We've tried to make installing and running Takahē as easy as possible, but an ActivityPub server does have a minimum level of complexity, so you should be experienced deploying software in order to run it.
Note that getting the technology running is arguably the easiest piece of running a server - you must also be prepared to support your users, moderate, defederate, keep on top of security risks, and know how you will handle illegal content.
- SSL support (Takahē requires HTTPS)
- Something that can run Docker/OCI images
- A PostgreSQL 14 (or above) database
- Hosting/reverse proxy that passes the
HOST
header down to Takahē - One of these to store uploaded images and media:
- Amazon S3
- Google Cloud Storage
- Writable local directory (must be accessible by all running copies!)
Note that ActivityPub is a chatty protocol that has a lot of background activity, so you will need to run background tasks, in order to fetch profiles, retry delivery of posts, and more - see "Preparation", below.
The flagship Takahē instance, takahe.social, runs inside of Kubernetes, with one Deployment for the webserver and one for the Stator runner.
All configuration is done via either environment variables, or online through the web interface.
You'll need to run two copies of our Docker image:
- One with no extra arguments (command), which will serve web traffic
- One with the arguments
python3 manage.py runstator
, which will run the background worker
These containers will need the ability to write at least 1GB of files out
to their scratch disks. See the TAKAHE_NGINX_CACHE_SIZE
environment
variable for more.
Note
If you cannot run a background worker for some reason, you can instead
call the URL /.stator/?token=abc
periodically (once a minute or more).
The token value must be the same as you set in the TAKAHE_STATOR_TOKEN
environment variable. This pattern is only suitable for very small installs.
While it is possible to install and run Takahē directly from a directory, rather than the Docker image, we don't provide support for that method due to the difficulty of getting libraries to all match. Takahē is a standard Django project, so if you know what you're doing, go for it - but we won't be able to give you support.
If you are running on Kubernetes, we recommend that you make one Deployment
for the webserver and one Deployment for the background worker. We also
recommend that you mount an emptyDir
to the /cache/
path on the
webserver containers, as this is where the media cache will be stored.
All of these variables are required for a working installation, and should be provided to the containers from the first boot.
TAKAHE_DATABASE_SERVER
should be a database DSN for your database (you can use the standardPGHOST
,PGUSER
, etc. variables instead if you want)TAKAHE_SECRET_KEY
must be a fixed, random value (it's used for internal cryptography). Don't change this unless you want to invalidate all sessions.Warning
You must keep the value of
TAKAHE_SECRET_KEY
unique and secret. Anyone with this value can modify their session to impersonate any user, including admins. It should be kept even more secure than your admin passwords, and should be long, random and completely unguessable. We recommend that it is at least 64 characters.TAKAHE_MEDIA_BACKEND
must be a URI starting withlocal://
,s3://
orgcs://
. See :ref:`media_configuration` below for more.TAKAHE_MAIN_DOMAIN
should be the domain name (withouthttps://
) that will be used for default links (such as in emails). It does not need to be the same as any domain you are hosting user accounts on.TAKAHE_EMAIL_SERVER
should be set to ansmtp://
orsendgrid://
URI. See :ref:`email_configuration` below for more.TAKAHE_EMAIL_FROM
is the email address that emails from the system will appear to come from.TAKAHE_AUTO_ADMIN_EMAIL
should be an email address that you would like to be automatically promoted to administrator when it signs up. You only need this for initial setup, and can unset it after that if you like.If you don't want to run Stator as a background process but as a view, set
TAKAHE_STATOR_TOKEN
to a random string that you are using to protect it; you'll use this when setting up the URL to be called.If your installation is behind a HTTPS endpoint that is proxying it, set
TAKAHE_USE_PROXY_HEADERS
totrue
. (The HTTPS proxy header must be calledX-Forwarded-Proto
).If you want to receive emails about internal site errors, set
TAKAHE_ERROR_EMAILS
to a valid JSON list of emails, such as["[email protected]"]
(if you're doing this via shell, be careful about escaping!)
There are some other, optional variables you can tweak once the system is up and working - see :doc:`tuning` for more.
Takahē needs somewhere to store uploaded post attachments, profile images and more ("media"). We support Amazon S3, Google Cloud Storage and a local directory, but we recommend against the local directory unless you know what you're doing - media must be accessible from every running container in a read-write mode, and this is hard to do with a directory as you scale.
Support for CDN configuration for media is coming soon.
To use S3, provide a URL in one of these forms:
s3:///bucket-name
s3://endpoint-url/bucket-name
s3://access-key:secret-key@endpoint-url/bucket-name
If you omit the keys or the endpoint URL, then Takahē will try to use implicit authentication for them.
Your S3 bucket must be set to allow publically-readable files, as Takahē will
set all files it uploads to be public-read
. We randomise uploaded file
names to prevent enumeration attacks.
To use GCS, provide a URL like:
gs:///bucket-name
The GCS backend currently only supports implicit authentication (from the standard Google authentication environment variables, or machine roles).
Your bucket must be set to world-readable and have individual object permissions disabled.
To use a local directory, specify the media URL as local://
.
You must then also specify:
TAKAHE_MEDIA_ROOT
, the file path to the local media DirectoryTAKAHE_MEDIA_URL
, a fully-qualified URL prefix that serves that directory (must end in a slash)
The media directory must be read-write accessible from every single container of Takahē - webserver and workers alike.
Takahē requires an email server in order to send password reset and other account emails. We support either explicit SMTP, or auto-configuration of SMTP for SendGrid.
Provide a URL in the form smtp://username:password@host:port/
If you are using TLS, add ?tls=true
to the end. If you are using
SSL, add ?ssl=true
to the end.
If your username and password have URL-unsafe characters in them, you can
URLencode them. For example, if I had to use the username [email protected]
with the password my:password
, it would be represented as:
smtp://someone%40example.com:my%[email protected]:25/
If you are using SendGrid, Takahē will auto-configure the SMTP settings for you.
Simply set the email server to sendgrid://api-key
.
Takahē requires a PostgreSQL database at version 14 or above in order to work
properly. You should create a database within your PostgreSQL server, with its
own username and password, and provide Takahē with those credentials via
TAKAHE_DATABASE_SERVER
(see above). It will make its own tables and indexes.
You will have to run python3 manage.py migrate
when you first install Takahē in
order to create the database tables; how you do this is up to you.
We recommend one of:
- Shell/Exec into a running container (such as the webserver) and run it there.
- Launch a separate container as a one-off with
python3 manage.py migrate
as its arguments/command. If you are using Kubernetes, you should use a Job (or a one-off Pod) for this rather than a Deployment
You will also have to run this for minor version releases when new migrations are present; the release notes for each release will tell you if one is.
Once the webserver is up and working, go to the "create account" flow and
create a new account using the email you specified in
TAKAHE_AUTO_ADMIN_EMAIL
.
Once you set your password using the link emailed to you, you will have an admin account.
If your email settings have a problem and you don't get the email, don't worry; fix them and then follow the "reset my password" flow on the login screen, and you'll get another password reset email that you can use.
If you have shell access to the Docker image and would rather use that, you
can run python3 manage.py createsuperuser
instead and follow the prompts.
When you login you'll be greeted with the "make an identity" screen, but you won't be able to as you will have no domains yet.
You should select the "Domains" link in the sidebar and create one, and then you will be able to make your first identity.
See :doc:`/tuning` for all the things you should tweak as your server gains users. We recommend setting up caches early on!