From 1d662cd85340c4fddd6a4b1b2fbcf7a7a63c9272 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eugen Rochko Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2019 19:59:09 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Add ElasticSearch documentation --- .../en/administration/optional-features.md | 52 ++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 51 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/content/en/administration/optional-features.md b/content/en/administration/optional-features.md index f432174c..9a2ca2ef 100644 --- a/content/en/administration/optional-features.md +++ b/content/en/administration/optional-features.md @@ -9,7 +9,57 @@ menu: ## Full-text search -TODO +Mastodon supports full-text search when it ElasticSearch is available. Mastodon's full-text search allows logged in users to find results from their own toots, their favourites, and their mentions. It deliberately does not allow searching for arbitrary strings in the entire database. + +### Install ElasticSearch + +ElasticSearch requires a Java runtime. If you don't have Java already installed, do it now. Assuming you are logged in as `root`: + + apt install openjdk-8-jre-headless + +Add the official ElasticSearch repository to apt: + + wget -qO - https://artifacts.elastic.co/GPG-KEY-elasticsearch | apt-key add - + echo "deb https://artifacts.elastic.co/packages/6.x/apt stable main" | tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/elastic-6.x.list + apt update + +Now you can install ElasticSearch: + + apt install elasticsearch + +> **Security warning:** By default, ElasticSearch is supposed to bind to localhost only, i.e. be inaccessible from the outside network. You can check which address ElasticSearch binds to by looking at `network.host` within `/etc/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.yml`. Consider that anyone who can access ElasticSearch can access and modify any data within it, as there is no authentication layer. So it's really important that the access is secured. Having a firewall that only exposes the 22, 80 and 443 ports is advisable, as outlined in the [main installation instructions]({{< relref "installation.md" >}}). If you have a multi-host setup, you must know how to secure internal traffic. + +To start ElasticSearch: + + systemctl enable elasticsearch + systemctl start elasticsearch + +### Setup Mastodon + +Edit `.env.production` to add the following variables: + +```bash +ES_ENABLED=true +ES_HOST=localhost +ES_PORT=9200 +``` + +If you have multiple Mastodon servers on the same machine, and you are planning to use the same ElasticSearch installation for all of them, make sure that all of them have unique `REDIS_NAMESPACE` in their configurations, to differentiate the indices. If you need to override the prefix of the ElasticSearch index, you can set `ES_PREFIX` directly. + +After saving the new configuration, create the index in ElasticSearch with: + + RAILS_ENV=production bundle exec rake chewy:upgrade + +Then restart Mastodon processes for the new configuration to take effect: + + systemctl restart mastodon-sidekiq + systemctl reload mastodon-web + +Now new statuses will be written to the ElasticSearch index. The last step is importing all of the old data as well. This might take a long while: + + RAILS_ENV=production bundle exec rake chewy:sync + +> **Compatibility note:** There is a known bug in Ruby 2.6.0 that prevents the above task from working. Other versions of Ruby, such as 2.6.1, are fine. ## Hidden services