toxcore/other/bootstrap_daemon
Maxim Biro 78d6e2d58b Change log levels
Some of them were set incorrectly, e.g. something that caused the
daemon to exit was marked as just a warning, instead of an error.

Removed debug level as it was hard to decide whether something should
go into info or debug. This is mostly because the use of the debug level
wasn't well defined. Debug should be used for information that could
help a user to debug an issue, but messages marked as debug were by the
most part the "success" log messages, which could go into info level
instead.
2015-12-30 21:49:00 -05:00
..
Makefile.inc Added .sh ending to bootstrapd's init script 2014-08-18 22:24:42 -04:00
README.md Updated daemon's systemd file, fixed typos in README 2015-05-10 03:04:42 -04:00
tox-bootstrapd.c Change log levels 2015-12-30 21:49:00 -05:00
tox-bootstrapd.conf Link changes. 2015-07-07 22:57:11 -04:00
tox-bootstrapd.service Updated daemon's systemd file, fixed typos in README 2015-05-10 03:04:42 -04:00
tox-bootstrapd.sh Don't fail when the binary is not found 2014-10-14 14:14:06 -04:00

#Instructions

These instructions are primarily tested on Debian Linux, Wheezy for init.d and Jessie for systemd, but they should work on other POSIX-compliant systems too.

##For `systemd` users:

For security reasons we run the daemon under its own user.

Create a new user by executing the following:

sudo useradd --home-dir /var/lib/tox-bootstrapd --create-home --system --shell /sbin/nologin --comment "Account to run Tox's DHT bootstrap daemon" --user-group tox-bootstrapd

Restrict access to home directory:

sudo chmod 700 /var/lib/tox-bootstrapd

Copy tox-bootstrapd.conf file to where ExecStart= from tox-bootstrapd.service points to. By default it's /etc/tox-bootstrapd.conf.

sudo cp tox-bootstrapd.conf /etc/tox-bootstrapd.conf

Go over everything in the copied tox-bootstrapd.conf file. Set options you want and add actual working nodes to the bootstrap_nodes list, instead of the example ones, if you want your node to connect to the Tox network. Make sure pid_file_path matches PIDFile= from tox-bootstrapd.service.

Copy tox-bootstrapd.service to /etc/systemd/system/:

sudo cp tox-bootstrapd.service /etc/systemd/system/

You must uncomment the next line in tox-bootstrapd.service, if you want to use port number < 1024

#CapabilityBoundingSet=CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE

and, possibly, install libcap2-bin or libcap2 package, depending of your distribution.

Reload systemd units definitions, enable service for automatic start (if needed), start it and verify it's running:

sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl enable tox-bootstrapd.service
sudo systemctl start tox-bootstrapd.service
sudo systemctl status tox-bootstrapd.service

Get your public key and check that the daemon initialized correctly:

sudo grep "tox-bootstrapd" /var/log/syslog
###Troubleshooting:
  • Check daemon's status:
sudo systemctl status tox-bootstrapd.service
  • Check the log for errors:
sudo grep "tox-bootstrapd" /var/log/syslog
# or
sudo journalctl --pager-end
# or
sudo journalctl -f _SYSTEMD_UNIT=tox-bootstrapd.service
  • Make sure tox-bootstrapd user has write permission for keys and pid files.

  • Make sure tox-bootstrapd has read permission for the config file.

  • Make sure tox-bootstrapd location matches its path in tox-bootstrapd.service file.

##For `init.d` users

For security reasons we run the daemon under its own user.

Create a new user by executing the following:

sudo useradd --home-dir /var/lib/tox-bootstrapd --create-home --system --shell /sbin/nologin --comment "Account to run Tox's DHT bootstrap daemon" --user-group tox-bootstrapd

Restrict access to home directory:

sudo chmod 700 /var/lib/tox-bootstrapd

Copy tox-bootstrapd.conf file to where CFGFILE variable from tox-bootstrapd.sh points to. By default it's /etc/tox-bootstrapd.conf.

sudo cp tox-bootstrapd.conf /etc/tox-bootstrapd.conf

Go over everything in the copied tox-bootstrapd.conf file. Set options you want and add actual working nodes to the bootstrap_nodes list, instead of the example ones, if you want your node to connect to the Tox network. Make sure pid_file_path matches PIDFILE from tox-bootstrapd.sh.

Look at the variable declarations in the beginning of tox-bootstrapd.sh init script to see if you need to change anything for it to work on your system. The default values must be fine for most users and we assume that you use those next.

Copy tox-bootstrapd.sh init script to /etc/init.d/tox-bootstrapd (note the disappearance of ".sh" ending):

sudo cp tox-bootstrapd.sh /etc/init.d/tox-bootstrapd

Set permissions for the init system to run the script:

sudo chmod 755 /etc/init.d/tox-bootstrapd

Make the init system aware of the script, start the daemon and verify it's running:

sudo update-rc.d tox-bootstrapd defaults
sudo service tox-bootstrapd start
sudo service tox-bootstrapd status

Get your public key and check that the daemon initialized correctly:

sudo grep "tox-bootstrapd" /var/log/syslog
###Troubleshooting:
  • Check daemon's status:
sudo service tox-bootstrapd status
  • Check the log for errors:
sudo grep "tox-bootstrapd" /var/log/syslog
  • Check that variables in the beginning of /etc/init.d/tox-bootstrapd are valid.

  • Make sure tox-bootstrapd user has write permission for keys and pid files.

  • Make sure tox-bootstrapd has read permission for the config file.

  • Make sure tox-bootstrapd location matches its path in the /etc/init.d/tox-bootstrapd init script.