Selfhosted
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
Rules:
-
Be civil: we're here to support and learn from one another. Insults won't be tolerated. Flame wars are frowned upon.
-
No spam posting.
-
Posts have to be centered around self-hosting. There are other communities for discussing hardware or home computing. If it's not obvious why your post topic revolves around selfhosting, please include details to make it clear.
-
Don't duplicate the full text of your blog or github here. Just post the link for folks to click.
-
Submission headline should match the article title (don’t cherry-pick information from the title to fit your agenda).
-
No trolling.
Resources:
- selfh.st Newsletter and index of selfhosted software and apps
- awesome-selfhosted software
- awesome-sysadmin resources
- Self-Hosted Podcast from Jupiter Broadcasting
Any issues on the community? Report it using the report flag.
Questions? DM the mods!
view the rest of the comments
it should return an empty set. It looks like the database is running but the lemmy database tables were not installed. Can you get back to the sql prompt and try
\dt
if the database was installed correctly, you should see something like this:
lemmy-# \dt
Schema | Name | Type | Owner
--------+----------------------------+-------+-------
public | __diesel_schema_migrations | table | lemmy
public | activity | table | lemmy . .
. .
public | person | table | lemmy
. . .
can you check that the tables are actually there? My guess is that the tables in the database weren't created. assuming you don't see any tables when you do this, again at the sql prompt, please try
\c lemmy
and see if it connects? if it does, it will say You are now connected to database "lemmy" as user "lemmy".
Let me know what the result of that is and we'll try to figure out what's gone wrong with the database setup because it looks like that's your problem - the database was not populated when it was created.
\c lemmy
does return "You are now connected to database "lemmy" as user "lemmy""Running \dt after connecting returns "Did not find any relations", so it looks like you were right and the database didn't get populated.
ok thanks - I'm not very familiar with the lemmy installation process so I will need to check if possibly the schema objects in the database aren't created until the admin user is first set up, which is another possibility, but they definitely aren't there right now - I'll set up a fresh install to check in a few minutes.
Switching gears a bit - when you say you can't access the web UI, can you elaborate on that? The web server should be running. You are going to https://your.url, presumably and then what do you actually see in the browser? It should show an initial setup screen - do you not see anything or is there some kind of error message? When the ansible script runs to create the instance does it throw any errors at all or everything looks happy in the output, including creation of your ssl certs?
No errors of any kind in the ansible script. nginx is running, and it's at https://lemmy.name - I get some gateway timeout errors once in a while, but that's all. When I do get error pages, they are served via https at least, so I don't think there's anything wrong with that part.
I assume this is because the lemmy backend container is continually restarting (as I detailed more in my original post and other replies here) due to database connection errors
Ok so I ran a clean install and confirmed that the database objects exist. So that's definitely the problem. Your database is munted. An interesting thing happened when I re-ran the playbook - I noticed it didn't rebuild the postgres container. Very suspicious! Let's try blowing it away completely and re-running your script:
docker stop lemmyname_postgres_1
docker rm lemmyname_postgres_1
now re run the ansible playbook and let's see if that works.
Ran those commands successfully, then the playbook again. Playbook has zero errors or warnings.
The postgres container was remade.. with the same broken database. Went into it with psql like before, did \c lemmy, then \dt - same error - did not find any relations.
weird. it's like it failed to install the postgres public schema properly. I am not at all familiar with ansible but I see you can set verbosity. Do you think it would be worth trying that?
According to link below you can preface your playbook command with ANSIBLE_DEBUG=true ANSIBLE_VERBOSITY=4
https://www.shellhacks.com/ansible-enable-debug-increase-verbosity/
This alternative installer might be a way around this issue: https://github.com/ubergeek77/Lemmy-Easy-Deploy
Wiped the VPS clean, new 22.04 server install.
Deployed using that installer.
Exact same issue. The lemmy container cannot reach the database and continually restarts. I'll post some logs, but they're practically identical to what I posted before:
lemmy container logs:
sudo docker ps
output:well, that rules out your local system and ansible, at least. It seems like there's an inability for the docker containers to reach postgres definitely at the install and probably at runtime - can we check this?
first let's make sure the postgres container is on the network and has an address:
sudo docker exec -it <yourinstance>_postgres_1 /bin/sh
once you're on the container
ifconfig
which should return on the second line: inet addr:172.18.0.4 (or similar ipV4 address)
exit
to return to the host and let's test connecting from the host :nc -zv 172.18.0.4 5432
(use IP from the DB container)Ubuntu host should respond something like : Connection to 172.18.0.4 5432 port [tcp/postgresql] succeeded!
now let's try the containers
sudo docker exec -it <yourinstance>_lemmy-ui_1 /bin/sh
now from that container test connectivity to postgres:
nc -zv 172.18.0.4 5432
(use IP from the DB container)now the other
sudo docker exec -it <yourinstance>_lemmy_1 /bin/sh
on the docker containers the nc command should return something like
172.18.0.4 (172.18.0.4:5432) open
is that working?