# Switching a from-source install to OTP releases ## What are OTP releases? OTP releases are as close as you can get to binary releases with Erlang/Elixir. The release is self-contained, and provides everything needed to boot it, it is easily administered via the provided shell script to open up a remote console, start/stop/restart the release, start in the background, send remote commands, and more. ## Pre-requisites You will be running commands as root. If you aren't root already, please elevate your priviledges by executing `sudo su`/`su`. The system needs to have `curl` and `unzip` installed for downloading and unpacking release builds. === "Alpine" ```sh apk add curl unzip ``` === "Debian/Ubuntu" ```sh apt install curl unzip ``` ## Moving content out of the application directory When using OTP releases the application directory changes with every version so it would be a bother to keep content there (and also dangerous unless `--no-rm` option is used when updating). Fortunately almost all paths in Pleroma are configurable, so it is possible to move them out of there. Pleroma should be stopped before proceeding. ### Moving uploads/custom public files directory ```sh # Create uploads directory and set proper permissions (skip if using a remote uploader) # Note: It does not have to be `/var/lib/pleroma/uploads`, you can configure it to be something else later mkdir -p /var/lib/pleroma/uploads chown -R pleroma /var/lib/pleroma # Create custom public files directory # Note: It does not have to be `/var/lib/pleroma/static`, you can configure it to be something else later mkdir -p /var/lib/pleroma/static chown -R pleroma /var/lib/pleroma # If you use the local uploader with default settings your uploads should be located in `~pleroma/uploads` mv ~pleroma/uploads/* /var/lib/pleroma/uploads # If you have created the custom public files directory with default settings it should be located in `~pleroma/instance/static` mv ~pleroma/instance/static /var/lib/pleroma/static ``` ### Moving emoji Assuming you have all emojis in subdirectories of `priv/static/emoji` moving them can be done with ```sh mkdir /var/lib/pleroma/static/emoji ls -d ~pleroma/priv/static/emoji/*/ | xargs -i sh -c 'mv "{}" "/var/lib/pleroma/static/emoji/$(basename {})"' ``` But, if for some reason you have custom emojis in the root directory you should copy the whole directory instead. ```sh mv ~pleroma/priv/static/emoji /var/lib/pleroma/static/emoji ``` and then copy custom emojis to `/var/lib/pleroma/static/emoji/custom`. This is needed because storing custom emojis in the root directory is deprecated, but if you just move them to `/var/lib/pleroma/static/emoji/custom` it will break emoji urls on old posts. Note that globs have been replaced with `pack_extensions`, so if your emojis are not in png/gif you should [modify the default value](../configuration/cheatsheet.md#emoji). ### Moving the config ```sh # Create the config directory # The default path for Pleroma config is /etc/pleroma/config.exs # but it can be set via PLEROMA_CONFIG_PATH environment variable mkdir -p /etc/pleroma # Move the config file mv ~pleroma/config/prod.secret.exs /etc/pleroma/config.exs # Change `use Mix.Config` at the top to `import Config` $EDITOR /etc/pleroma/config.exs ``` ## Installing the release Before proceeding, get the flavour from [Detecting flavour](otp_en.md#detecting-flavour) section in OTP installation guide. ```sh # Delete all files in pleroma user's directory rm -r ~pleroma/* # Set the flavour environment variable to the string you got in Detecting flavour section. # For example if the flavour is `amd64-musl` the command will be export FLAVOUR="amd64-musl" # Clone the release build into a temporary directory and unpack it # Replace `stable` with `unstable` if you want to run the unstable branch su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc " curl 'https://git.pleroma.social/api/v4/projects/2/jobs/artifacts/stable/download?job=$FLAVOUR' -o /tmp/pleroma.zip unzip /tmp/pleroma.zip -d /tmp/ " # Move the release to the home directory and delete temporary files su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc " mv /tmp/release/* ~pleroma/ rmdir /tmp/release rm /tmp/pleroma.zip " # Start the instance to verify that everything is working as expected su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "./bin/pleroma daemon" # Wait for about 20 seconds and query the instance endpoint, if it shows your uri, name and email correctly, you are configured correctly sleep 20 && curl http://localhost:4000/api/v1/instance # Stop the instance su pleroma -s $SHELL -lc "./bin/pleroma stop" ``` ## Setting up a system service OTP releases have different service files than from-source installs so they need to be copied over again. **Warning:** The service files assume pleroma user's home directory is `/opt/pleroma`, please make sure all paths fit your installation. === "Alpine" ```sh # Copy the service into a proper directory cp -f ~pleroma/installation/init.d/pleroma /etc/init.d/pleroma # Start pleroma rc-service pleroma start ``` === "Debian/Ubuntu" ```sh # Copy the service into a proper directory cp ~pleroma/installation/pleroma.service /etc/systemd/system/pleroma.service # Reload service files systemctl daemon-reload # Reenable pleroma to start on boot systemctl reenable pleroma # Start pleroma systemctl start pleroma ``` ## Running mix tasks Refer to [Running mix tasks](otp_en.md#running-mix-tasks) section from OTP release installation guide. ## Updating Refer to [Updating](otp_en.md#updating) section from OTP release installation guide.