mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
887 lines
39 KiB
Markdown
887 lines
39 KiB
Markdown
Zulip in production
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===================
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This documents the process for installing Zulip in a production environment.
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Note that if you just want to play around with Zulip and see what it
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looks like, it is easier to install it in a development environment
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following the instructions in README.dev, since then you don't need to
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worry about setting up SSL certificates and an authentication mechanism.
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Recommended requirements:
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* Server running Ubuntu Trusty
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* At least 2 CPUs for production use with 100+ users
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* At least 4GB of RAM for production use with 100+ users. We **strongly
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recommend against installing with less than 2GB of RAM**, as you will
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likely experience OOM issues. In the future we expect Zulip's RAM
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requirements to decrease to support smaller installations (see
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https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/32).
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* At least 10GB of free disk for production use (more may be required
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if you intend to store uploaded files locally rather than in S3
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and your team uses that feature extensively)
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* Outgoing HTTP(S) access to the public Internet.
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* SSL Certificate for the host you're putting this on
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(e.g. zulip.example.com). If you just want to see what
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Zulip looks like, we recommend installing the development
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environment detailed in README.md as that is easier to setup.
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* Email credentials Zulip can use to send outgoing emails to users
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(e.g. email address confirmation emails during the signup process,
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missed message notifications, password reminders if you're not using
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SSO, etc.).
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Installing Zulip in production
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==============================
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These instructions should be followed as root.
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(1) Install the SSL certificates for your machine to
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`/etc/ssl/private/zulip.key` and `/etc/ssl/certs/zulip.combined-chain.crt`.
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If you don't know how to generate an SSL certificate, you, you can
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do the following to generate a self-signed certificate:
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```
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apt-get install openssl
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openssl genrsa -des3 -passout pass:x -out server.pass.key 4096
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openssl rsa -passin pass:x -in server.pass.key -out zulip.key
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rm server.pass.key
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openssl req -new -key zulip.key -out server.csr
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openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in server.csr -signkey zulip.key -out zulip.combined-chain.crt
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rm server.csr
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cp zulip.key /etc/ssl/private/zulip.key
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cp zulip.combined-chain.crt /etc/ssl/certs/zulip.combined-chain.crt
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```
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You will eventually want to get a properly signed certificate (and
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note that at present the Zulip desktop app doesn't support
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self-signed certificates), but this will let you finish the
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installation process.
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(2) Download [the latest built server tarball](https://www.zulip.com/dist/releases/zulip-server-latest.tar.gz)
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and unpack it to `/root/zulip`, e.g.
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```
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wget https://www.zulip.com/dist/releases/zulip-server-latest.tar.gz
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tar -xf zulip-server-latest.tar.gz
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mv zulip-server-1.3.6 /root/zulip
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```
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(3) Run
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```
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/root/zulip/scripts/setup/install
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```
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This may take a while to run, since it will install a large number of
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packages via apt.
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(4) Configure the Zulip server instance by filling in the settings in
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`/etc/zulip/settings.py`. Be sure to fill in all the mandatory
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settings, enable at least one authentication mechanism, and do the
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configuration required for that authentication mechanism to work.
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See the section on "Authentication" below for more detail on
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configuring authentication mechanisms.
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(5) Run
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```
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su zulip -c /home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/setup/initialize-database
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```
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This will report an error if you did not fill in all the mandatory
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settings from `/etc/zulip/settings.py`. Once this completes
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successfully, the main installation process will be complete, and if
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you are planning on using password authentication, you should be able
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to visit the URL for your server and register for an account.
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(6) Subscribe to [the Zulip announcements Google Group](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/zulip-announce)
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to get announcements about new releases, security issues, etc.
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Authentication and logging into Zulip the first time
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====================================================
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(As you read and follow the instructions in this section, if you run
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into trouble, check out the troubleshooting advice in the next major
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section.)
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Once you've finished installing Zulip, configuring your settings.py
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file, and initializing the database, it's time to login to your new
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installation. By default, initialize-database creates 1 realm that
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you can join, the `ADMIN_DOMAIN` realm (defined in
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`/etc/zulip/settings.py`).
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The `ADMIN_DOMAIN` realm is by default configured with the following settings:
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* `restricted_to_domain=True`: Only people with emails ending with @ADMIN_DOMAIN can join.
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* `invite_required=False`: An invitation is not required to join the realm.
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* `invite_by_admin_only=False`: You don't need to be an admin user to invite other users.
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* `mandatory_topics=False`: Users are not required to specify a topic when sending messages.
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If you would like to change these settings, you can do so using the
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Django management python shell (as the zulip user):
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```
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cd /home/zulip/deployments/current
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./manage.py shell
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from zerver.models import *
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r = get_realm(settings.ADMIN_DOMAIN)
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r.restricted_to_domain=False # Now anyone anywhere can login
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r.save() # save to the database
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```
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If you realize you set `ADMIN_DOMAIN` wrong, in addition to fixing the
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value in settings.py, you will also want to do a similar manage.py
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process to set `r.domain = "newexample.com"`. If you've already
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changed `ADMIN_DOMAIN` in settings.py, you can use
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`Realm.objects.all()` in the management shell to find the list of
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realms and pass the domain of the realm that is not "zulip.com" to
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`get_realm`.
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Depending what authentication backend you're planning to use, you will
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need to do some additional setup documented in the `settings.py` template:
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* For Google authentication, you need to follow the configuration
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instructions around `GOOGLE_OAUTH2_CLIENT_ID` and `GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID`.
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* For Email authentication, you will need to follow the configuration
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instructions around outgoing SMTP from Django.
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You should be able to login now. If you get an error, check
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`/var/log/zulip/errors.log` for a traceback, and consult the next
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section for advice on how to debug. If you aren't able to figure it
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out, email zulip-help@googlegroups.com with the traceback and we'll
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try to help you out!
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You will likely want to make your own user account an admin user,
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which you can do via the following management command:
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```
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./manage.py knight username@example.com -f
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```
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Now that you are an administrator, you will have a special
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"Administration" tab linked to from the upper-right gear menu in the
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Zulip app that lets you deactivate other users, manage streams, change
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the Realm settings you may have edited using manage.py shell above,
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etc.
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You can also use `manage.py knight` with the
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`--permission=api_super_user` argument to create API super users,
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which are needed to mirror messages to streams from other users for
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the IRC and Jabber mirroring integrations (see
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`bots/irc-mirror.py` and `bots/jabber_mirror.py` for some detail on these).
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There are a large number of useful management commands under
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`zerver/manangement/commands/`; you can also see them listed using
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`./manage.py` with no arguments.
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One such command worth highlighting because it's a valuable feature
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with no UI in the Administration page is `./manage.py realm_filters`,
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which allows you to configure certain patterns in messages to be
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automatically linkified, e.g. whenever someone mentions "T1234" it
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could be auto-linkified to ticket 1234 in your team's Trac instance.
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Checking Zulip is healthy and debugging the services it depends on
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==================================================================
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You can check if the zulip application is running using:
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```
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supervisorctl status
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```
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And checking for errors in the Zulip errors logs under
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`/var/log/zulip/`. That contains one log file for each service, plus
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`errors.log` (has all errors), `server.log` (logs from the Django and
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Tornado servers), and `workers.log` (combined logs from the queue
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workers).
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After you change configuration in `/etc/zulip/settings.py` or fix a
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misconfiguration, you will often want to restart the Zulip application.
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You can restart Zulip using:
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```
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supervisorctl restart all
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```
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Similarly, you can stop Zulip using:
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```
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supervisorctl stop all
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```
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The Zulip application uses several major services to store and cache
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data, queue messages, and otherwise support the Zulip application:
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* postgresql
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* rabbitmq-server
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* nginx
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* redis
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* memcached
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If one of these services is not installed or functioning correctly,
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Zulip will not work. Below we detail some common configuration
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problems and how to resolve them:
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* An AMQPConnectionError traceback or error running rabbitmqctl
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usually means that RabbitMQ is not running; to fix this, try:
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```
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service rabbitmq-server restart
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```
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If RabbitMQ fails to start, the problem is often that you are using
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a virtual machine with broken DNS configuration; you can often
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correct this by configuring `/etc/hosts` properly.
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* If your browser reports no webserver is running, that is likely
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because nginx is not configured properly and thus failed to start.
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nginx will fail to start if you configured SSL incorrectly or did
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not provide SSL certificates. To fix this, configure them properly
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and then run:
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```
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service nginx restart
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```
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If you run into additional problems, [please report
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them](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues) so that we can update
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these lists! The Zulip installation scripts logs its full output to
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`/var/log/zulip/install.log`, so please include the context for any
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tracebacks from that log.
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Making your Zulip instance awesome
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==================================
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Once you've got Zulip setup, you'll likely want to configure it the
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way you like. There are four big things to focus on:
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(1) Integrations. We recommend setting up integrations for the major
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tools that your team works with. For example, if you're a software
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development team, you may want to start with integrations for your
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version control, issue tracker, CI system, and monitoring tools.
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Spend time configuring these integrations to be how you like them --
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if an integration is spammy, you may want to change it to not send
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messages that nobody cares about (E.g. for the zulip.com trac
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integration, some teams find they only want notifications when new
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tickets are opened, commented on, or closed, and not every time
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someone edits the metadata).
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If Zulip doesn't have an integration you want, you can add your own!
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Most integrations are very easy to write, and even more complex
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integrations usually take less than a day's work to build. We very
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much appreciate contributions of new integrations; there is a brief
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draft integration writing guide [here](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/70).
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It can often be valuable to integrate your own internal processes to
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send notifications into Zulip; e.g. notifications of new customer
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signups, new error reports, or daily reports on the team's key
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metrics; this can often spawn discussions in response to the data.
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(2) Streams and Topics. If it feels like a stream has too much
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traffic about a topic only of interest to some of the subscribers,
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consider adding or renaming streams until you feel like your team is
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working productively.
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Second, most users are not used to topics. It can require a bit of
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time for everyone to get used to topics and start benefitting from
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them, but usually once a team is using them well, everyone ends up
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enthusiastic about how much topics make life easier. Some tips on
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using topics:
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* When replying to an existing conversation thread, just click on the
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message, or navigate to it with the arrow keys and hit "r" or
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"enter" to reply on the same topic
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* When you start a new conversation topic, even if it's related to the
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previous conversation, type a new topic in the compose box
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* You can edit topics to fix a thread that's already been started,
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which can be helpful when onboarding new batches of users to the platform.
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Third, setting default streams for new users is a great way to get
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new users involved in conversations before they've accustomed
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themselves with joining streams on their own. You can use the
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[`set_default_streams`](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/blob/master/zerver/management/commands/set_default_streams.py)
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command to set default streams for users within a realm:
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```
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python manage.py set_default_streams --domain=example.com --streams=foo,bar,...
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```
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(3) Notification settings. Zulip gives you a great deal of control
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over which messages trigger desktop notifications; you can configure
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these extensively in the `/#settings` page (get there from the gear
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menu). If you find the desktop notifications annoying, consider
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changing the settings to only trigger desktop notifications when you
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receive a PM or are @-mentioned.
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(4) The mobile and desktop apps. Currently, the Zulip Desktop app
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only supports talking to servers with a properly signed SSL
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certificate, so you may find that you get a blank screen when you
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connect to a Zulip server using a self-signed certificate.
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The Zulip iOS and Android apps in their respective stores don't yet
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support talking to non-zulip.com servers; the iOS app is waiting on
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Apple's app store review, while the Android app is waiting on someone
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to do the small project of adding a field to specify what Zulip server
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to talk to.
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These issues will likely all be addressed in the coming weeks; make
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sure to join the zulip-announce@googlegroups.com list so that you can
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receive the announcements when these become available.
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(5) All the other features: Hotkeys, emoji, search filters,
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@-mentions, etc. Zulip has lots of great features, make sure your
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team knows they exist and how to use them effectively.
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(6) Enjoy your Zulip installation! If you discover things that you
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wish had been documented, please contribute documentation suggestions
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either via a GitHub issue or pull request; we love even small
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contributions, and we'd love to make the Zulip documentation cover
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everything anyone might want to know about running Zulip in
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production.
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Maintaining and upgrading Zulip in production
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=============================================
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We recommend reading this entire section before doing your first
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upgrade.
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* To upgrade to a new version of the zulip server, download the
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appropriate release tarball from
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https://www.zulip.com/dist/releases/ and then run as root:
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```
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/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/upgrade-zulip zulip-server-VERSION.tar.gz
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```
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The upgrade process will shut down the service, run `apt-get
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upgrade`, a puppet apply, and any database migrations, and then
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bring the service back up. This will result in some brief downtime
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for the service, which should be under 30 seconds unless there is an
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expensive transition involved. Unless you have tested the upgrade
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in advance, we recommend doing upgrades at off hours.
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You can create your own release tarballs from a copy of zulip.git
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repository using `tools/build-release-tarball`.
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* **Warning**: If you have modified configuration files installed by
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Zulip (e.g. the nginx configuration), the Zulip upgrade process will
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overwrite your configuration when it does the `puppet apply`. You
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can test whether this will happen assuming no upstream changes to
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the configuration using `scripts/zulip-puppet-apply` (without the
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`-f` option), which will do a test puppet run and output and changes
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it would make. Using this list, you can save a copy of any files
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that you've modified, do the upgrade, and then restore your
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configuration. If you need to do this, please report the issue so
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that we can make the Zulip puppet configuration flexible enough to
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handle your setup.
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* The Zulip upgrade script automatically logs output to
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/var/log/zulip/upgrade.log; please use those logs to include output
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that shows all errors in any bug reports.
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* The Zulip upgrade process works by creating a new deployment under
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/home/zulip/deployments/ containing a complete copy of the Zulip
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server code, and then moving the symlinks at
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`/home/zulip/deployments/current` and /root/zulip` as part of the
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upgrade process. This means that if the new version isn't working,
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you can quickly downgrade to the old version by using
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`/home/zulip/deployments/<date>/scripts/restart-server` to return to
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a previous version that you've deployed (the version is specified
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via the path to the copy of `restart-server` you call).
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* To update your settings, simply edit `/etc/zulip/settings.py` and then
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run `/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/restart-server` to
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restart the server
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* You are responsible for running `apt-get upgrade` on your system on
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a regular basis to ensure that it is up to date with the latest
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security patches.
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* To use the Zulip API with your Zulip server, you will need to use the
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API endpoint of e.g. `https://zulip.example.com/api`. Our Python
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API example scripts support this via the
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`--site=https://zulip.example.com` argument. The API bindings
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support it via putting `site=https://zulip.example.com` in your
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.zuliprc.
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Every Zulip integration supports this sort of argument (or e.g. a
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`ZULIP_SITE` variable in a zuliprc file or the environment), but this
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is not yet documented for some of the integrations (the included
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integration documentation on `/integrations` will properly document
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how to do this for most integrations). Pull requests welcome to
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document this for those integrations that don't discuss this!
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* Similarly, you will need to instruct your users to specify the URL
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for your Zulip server when using the Zulip desktop and mobile apps.
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* As a measure to mitigate the impact of potential memory leaks in one
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of the Zulip daemons, the service automatically restarts itself
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every Sunday early morning. See `/etc/cron.d/restart-zulip` for the
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precise configuration.
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### Backups for Zulip
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There are several pieces of data that you might want to back up:
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* The postgres database. That you can back up like any postgres
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database; we have some example tooling for doing that incrementally
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into S3 using [wal-e](https://github.com/wal-e/wal-e) in
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`puppet/zulip_internal/manifests/postgres_common.pp` (that's what we
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use for zulip.com's database backups). Note that this module isn't
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part of the Zulip server releases since it's part of the zulip.com
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configuration (see https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/293 for a
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ticket about fixing this to make life easier for running backups).
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* Any user-uploaded files. If you're using S3 as storage for file
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uploads, this is backed up in S3, but if you have instead set
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LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR, any files uploaded by users (including avatars)
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will be stored in that directory and you'll want to back it up.
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* Your Zulip configuration including secrets from /etc/zulip/.
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E.g. if you lose the value of secret_key, all users will need to login
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again when you setup a replacement server since you won't be able to
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verify their cookies; if you lose avatar_salt, any user-uploaded
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avatars will need to be re-uploaded (since avatar filenames are
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computed using a hash of avatar_salt and user's email), etc.
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* The logs under /var/log/zulip can be handy to have backed up, but
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they do get large on a busy server, and it's definitely
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lower-priority.
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### Restoration
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To restore from backups, the process is basically the reverse of the above:
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* Install new server as normal by downloading a Zulip release tarball
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and then using `scripts/setup/install`, you don't need
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to run the `initialize-database` second stage which puts default
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data into the database.
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|
|
* Unpack to /etc/zulip the settings.py and secrets.conf files from your backups.
|
|
|
|
* Restore your database from the backup using wal-e; if you ran
|
|
`initialize-database` anyway above, you'll want to first
|
|
`scripts/setup/postgres-init-db` to drop the initial database first.
|
|
|
|
* If you're using local file uploads, restore those files to the path
|
|
specified by `settings.LOCAL_UPLOADS_DIR` and (if appropriate) any
|
|
logs.
|
|
|
|
* Start the server using scripts/restart-server
|
|
|
|
This restoration process can also be used to migrate a Zulip
|
|
installation from one server to another.
|
|
|
|
We recommend running a disaster recovery after you setup backups to
|
|
confirm that your backups are working; you may also want to monitor
|
|
that they are up to date using the Nagios plugin at:
|
|
`puppet/zulip_internal/files/nagios_plugins/check_postgres_backup`.
|
|
|
|
Contributions to more fully automate this process or make this section
|
|
of the guide much more explicit and detailed are very welcome!
|
|
|
|
### Postgres streaming replication
|
|
|
|
Zulip has database configuration for doing with Postgres streaming
|
|
replication ; you can see the configuration in these files:
|
|
|
|
* puppet/zulip_internal/manifests/postgres_slave.pp
|
|
* puppet/zulip_internal/manifests/postgres_master.pp
|
|
* puppet/zulip_internal/files/postgresql/*
|
|
|
|
Contribution of a step-by-step guide for setting this up (and moving
|
|
this configuration to be available in the main `puppet/zulip/` tree)
|
|
would be very welcome!
|
|
|
|
### Using a remote postgres host
|
|
|
|
This is a bit annoying to setup, but you can configure Zulip to use a
|
|
dedicated postgres server by setting the `REMOTE_POSTGRES_HOST`
|
|
variable in /etc/zulip/settings.py, and configuring Postgres
|
|
certificate authentication (see
|
|
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/ssl-tcp.html and
|
|
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/libpq-ssl.html for
|
|
documentation on how to set this up and deploy the certificates) to
|
|
make the DATABASES configuration in `zproject/settings.py` work (or
|
|
override that configuration).
|
|
|
|
### Monitoring Zulip
|
|
|
|
The complete Nagios configuration (sans secret keys) we used to
|
|
monitor zulip.com is available under `puppet/zulip_internal` in the
|
|
Zulip Git repository (those files are not installed in the release
|
|
tarballs); there are a number of useful Nagios plugins available
|
|
there, including:
|
|
|
|
Frontend server monitoring:
|
|
|
|
* check_send_receive_time (sends a test message through the system
|
|
between two bot users to check that end-to-end message sending works)
|
|
* check_website_response.sh (standard HTTP check)
|
|
|
|
Queue worker monitoring:
|
|
|
|
* check_rabbitmq_consumers and check_rabbitmq_queues (checks for
|
|
rabbitmq being down or the queue workers being behind)
|
|
* check_queue_worker_errors (checks for errors reported by the queue workers)
|
|
* check_worker_memory (monitors for memory leaks in queue workers)
|
|
* check_email_deliverer_backlog and check_email_deliverer_process
|
|
(monitors for whether outgoing emails are being sent)
|
|
|
|
Database monitoring:
|
|
|
|
* check_pg_replication_lag
|
|
* check_postgres (checks the health of the postgres database)
|
|
* check_postgres_backup (checks backups are up to date; see above)
|
|
* check_fts_update_log (monitors for whether full-text search updates
|
|
are being processed)
|
|
|
|
Standard server monitoring:
|
|
|
|
* check_debian_packages
|
|
|
|
Contributions on making it easier to monitor Zulip and maintain it in
|
|
production, e.g. https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/371, are very
|
|
welcome!
|
|
|
|
### Scalability of Zulip
|
|
|
|
This section attempts to address the considerations involved with
|
|
running Zulip with a large team (>1000 users).
|
|
|
|
* We recommend using a remote postgres database (see
|
|
REMOTE_POSTGRES_HOST docs above) for isolation, though it is not
|
|
required. In the following, we discuss a relatively simple
|
|
configuration with two types of servers: application servers
|
|
(running Django, Tornado, RabbitMQ, Redis, Memcached, etc.) and
|
|
database servers.
|
|
|
|
* You can scale to a pretty large installation (O(~1000) concurrently
|
|
active users using it to chat all day) with just a single reasonably
|
|
large application server (e.g. AWS c3.2xlarge with 8 cores and 16GB
|
|
of RAM) sitting mostly idle (<10% CPU used and only 4GB of the 16GB
|
|
RAM actively in use). You can probably get away with half that
|
|
(e.g. c3.xlarge), but ~8GB of RAM is highly recommended at scale.
|
|
Beyond a 1000 active users, you will eventually want to increase the
|
|
memory cap in `memcached.conf` from the default 512MB to avoid high
|
|
rates of memcached misses.
|
|
|
|
* For the database server, we highly recommend SSD disks, and RAM is
|
|
the primary resource limitation. We have not aggressively tested
|
|
for the minimum resources required, but 8 cores with 30GB of RAM
|
|
(e.g. AWS's m3.2xlarge) should suffice; you may be able to get away
|
|
with less especially on the CPU side. The database load per user is
|
|
pretty optimized as long as `memcached` is working correctly. This
|
|
has not been tested, but from extrapolating the load profile, it
|
|
should be possible to scale a Zulip installation to 10,000s of
|
|
active users using a single large database server without doing
|
|
anything complicated like sharding the database.
|
|
|
|
* For reasonably high availability, it's easy to run a hot spare
|
|
application server and a hot spare database (using Postgres
|
|
streaming replication; see the section on configuring this). Be
|
|
sure to check out the section on backups if you're hoping to run a
|
|
spare application server; in particular you probably want to use the
|
|
S3 backend for storing user-uploaded files and avatars and will want
|
|
to make sure secrets are available on the hot spare.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip does not support dividing traffic for a given Zulip realm
|
|
between multiple application servers. There are two issues: you
|
|
need to share the memcached/redis/rabbitmq instance (these should
|
|
can be moved to a network service shared by multiple servers with a
|
|
bit of configuration) and the Tornado event system for pushing to
|
|
browsers currently has no mechanism for multiple frontend servers
|
|
(or event processes) talking to each other. One can probably get a
|
|
factor of 10 in a single server's scalability by [supporting
|
|
multiple tornado processes on a single
|
|
server](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/372), which is also
|
|
likely the first part of any project to support exchanging events
|
|
amongst multiple servers.
|
|
|
|
* The first scalability issue encountered by a very large realm (more
|
|
than a few thousand users), will be with the [frontend buddy list
|
|
perf and UI](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/262). Fixing
|
|
this should be a small project; the code for that part of the UI
|
|
layer doesn't do proper incremental updates.
|
|
|
|
Questions, concerns, and bug reports about this area of Zulip are very
|
|
welcome! This is an area we are hoping to improve.
|
|
|
|
### Security Model
|
|
|
|
This section attempts to document the Zulip security model. Since
|
|
this is new documentation, it likely does not cover every issue; if
|
|
there are details you're curious about, please feel free to ask
|
|
questions on the Zulip development mailing list (or if you think
|
|
you've found a security bug, please report it to support@zulip.com so
|
|
we can do a responsible security announcement).
|
|
|
|
#### Secure your Zulip server like your email server
|
|
|
|
* It's reasonable to think about security for a Zulip server like you
|
|
do security for a team email server -- only trusted administrators
|
|
within an organization should have shell access to the server.
|
|
|
|
In particular, anyone with root access to a Zulip application server
|
|
or Zulip database server, or with access to the `zulip` user on a
|
|
Zulip application server, has complete control over the Zulip
|
|
installation and all of its data (so they can read messages, modify
|
|
history, etc.). It would be difficult or impossible to avoid this,
|
|
because the server needs access to the data to support features
|
|
expected of a group chat system like the ability to search the
|
|
entire message history, and thus someone with control over the
|
|
server has access to that data as well.
|
|
|
|
#### Encryption and Authentication
|
|
|
|
* Traffic between clients (web, desktop and mobile) and the Zulip is
|
|
encrypted using HTTPS. By default, all Zulip services talk to each
|
|
other either via a localhost connection or using an encrypted SSL
|
|
connection.
|
|
|
|
* The preferred way to login to Zulip is using an SSO solution like
|
|
Google Auth, LDAP, or similar. Zulip stores user passwords using
|
|
the standard PBKDF2 algorithm. Password strength is checked and
|
|
weak passwords are visually discouraged using the zxcvbn library,
|
|
but Zulip does not by default have strong requirements on user
|
|
password strength. Modify `static/js/common.js` to adjust the
|
|
password strength requirements (Patches welcome to make controlled
|
|
by an easy setting!).
|
|
|
|
* Zulip requires CSRF tokens in all interactions with the web API to
|
|
prevent CSRF attacks.
|
|
|
|
#### Messages and History
|
|
|
|
* Zulip message content is rendering using a specialized Markdown
|
|
parser which escapes content to protect against cross-site scripting
|
|
attacks.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip supports both public streams and private ("invite-only")
|
|
streams. Any Zulip user can join any public stream in the realm
|
|
(and can view the complete message of any public stream history
|
|
without joining the stream).
|
|
|
|
* Users who are not members of a private stream cannot read messages
|
|
on the stream, send messages to the stream, or join the stream, even
|
|
if they are a Zulip administrator. However, any member of a private
|
|
stream can invite other users to the stream. When a new user joins
|
|
a private stream, they can see future messages sent to the stream,
|
|
but they do not receive access to the stream's message history.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip supports editing the content or topics of messages that have
|
|
already been sent (and even updating the topic of messages sent by
|
|
other users when editing the topic of the overall thread).
|
|
|
|
While edited messages are synced immediately to open browser
|
|
windows, editing messages is not a safe way to redact secret content
|
|
(e.g. a password) unintentionally shared via Zulip, because other
|
|
users may have seen and saved the content of the original message
|
|
(for example, they could have taken a screenshot immediately after
|
|
you sent the message, or have an API tool recording all messages
|
|
they receive).
|
|
|
|
Zulip stores and sends to clients the content of every historical
|
|
version of a message, so that future versions of Zulip could support
|
|
displaying the diffs between previous versions.
|
|
|
|
#### Users and Bots
|
|
|
|
* There are three types of users in a Zulip realm: Administrators,
|
|
normal users, and botsq. Administrators have the ability to
|
|
deactivate and reactivate other human and bot users, delete streams,
|
|
add/remove administrator privileges, as well as change configuration
|
|
for the overall realm (e.g. whether an invitation is required to
|
|
join the realm). Being a Zulip administrator does not provide the
|
|
ability to interact with other users' private messages or the
|
|
messages sent private streams to which the administrator is not
|
|
subscribed. However, a Zulip administrator subscribed to a stream
|
|
can toggle whether that stream is public or private.
|
|
|
|
* Every Zulip user has an API key, available on the settings page.
|
|
This API key can be used to do essentially everything the user can
|
|
do; for that reason, users should keep their API key safe. Users
|
|
can rotate their own API key if it is accidentally compromised.
|
|
|
|
* To properly remove a user's access to a Zulip team, it does not
|
|
suffice to change their password or deactivate their account in the
|
|
SSO system, since neither of those prevents authenticating with the
|
|
user's API key or those of bots the user has created. Instead, you
|
|
should deactivate the user's account in the Zulip administration
|
|
interface (/#administration); this will automatically also
|
|
deactivate any bots the user had created.
|
|
|
|
* The Zulip mobile apps authenticate to the server by sending the
|
|
user's password and retrieving the user's API key; the apps then use
|
|
the API key to authenticate all future interactions with the site.
|
|
Thus, if a user's phone is lost, in addition to changing passwords,
|
|
you should rotate the user's Zulip API key.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip bots are used for integrations. A Zulip bot can do everything
|
|
a normal user in the realm can do including reading other, with a
|
|
few exceptions (e.g. a bot cannot login to the web application or
|
|
create other bots). In particular, with the API key for a Zulip
|
|
bot, one can read any message sent to a public stream in that bot's
|
|
realm. A likely future feature for Zulip is [limited bots that can
|
|
only send messages](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/373).
|
|
|
|
* Certain Zulip bots can be marked as "API super users"; these special
|
|
bots have the ability to send messages that appear to have been sent
|
|
by another user (an important feature for implementing integrations
|
|
like the Jabber, IRC, and Zephyr mirrors).
|
|
|
|
#### User-uploaded content
|
|
|
|
* Zulip supports user-uploaded files; ideally they should be hosted
|
|
from a separate domain from the main Zulip server to protect against
|
|
various same-domain attacks (e.g. zulip-user-content.example.com)
|
|
using the S3 integration.
|
|
|
|
The URLs of user-uploaded files are secret; if you are using the
|
|
"local file upload" integration, anyone with the URL of an uploaded
|
|
file can access the file. This means the local uploads integration
|
|
is vulnerable to a subtle attack where if a user clicks on a link in
|
|
a secret .PDF or .HTML file that had been uploaded to Zulip, access
|
|
to the file might be leaked to the other server via the Referrer
|
|
header (see https://github.com/zulip/zulip/issues/320).
|
|
|
|
The Zulip S3 file upload integration is relatively safe against that
|
|
attack, because the URLs of files presented to users don't host the
|
|
content. Instead, the S3 integration checks the user has a valid
|
|
Zulip session in the relevant realm, and if so then redirects the
|
|
browser to a one-time S3 URL that expires a short time later.
|
|
Keeping the URL secret is still important to avoid other users in
|
|
the Zulip realm from being able to access the file.
|
|
|
|
* Zulip supports using the Camo image proxy to proxy content like
|
|
inline image previews that can be inserted into the Zulip message
|
|
feed by other users over HTTPS.
|
|
|
|
* By default, Zulip will provide image previews inline in the body of
|
|
messages when a message contains a link to an image. You can
|
|
control this using the `INLINE_IMAGE_PREVIEW` setting.
|
|
|
|
#### Final notes and security response
|
|
|
|
If you find some aspect of Zulip that seems inconsistent with this
|
|
security model, please report it to support@zulip.com so that we can
|
|
investigate and coordinate an appropriate security release if needed.
|
|
|
|
Zulip security announcements will be sent to
|
|
zulip-announce@googlegroups.com, so you should subscribe if you are
|
|
running Zulip in production.
|
|
|
|
Remote User SSO Authentication
|
|
==============================
|
|
|
|
Zulip supports integrating with a corporate Single-Sign-On solution.
|
|
There are a few ways to do it, but this section documents how to
|
|
configure Zulip to use an SSO solution that best supports Apache and
|
|
will set the `REMOTE_USER` variable:
|
|
|
|
(0) Check that `/etc/zulip/settings.py` has
|
|
`zproject.backends.ZulipRemoteUserBackend` as the only enabled value
|
|
in the `AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS` list, and that `SSO_APPEND_DOMAIN` is
|
|
correct set depending on whether your SSO system uses email addresses
|
|
or just usernames in `REMOTE_USER`.
|
|
|
|
Make sure that you've restarted the Zulip server since making this
|
|
configuration change.
|
|
|
|
(1) Edit `/etc/zulip/zulip.conf` and change the `puppet_classes` line to read:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
puppet_classes = zulip::voyager, zulip::apache_sso
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
(2) As root, run `/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/zulip-puppet-apply`
|
|
to install our SSO integration.
|
|
|
|
(3) To configure our SSO integration, edit
|
|
`/etc/apache2/sites-available/zulip-sso.example` and fill in the
|
|
configuration required for your SSO service to set `REMOTE_USER` and
|
|
place your completed configuration file at `/etc/apache2/sites-available/zulip-sso`
|
|
|
|
(4) Run `a2ensite zulip-sso` to enable the Apache integration site.
|
|
|
|
Now you should be able to visit `https://zulip.example.com/` and
|
|
login via the SSO solution.
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Troubleshooting Remote User SSO
|
|
|
|
This system is a little finicky to networking setup (e.g. common
|
|
issues have to do with /etc/hosts not mapping settings.EXTERNAL_HOST
|
|
to the Apache listening on 127.0.0.1/localhost, for example). It can
|
|
often help while debugging to temporarily change the Apache config in
|
|
/etc/apache2/sites-available/zulip-sso to listen on all interfaces
|
|
rather than just 127.0.0.1 as you debug this. It can also be helpful
|
|
to change /etc/nginx/zulip-include/app.d/external-sso.conf to
|
|
proxy_pass to a more explicit URL possibly not over HTTPS when
|
|
debugging. The following log files can be helpful when debugging this
|
|
setup:
|
|
|
|
* /var/log/zulip/{errors.log,server.log} (the usual places)
|
|
* /var/log/nginx/access.log (nginx access logs)
|
|
* /var/log/apache2/zulip_auth_access.log (you may want to change
|
|
LogLevel to "debug" in the apache config file to make this more
|
|
verbose)
|
|
|
|
Here's a summary of how the remote user SSO system works assuming
|
|
you're using HTTP basic auth; this summary should help with
|
|
understanding what's going on as you try to debug:
|
|
|
|
* Since you've configured /etc/zulip/settings.py to only define the
|
|
zproject.backends.ZulipRemoteUserBackend, zproject/settings.py
|
|
configures /accounts/login/sso as HOME_NOT_LOGGED_IN, which makes
|
|
`https://zulip.example.com/` aka the homepage for the main Zulip
|
|
Django app running behind nginx redirect to /accounts/login/sso if
|
|
you're not logged in.
|
|
|
|
* nginx proxies requests to /accounts/login/sso/ to an Apache instance
|
|
listening on localhost:8888 apache via the config in
|
|
/etc/nginx/zulip-include/app.d/external-sso.conf (using the upstream
|
|
localhost:8888 defined in /etc/nginx/zulip-include/upstreams).
|
|
|
|
* The Apache zulip-sso site which you've enabled listens on
|
|
localhost:8888 and presents the htpasswd dialogue; you provide
|
|
correct login information and the request reaches a second Zulip
|
|
Django app instance that is running behind Apache with with
|
|
REMOTE_USER set. That request is served by
|
|
`zerver.views.remote_user_sso`, which just checks the REMOTE_USER
|
|
variable and either logs in (sets a cookie) or registers the new
|
|
user (depending whether they have an account).
|
|
|
|
* After succeeding, that redirects the user back to / on port 443
|
|
(hosted by nginx); the main Zulip Django app sees the cookie and
|
|
proceeds to load the site homepage with them logged in (just as if
|
|
they'd logged in normally via username/password).
|
|
|
|
Again, most issues with this setup tend to be subtle issues with the
|
|
hostname/DNS side of the configuration. Suggestions for how to
|
|
improve this SSO setup documentation are very welcome!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Remote Postgresql database
|
|
==========================
|
|
|
|
If you want to use a remote Postgresql database, you should configure the information about the connection with the server. You need a user called "zulip" in your database server. You can configure these options in /etc/zulip/settings.py
|
|
|
|
* REMOTE_POSTGRES_HOST: Name or IP address of the remote host
|
|
* REMOTE_POSTGRES_SSLMODE: SSL Mode used to connect to the server, different options you can use are:
|
|
* disable: I don't care about security, and I don't want to pay the overhead of encryption.
|
|
* allow: I don't care about security, but I will pay the overhead of encryption if the server insists on it.
|
|
* prefer: I don't care about encryption, but I wish to pay the overhead of encryption if the server supports it.
|
|
* require: I want my data to be encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I trust that the network will make sure I always connect to the server I want.
|
|
* verify-ca: I want my data encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I want to be sure that I connect to a server that I trust.
|
|
* verify-full: I want my data encrypted, and I accept the overhead. I want to be sure that I connect to a server I trust, and that it's the one I specify.
|
|
|
|
Then you should specify the password of the user zulip for the database in /etc/zulip/zulip-secrets.conf:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
postgres_password = xxxx
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Finally you can stop your database in the zulip server to save some memory, you can do it with:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
sudo service postgresql stop
|
|
sudo update-rc.d postgresql disable
|
|
```
|
|
|