://my.domain/ws"
In the case of HOSTNAME
, you must strip the protocol prefix:
# .env
- HOSTNAME=https://my.domain
+ HOSTNAME=my.domain
Putting Revolt behind another reverse proxy (or on a non-standard port)
Override the port definitions on caddy
:
# compose.yml
services:
caddy:
ports:
- "1234:80"
[!WARNING] This file is not Git ignored. It may be sufficient to use an override file, but that will not remove port 80 / 443 allocations.
Update the hostname used by the web server:
# .env
- HOSTNAME=http://local.revolt.chat
+ HOSTNAME=:80
You can now reverse proxy to http://localhost:1234.
Insecurely expose database
You can insecurely expose the database by adding a port definition:
# compose.override.yml
services:
database:
ports:
- "27017:27017"
Mongo compatibility
Older processors may not support the latest MongoDB version, you may pin to MongoDB 4.4 as such:
# compose.override.yml
services:
database:
image: mongo:4.4
Making your instance invite-only
Enable invite-only mode by setting REVOLT_INVITE_ONLY
in .env
to 1
and invite_only
in Revolt.toml
to true
.
Create an invite:
# drop into mongo shell
docker compose exec database mongosh
# create the invite
use revolt
db.invites.insertOne({ _id: "enter_an_invite_code_here" })
Notices
[!IMPORTANT] If you deployed Revolt before 2022-10-29, you may have to tag the
minio
image release if it's configured in "fs" mode.image: minio/minio:RELEASE.2022-10-24T18-35-07Z
[!IMPORTANT] If you deployed Revolt before 2023-04-21, you may have to flush your Redis database.
# for stock Redis and older KeyDB images: docker compose exec redis redis-cli # ...or for newer KeyDB images: docker compose exec redis keydb-cli # then run: FLUSHDB
[!IMPORTANT] As of 30th September 2024, Autumn has undergone a major refactor which requires a manual migration.
To begin, add a temporary container that we can work from:
# compose.override.yml services: migration: image: node:21 volumes: - ./migrations:/cwd command: "bash -c 'while true; do sleep 86400; done'"
Then switch to the shell:
docker compose up -d database migration docker compose exec migration bash
Now we can run the migration:
cd /cwd npm i mongodb node ./20240929-autumn-rewrite.mjs