installation.rst 15 KB

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  1. Installation
  2. ============
  3. - `Basic Setup <#basic-setup>`_
  4. - `Configuration <#configuration>`_
  5. - `Deploying <#deploying>`_
  6. - `Deploying to PythonAnywhere <#deploying-to-pythonanywhere>`_
  7. Basic Setup
  8. -----------
  9. We recommend installing FlaskBB in an isolated Python environment. This can be
  10. achieved with `virtualenv`_. In our little guide we will use a wrapper around
  11. virtualenv - the `virtualenvwrapper`_. In addition to virtualenv, we will also
  12. use the package manager `pip`_ to install the dependencies for FlaskBB.
  13. Virtualenv Setup
  14. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  15. The easiest way to install `virtualenv`_ and
  16. `virtualenvwrapper`_ is, to use the package manager on your system (if you
  17. are running Linux) to install them.
  18. For example, on archlinux you can install them with::
  19. $ sudo pacman -S python2-virtualenvwrapper
  20. or, on macOS, you can install them with::
  21. $ sudo pip install virtualenvwrapper
  22. It's sufficient to just install the virtualenvwrapper because it depends on
  23. virtualenv and the package manager will resolve all the dependncies for you.
  24. After that, you can create your virtualenv with::
  25. $ mkvirtualenv -a /path/to/flaskbb -p $(which python2) flaskbb
  26. This will create a virtualenv named ``flaskbb`` using the python interpreter in
  27. version 2 and it will set your project directory to ``/path/to/flaskbb``.
  28. This comes handy when typing ``workon flaskbb`` as it will change your
  29. current directory automatically to ``/path/to/flaskbb``.
  30. To deactivate it you just have to type ``deactivate`` and if you want to work
  31. on it again, just type ``workon flaskbb``.
  32. It is also possible to use ``virtualenv`` without the ``virtualenvwrapper``.
  33. For this you have to use the ``virtualenv`` command and pass the name
  34. of the virtualenv as an argument. In our example, the name of
  35. the virtualenv is ``.venv``.
  36. ::
  37. $ virtualenv .venv
  38. and finally activate it
  39. ::
  40. $ source .venv/bin/activate
  41. If you want to know more about those isolated python environments, checkout
  42. the `virtualenv`_ and `virtualenvwrapper`_ docs.
  43. Dependencies
  44. ~~~~~~~~~~~~
  45. Now that you have set up your environment, you are ready to install the
  46. dependencies.
  47. ::
  48. $ pip install -r requirements.txt
  49. Alternatively, you can use the `make` command to install the dependencies.
  50. ::
  51. $ make dependencies
  52. The development process requires a few extra dependencies which can be
  53. installed with the provided ``requirements-dev.txt`` file.
  54. ::
  55. $ pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
  56. Optional Dependencies
  57. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  58. We have one optional dependency, redis (the python package is installed
  59. automatically).
  60. If you want to use it, make sure that a redis-server is running.
  61. Redis will be used as the default result and caching backend for
  62. celery (celery is a task queue which FlaskBB uses to send non blocking emails).
  63. The feature for tracking the `online guests` and `online users` do also
  64. require redis (although `online users` works without redis as well).
  65. To install redis, just use your distributions package manager. For Arch Linux
  66. this is `pacman` and for Debian/Ubuntu based systems this is `apt-get`.
  67. ::
  68. # Installing redis using 'pacman':
  69. $ sudo pacman -S redis
  70. # Installing redis using 'apt-get':
  71. $ sudo apt-get install redis-server
  72. # Check if redis is already running.
  73. $ systemctl status redis
  74. # If not, start it.
  75. $ sudo systemctl start redis
  76. # Optional: Lets start redis everytime you boot your machine
  77. $ sudo systemctl enable redis
  78. Configuration
  79. -------------
  80. FlaskBB comes with the ability to generate the configuration file for you.
  81. Just run::
  82. flaskbb makeconfig
  83. and answer its questions. By default it will try to save the configuration
  84. file with the name ``flaskbb.cfg`` in FlaskBB's root folder.
  85. You can also omit the questions, which will generate a **developemnt**
  86. configuration by passing the ``-d/--development`` option to it::
  87. flaskbb makeconfig -d
  88. In previous versions, FlaskBB tried to assume which configuration file to use,
  89. which it will no longer do. Now, by default, it will load a config with
  90. some sane defaults (i.e. debug off) but thats it. You can either pass an
  91. import string to a config object or the path to the (python) config file.
  92. For example, if you are using a generated config file it looks something
  93. like this::
  94. flaskbb --config flaskbb.cfg run
  95. [+] Using config from: /path/to/flaskbb/flaskbb.cfg
  96. * Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
  97. and this is how you do it by using an import string. Be sure that it is
  98. importable from within FlaskBB::
  99. flaskbb --config flaskbb.configs.default.DefaultConfig run
  100. Development
  101. ~~~~~~~~~~~
  102. To get started with development you have to generate a development
  103. configuration first. You can use the CLI for this,
  104. as explained in `Configuration <#configuration>`_::
  105. flaskbb makeconfig --development
  106. Now you can either use ``make`` to run the development server::
  107. make run
  108. or if you like to type a little bit more, the CLI::
  109. flaskbb --config flaskbb.cfg run
  110. Production
  111. ~~~~~~~~~~
  112. FlaskBB already sets some sane defaults, so you shouldn't have to change much.
  113. To make this whole process a little bit easier for you, we have created
  114. a little wizard which will ask you some questions and with the answers
  115. you provide it will generate a configuration for you. You can of course
  116. further adjust the generated configuration.
  117. The setup wizard can be started with::
  118. flaskbb makeconfig
  119. These are the only settings you have to make sure to setup accordingly if
  120. you want to run FlaskBB in production:
  121. - ``SERVER_NAME = "example.org"``
  122. - ``PREFERRED_URL_SCHEME = "https"``
  123. - ``SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI = 'sqlite:///path/to/flaskbb.sqlite'``
  124. - ``SECRET_KEY = "secret key"``
  125. - ``WTF_CSRF_SECRET_KEY = "secret key"``
  126. Redis
  127. ~~~~~
  128. If you have decided to use redis as well, which we highly recommend, then
  129. the following services and features can be enabled and configured to use redis.
  130. Before you can start using redis, you have to enable and configure it.
  131. This is quite easy just set ``REDIS_ENABLE`` to ``True`` and adjust the
  132. ``REDIS_URL`` if needed.
  133. ::
  134. REDIS_ENABLED = True
  135. REDIS_URL = "redis://localhost:6379" # or with a password: "redis://:password@localhost:6379"
  136. REDIS_DATABASE = 0
  137. The other services are already configured to use the ``REDIS_URL`` configuration
  138. variable.
  139. **Celery**
  140. ::
  141. CELERY_BROKER_URL = REDIS_URL
  142. CELERY_RESULT_BACKEND = REDIS_URL
  143. **Caching**
  144. ::
  145. CACHE_TYPE = "redis"
  146. CACHE_REDIS_URL = REDIS_URL
  147. **Rate Limiting**
  148. ::
  149. RATELIMIT_ENABLED = True
  150. RATELIMIT_STORAGE_URL = REDIS_URL
  151. Mail Examples
  152. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  153. Both methods are included in the example configs.
  154. **Google Mail**
  155. ::
  156. MAIL_SERVER = "smtp.gmail.com"
  157. MAIL_PORT = 465
  158. MAIL_USE_SSL = True
  159. MAIL_USERNAME = "your_username@gmail.com"
  160. MAIL_PASSWORD = "your_password"
  161. MAIL_DEFAULT_SENDER = ("Your Name", "your_username@gmail.com")
  162. **Local SMTP Server**
  163. ::
  164. MAIL_SERVER = "localhost"
  165. MAIL_PORT = 25
  166. MAIL_USE_SSL = False
  167. MAIL_USERNAME = ""
  168. MAIL_PASSWORD = ""
  169. MAIL_DEFAULT_SENDER = "noreply@example.org"
  170. Installation
  171. ------------
  172. For a guided install, run::
  173. $ make install
  174. or::
  175. flaskbb install
  176. During the installation process you are asked about your username,
  177. your email address and the password for your administrator user. Using the
  178. ``make install`` command is recommended as it checks that the dependencies
  179. are also installed.
  180. Upgrading
  181. ---------
  182. If the database models changed after a release, you have to run the ``upgrade``
  183. command::
  184. flaskbb db upgrade
  185. Deploying
  186. ---------
  187. This chapter will describe how to set up Supervisor + uWSGI + nginx for
  188. FlaskBB as well as document how to use the built-in WSGI server (gunicorn)
  189. that can be used in a productive environment.
  190. Supervisor
  191. ~~~~~~~~~~
  192. `Supervisor is a client/server system that allows its users to monitor and
  193. control a number of processes on UNIX-like operating systems.`
  194. To install `supervisor` on Debian, you need to fire up this command:
  195. ::
  196. $ sudo apt-get install supervisor
  197. There are two ways to configure supervisor. The first one is, you just put
  198. the configuration to the end in the ``/etc/supervisor/supervisord.conf`` file.
  199. The second way would be to create a new file in the ``/etc/supervisor/conf.d/``
  200. directory. For example, such a file could be named ``uwsgi.conf``.
  201. After you have choosen the you way you like, simply put the snippet below in the
  202. configuration file.
  203. ::
  204. [program:uwsgi]
  205. command=/usr/bin/uwsgi --emperor /etc/uwsgi/apps-enabled
  206. user=apps
  207. stopsignal=QUIT
  208. autostart=true
  209. autorestart=true
  210. redirect_stderr=true
  211. uWSGI
  212. ~~~~~
  213. `uWSGI is a web application solution with batteries included.`
  214. To get started with uWSGI, you need to install it first.
  215. You'll also need the python plugin to serve python apps.
  216. This can be done with::
  217. $ sudo apt-get install uwsgi uwsgi-plugin-python
  218. For the configuration, you need to create a file in the
  219. ``/etc/uwsgi/apps-available`` directory. In this example, I will call the
  220. file ``flaskbb.ini``. After that, you can start with configuring it.
  221. My config looks like this for `flaskbb.org` (see below). As you might have noticed, I'm
  222. using a own user for my apps whose home directory is located at `/var/apps/`.
  223. In this directory there are living all my Flask apps.
  224. ::
  225. [uwsgi]
  226. base = /var/apps/flaskbb
  227. home = /var/apps/.virtualenvs/flaskbb/
  228. pythonpath = %(base)
  229. socket = 127.0.0.1:30002
  230. module = wsgi
  231. callable = flaskbb
  232. uid = apps
  233. gid = apps
  234. logto = /var/apps/flaskbb/logs/uwsgi.log
  235. plugins = python
  236. =============== ========================== ===============
  237. **base** /path/to/flaskbb The folder where your flaskbb application lives
  238. **home** /path/to/virtualenv/folder The virtualenv folder for your flaskbb application
  239. **pythonpath** /path/to/flaskbb The same as base
  240. **socket** socket This can be either a ip or the path to a socket (don't forget to change that in your nginx config)
  241. **module** wsgi.py This is the file located in the root directory from flaskbb (where manage.py lives).
  242. **callable** flaskbb The callable is application you have created in the ``wsgi.py`` file
  243. **uid** your_user The user who should be used. **NEVER** use root!
  244. **gid** your_group The group who should be used.
  245. **logto** /path/to/log/file The path to your uwsgi logfile
  246. **plugins** python We need the python plugin
  247. =============== ========================== ===============
  248. Don't forget to create a symlink to ``/etc/uwsgi/apps-enabled``.
  249. ::
  250. ln -s /etc/uwsgi/apps-available/flaskbb /etc/uwsgi/apps-enabled/flaskbb
  251. gunicorn
  252. ~~~~~~~~
  253. `Gunicorn 'Green Unicorn' is a Python WSGI HTTP Server for UNIX.`
  254. It's a pre-fork worker model ported from Ruby's Unicorn project.
  255. The Gunicorn server is broadly compatible with various web frameworks,
  256. simply implemented, light on server resources, and fairly speedy.
  257. This is probably the easiest way to run a FlaskBB instance.
  258. Just install gunicorn via pip inside your virtualenv::
  259. pip install gunicorn
  260. FlaskBB has an built-in command to gunicorn::
  261. flaskbb start
  262. To see a full list of options either type ``flaskbb start --help`` or
  263. visit the :ref:`cli <commandline>` docs.
  264. nginx
  265. ~~~~~
  266. `nginx [engine x] is an HTTP and reverse proxy server,
  267. as well as a mail proxy server, written by Igor Sysoev.`
  268. The nginx config is pretty straightforward. Again, this is how I use it for
  269. `FlaskBB`. Just copy the snippet below and paste it to, for example
  270. ``/etc/nginx/sites-available/flaskbb``.
  271. The only thing left is, that you need to adjust the ``server_name`` to your
  272. domain and the paths in ``access_log``, ``error_log``. Also, don't forget to
  273. adjust the paths in the ``alias`` es, as well as the socket address in ``uwsgi_pass``.
  274. ::
  275. server {
  276. listen 80;
  277. server_name forums.flaskbb.org;
  278. access_log /var/log/nginx/access.forums.flaskbb.log;
  279. error_log /var/log/nginx/error.forums.flaskbb.log;
  280. location / {
  281. try_files $uri @flaskbb;
  282. }
  283. # Static files
  284. location /static {
  285. alias /var/apps/flaskbb/flaskbb/static/;
  286. }
  287. location ~ ^/_themes/([^/]+)/(.*)$ {
  288. alias /var/apps/flaskbb/flaskbb/themes/$1/static/$2;
  289. }
  290. # robots.txt
  291. location /robots.txt {
  292. alias /var/apps/flaskbb/flaskbb/static/robots.txt;
  293. }
  294. location @flaskbb {
  295. uwsgi_pass 127.0.0.1:30002;
  296. include uwsgi_params;
  297. }
  298. }
  299. If you wish to use gunicorn instead of uwsgi just replace the ``location @flaskbb``
  300. with this::
  301. location @flaskbb {
  302. proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
  303. proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
  304. proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
  305. #proxy_set_header SCRIPT_NAME /forums; # This line will make flaskbb available on /forums;
  306. proxy_redirect off;
  307. proxy_buffering off;
  308. proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8000;
  309. }
  310. Don't forget to adjust the ``proxy_pass`` address to your socket address.
  311. Like in the `uWSGI <#uwsgi>`_ chapter, don't forget to create a symlink to
  312. ``/etc/nginx/sites-enabled/``.
  313. User Contributed Deployment Guides
  314. ----------------------------------
  315. We do not maintain these deployment guides. They have been submitted by users
  316. and we thought it is nice to include them in docs. If something is missing,
  317. or doesn't work - please open a new pull request on GitHub.
  318. Deploying to PythonAnywhere
  319. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  320. `PythonAnywhere <https://www.pythonanywhere.com/>`_ is a
  321. platform-as-a-service, which basically means they have a bunch of servers
  322. pre-configured with Python, nginx and uWSGI.
  323. You can run a low-traffic website with them for free,
  324. so it's an easy way to get quickly FlaskBB running publicly.
  325. Here's what to do:
  326. * Sign up for a PythonAnywhere account at
  327. `https://www.pythonanywhere.com/ <https://www.pythonanywhere.com/>`_.
  328. * On the "Consoles" tab, start a Bash console and install/configure
  329. FlaskBB like this
  330. ::
  331. git clone https://github.com/sh4nks/flaskbb.git
  332. cd flaskbb
  333. pip3.5 install --user -r requirements.txt
  334. pip3.5 install --user -e .
  335. * Click the PythonAnywhere logo to go back to the dashboard,
  336. then go to the "Web" tab, and click the "Add a new web app" button.
  337. * Just click "Next" on the first page.
  338. * On the next page, click "Flask"
  339. * On the next page, click "Python 3.5"
  340. * On the next page, just accept the default and click next
  341. * Wait while the website is created.
  342. * Click on the "Source code" link, and in the input that appears,
  343. replace the `mysite` at the end with `flaskbb`
  344. * Click on the "WSGI configuration file" filename,
  345. and wait for an editor to load.
  346. * Change the line that sets `project_home` to replace `mysite` with `flaskbb`
  347. again.
  348. * Change the line that says
  349. ::
  350. from flask_app import app as application
  351. to say
  352. ::
  353. from flaskbb import create_app
  354. application = create_app("/path/to/your/configuration/file")
  355. * Click the green "Save" button near the top right.
  356. * Go back to the "Web" tab.
  357. * Click the green "Reload..." button.
  358. * Click the link to visit the site -- you'll have a new FlaskBB install!
  359. .. _virtualenv: https://virtualenv.pypa.io/en/latest/installation.html
  360. .. _virtualenvwrapper: http://virtualenvwrapper.readthedocs.org/en/latest/install.html#basic-installation
  361. .. _pip: http://www.pip-installer.org/en/latest/installing.html