# LBRY cloud-init with systemd Contributing Author: [EnigmaCurry](https://www.enigmacurry.com) Last Update: April 18 2019 This tutorial meant to be easy instructions for running a lbrycrd and chainquery service on DigitalOcean. It's pretty much just copy-and-paste. This tutorial should also work on any host that supports [cloud-init](https://cloud-init.io/), but I've not tested it anywhere except for DigitalOcean. If you wish to use docker-compose, there is an [alternative configuration](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry-docker/tree/master/lbrycrd) for that. This tutorial uses cloud-init and systemd to control docker. ## It's easy to run your full lbrycrd node [![Video of creating lbrycrd droplet on DigitalOcean](https://spee.ch/@EnigmaCurry:d/lbrycrd-video-thumb.jpg)](https://spee.ch/@EnigmaCurry:d/lbrycrd-docker-cloud-init.mp4) ## Installation * Login to your DigitalOcean account and create a new droplet. * Choose Ubuntu 18.04. (This will likely NOT work on other versions without tweaks.) * Select a Standard droplet with 8GB of memory ($40 per month in 2019.) * Select whatever datacenter you want. * Mark the checkbox called `User data`, and paste the following into the box: ``` #cloud-config ## DigitalOcean user-data for Ubuntu 18.04 droplet ## Installs docker ## Setup systemd service for lbrycrd ## (This config runs docker on vanilla Ubuntu, ## it uses systemd in place of docker-compose or kubernetes.) write_files: - path: "/etc/lbry/lbrycrd.conf" content: | datadir=/data port=9246 rpcuser=lbry rpcpassword=lbry rpcport=9245 rpcallowip=172.17.0.0/16 regtest=0 server=1 txindex=1 daemon=0 listen=1 - path: "/etc/systemd/system/lbrycrd.service" content: | [Unit] Description=lbrycrd docker container After=snap.docker.dockerd.service Requires=snap.docker.dockerd.service [Service] Environment=SERVICE=lbrycrd Environment=IMAGE=lbry/lbrycrd:linux-x86-64-production TimeoutStartSec=0 ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker stop $SERVICE ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker rm -f $SERVICE ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker pull $IMAGE ExecStart=/snap/bin/docker run \ --rm \ --name lbrycrd \ -p 9246:9246 \ -p 127.0.0.1:9245:9245 \ --mount type=volume,source=lbrycrd-data,target=/data \ --mount type=bind,source=/etc/lbry/lbrycrd.conf,target=/etc/lbry/lbrycrd.conf \ -e RUN_MODE=default \ $IMAGE ExecStop=/snap/bin/docker stop $SERVICE Restart=always RestartSec=60 [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target - path: "/etc/mysql/conf.d/chainquery.cnf" content: | # Put MySQL optimizations specific to chainquery here - path: "/etc/systemd/system/mysql.service" content: | [Unit] Description=mysql docker container After=snap.docker.dockerd.service Requires=snap.docker.dockerd.service [Service] Environment=SERVICE=mysql Environment=IMAGE=mysql:5 TimeoutStartSec=0 ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker stop $SERVICE ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker rm -f $SERVICE ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker pull $IMAGE ExecStart=/snap/bin/docker run \ --rm \ --name mysql \ --mount type=volume,source=mysql-data,target=/var/lib/mysql \ --mount type=bind,source=/etc/mysql/conf.d/chainquery.cnf,target=/etc/mysql/conf.d/chainquery.cnf \ -e MYSQL_USER=chainquery \ -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=chainquery \ -e MYSQL_DATABASE=chainquery \ -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=chainquery \ $IMAGE ExecStop=/snap/bin/docker stop $SERVICE Restart=always RestartSec=60 [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target - path: "/etc/lbry/chainqueryconfig.toml" content: | ### Reference config: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lbryio/chainquery/master/config/default/chainqueryconfig.toml lbrycrdurl="rpc://lbry:lbry@lbrycrd:9245" mysqldsn="chainquery:chainquery@tcp(mysql:3306)/chainquery" apimysqldsn="chainquery:chainquery@tcp(mysql:3306)/chainquery" - path: "/etc/systemd/system/chainquery.service" content: | [Unit] Description=chainquery docker container After=mysql.service Requires=mysql.service Requires=snap.docker.dockerd.service [Service] Environment=SERVICE=chainquery Environment=IMAGE=lbry/chainquery:linux-x86-64-production TimeoutStartSec=0 ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker stop $SERVICE ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker rm -f $SERVICE ExecStartPre=-/snap/bin/docker pull $IMAGE ExecStart=/snap/bin/docker run \ --rm \ --name chainquery \ -p 127.0.0.1:6300:6300 \ --mount type=bind,source=/etc/lbry/chainqueryconfig.toml,target=/etc/lbry/chainqueryconfig.toml \ --link mysql:mysql \ --link lbrycrd:lbrycrd \ $IMAGE ExecStop=/snap/bin/docker stop $SERVICE Restart=always RestartSec=60 [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target - path: "/root/.bash_aliases" content: | alias lbrycrd-cli="docker run --rm -it --link lbrycrd:lbrycrd --mount type=bind,source=/etc/lbry/lbrycrd.conf,target=/etc/lbry/lbrycrd.conf \ lbry/lbrycrd:linux-x86-64-production lbrycrd-cli -conf=/etc/lbry/lbrycrd.conf -rpcconnect=lbrycrd" alias mysql="docker run --rm -it --link mysql:mysql mysql:5 mysql -hmysql -u chainquery --password=chainquery" runcmd: - apt-get update - DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get -y upgrade - snap install docker - until /snap/bin/docker ps; do echo "Waiting for docker startup..."; sleep 1; done; echo "Docker is up." - /snap/bin/docker volume create lbrycrd-data - /snap/bin/docker volume create mysql-data - systemctl enable --now lbrycrd - echo "Good to go." ``` * You can leave everything above as it is, to use the default configuration, OR you may edit the config in the box to your liking. * For instance, if you wanted to run in [regtest mode](https://lbry.tech/resources/regtest-setup), you would set `regtest=1` in the first section under `write_files`. * You can also edit the config files at any later point in `/etc/lbry`, after you create the droplet. * Select your SSH key so you can log in. * Give it a good hostname. * Click Create. ## Usage ### How to administer the system Copy the IP address from the droplet status page, SSH into the droplet as root using the same SSH key, you configured for the droplet. The config file is in `/etc/lbry/lbrycrd.conf` on the host. The systemd service is called `lbrycrd`, in `/etc/systemd/system/lbrycrd.service`. It is preconfigured to start on system startup. #### Monitor the installer log You can tail the log to monitor the install progress: ``` tail -f /var/log/cloud-init-output.log ``` Wait for the final `Good to go` message to know that the installer has finished. (Press Ctrl-C to exit from tail.) #### Check the status of the systemd service You can interact with systemd using `systemctl` (status, start, stop, restart, and more.) and `journalctl` (logging) tools. ``` systemctl status lbrycrd ``` ``` journalctl --unit lbrycrd ``` [Here is a tutorial to get you familiarized with systemd](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/systemd-essentials-working-with-services-units-and-the-journal) #### Check the container You can get the same information directly from docker: ``` docker ps ``` ``` docker logs lbrycrd ``` ### Utilize lbrycrd-cli You can use lbrycrd-cli from the host console. A bash alias gets added to `/root/.bash_aliases` that invokes lbrycrd-cli in its own container. ``` $ lbrycrd-cli getinfo { "version": 120400, "protocolversion": 70013, "walletversion": 60000, "balance": 0.00000000, "blocks": 551965, "timeoffset": 0, "connections": 12, "proxy": "", "difficulty": 739465688254.7942, "testnet": false, "keypoololdest": 1555360604, "keypoolsize": 101, "paytxfee": 0.00000000, "relayfee": 0.00001000, "errors": "" } ``` ### Chainquery (optional) The chainquery service is pre-installed but not enabled by default. #### Enable and start the MySQL service ``` systemctl enable --now mysql ``` In case you need it, there is a bash alias called `mysql`. (`/root/.bash_aliases`) for the MySQL client that allows you to log in to the chainquery database. #### Enable and start the chainquery service The chainquery config file located on the host at: `/etc/lbry/chainqueryconfig.toml` ``` systemctl enable --now chainquery ``` In systemd, when you enable a service, it means always to start the service at system boot. (`--now` means you also want to start the service right away.) As with any service, you can control chainquery with `systemctl` and get logs with `journalctl`: ##### Starting and stopping chainquery service ``` systemctl start chainquery ``` ``` systemctl stop chainquery ``` ##### Getting the chainquery service logs ``` journalctl --unit chainquery ``` (optionally use `-f` if you want to tail/follow the logs) ##### Disabling chainquery service ``` systemctl disable --now chainquery ``` ### Known issues Ubuntu's snap update mechanism will apparently [restart docker even if there are no updates available](https://github.com/lbryio/lbry-docker/pull/50#issuecomment-485435736). In the future, this tutorial may replace the snap version of docker with the regular PPA version of docker-ce, which has a more predictable update strategy (apt-get) rather than auto-updates. More long term testing is needed to know which way is better.