# Alliance Auth This document describes how to install **Alliance Auth** from scratch. ```eval_rst .. note:: There are additional installation steps for activating services and apps that come with **Alliance Auth**. Please see the page for the respective service or apps in chapter :doc:`/features/index` for details. ``` ## Dependencies ### Operating Systems Alliance Auth can be installed on any in-support *nix operating system. Our install documentation targets the following operating systems. - Ubuntu 18.04 - Ubuntu 20.04 - Ubuntu 22.04 - Centos 7 - CentOS Stream 8 - CentOS Stream 9 To install on your favorite flavour of Linux, identify and install equivalent packages to the ones listed here. ### OS Maintenance It is reccommended to ensure your OS is fully up to date before proceeding. We may also add Package Repositories here, used later in the documentation. Ubuntu 1804, 2004, 2204: ```bash sudo apt-get update ``` ```bash sudo apt-get upgrade ``` ```bash sudo do-dist-upgrade ``` CentOS 7 ```bash yum install epel-release ``` ```bash sudo yum upgrade ``` CentOS Stream 8 ```bash sudo dnf config-manager --set-enabled powertools ``` ```bash sudo dnf install epel-release epel-next-release ``` ```bash sudo yum upgrade ``` CentOS Stream 9 ```bash sudo dnf config-manager --set-enabled crb ``` ```bash dnf install epel-release epel-next-release ``` ```bash sudo yum upgrade ``` ### Python Alliance Auth requires Python 3.8 or higher. Ensure it is installed on your server before proceeding. Ubuntu 1804, 2004: ```eval_rst .. note:: Ubuntu 2204 ships with Python 3.10 already ``` ```bash sudo add-apt-repository ppa:deadsnakes/ppa ``` ```bash sudo apt-get update ``` ```bash sudo apt-get install python3.10 python3.10-dev python3.10-venv ``` CentOS 7: We need to build Python from source Centos Stream 8/9: ```eval_rst .. note:: A Python 3.9 Package is available for Stream 8 and 9. You _may_ use this instead of building your own package. But our documentation will assume Python3.10 and you may need to substitute as neccessary sudo dnf install python39 python39-devel ``` ```bash cd ~ ``` ```bash sudo yum install gcc openssl-devel bzip2-devel libffi-devel wget ``` ```bash wget https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.10.5/Python-3.10.5.tgz ``` ```bash tar xvf Python-3.10.5.tgz ``` ```bash cd Python-3.10.5/ ``` ```bash ./configure --enable-optimizations --enable-shared ``` ```bash sudo make altinstall ``` ### Database It's recommended to use a database service instead of SQLite. Many options are available, but this guide will use MariaDB. ```eval_rst .. note:: Many Ubuntu distributions come with an older version of Maria DB, which is not compatible with **Alliance Auth**. You need Maria DB 10.3 or higher! ``` Ubuntu 1804, 2004, 2204: ```eval_rst .. warning:: Please follow these steps to update MariaDB https://mariadb.org/download/?t=repo-config&d=20.04+%22focal%22&v=10.6&r_m=osuosl ``` Ubuntu 1804, 2004, 2204 ```bash apt-get install mariadb-server mariadb-client libmysqlclient-dev ``` CentOS 7 ```eval_rst .. warning:: Please follow these steps to update MariaDB https://mariadb.org/download/?t=repo-config&d=CentOS+7+%28x86_64%29&v=10.6&r_m=osuosl ``` ```bash sudo yum install MariaDB-server MariaDB-client MariaDB-devel MariaDB-shared ``` CentOS Stream 8/9 ```eval_rst .. note:: We reccomend using the built in AppStream, as they are maintained by CentOS. Currently an AppStream is not available for 10.6 ``` ```bash sudo dnf module enable mariadb:10.5 ``` ```bash sudo dnf install mariadb mariadb-server mariadb-devel ``` ```bash sudo systemctl enable mariadb ``` ```bash sudo systemctl start mariadb ``` ```eval_rst .. important:: If you don't plan on running the database on the same server as auth you still need to install the ``libmysqlclient-dev`` package on Ubuntu or ``mariadb-devel`` package on CentOS. ``` ### Redis and Other Tools A few extra utilities are also required for installation of packages. Ubuntu 1804, 2004, 2204: ```bash sudo apt-get install unzip git redis-server curl libssl-dev libbz2-dev libffi-dev build-essential ``` CentOS 7: ```bash sudo yum install gcc gcc-c++ unzip git redis curl bzip2-devel openssl-devel libffi-devel wget ``` ```bash sudo systemctl enable redis.service ``` ```bash sudo systemctl start redis.service ``` CentOS Stream 8, Stream 9: ```bash sudo dnf install gcc gcc-c++ unzip git redis curl bzip2-devel openssl-devel libffi-devel wget ``` ```bash sudo systemctl enable redis.service ``` ```bash sudo systemctl start redis.service ``` ## Database Setup Alliance Auth needs a MySQL user account and database. Open an SQL shell with ```bash sudo mysql -u root ``` and create them as follows, replacing `PASSWORD` with an actual secure password: ```sql CREATE USER 'allianceserver'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'PASSWORD'; CREATE DATABASE alliance_auth CHARACTER SET utf8mb4; GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON alliance_auth . * TO 'allianceserver'@'localhost'; ``` Once your database is set up, you can leave the SQL shell with `exit`. Add timezone tables to your mysql installation: ```bash mysql_tzinfo_to_sql /usr/share/zoneinfo | sudo mysql -u root mysql ``` ```eval_rst .. note:: You may see errors when you add the timezone tables. To make sure that they were correctly added run the following commands and check for the ``time_zone`` tables:: mysql -u root -p use mysql; show tables; ``` Close the SQL shell and secure your database server with this command: ```bash mysql_secure_installation ``` ## Auth Install ### User Account For security and permissions, it’s highly recommended you create a separate user to install auth under. Do not log in as this account. Ubuntu 1804, 2004, 2204: ```bash adduser --disabled-login allianceserver ``` CentOS 7, Stream 8, Stream 9: ```bash sudo useradd -s /bin/bash allianceserver ``` ```bash sudo passwd -l allianceserver ``` ### Prepare Directories ```bash sudo mkdir -p /var/www/myauth/static ``` ```bash sudo chown -R allianceserver:allianceserver /var/www/myauth/static/ ``` ```eval_rst .. note:: When installing and performing maintenance on Alliance Auth, using the allianceserver user will greatly simplify permission management:: sudo su allianceserver ``` ### Virtual Environment Create a Python virtual environment and put it somewhere convenient (e.g. `/home/allianceserver/venv/auth/`) ```eval_rst .. note:: Your python3.x command/version may vary depending on your installed python version. ``` ```bash python3.10 -m venv /home/allianceserver/venv/auth/ ``` ```eval_rst .. tip:: A virtual environment provides support for creating a lightweight "copy" of Python with their own site directories. Each virtual environment has its own Python binary (allowing creation of environments with various Python versions) and can have its own independent set of installed Python packages in its site directories. You can read more about virtual environments on the Python_ docs. .. _Python: https://docs.python.org/3/library/venv.html ``` Activate the virtual environment with (Note the `/bin/activate` on the end of the path): ```bash source /home/allianceserver/venv/auth/bin/activate ``` ```eval_rst .. hint:: Each time you come to do maintenance on your Alliance Auth installation, you should activate your virtual environment first. When finished, deactivate it with the ``deactivate`` command. ``` ### Eve Online SSO You need to have a dedicated Eve SSO app for Alliance auth. Please go to [EVE Developer](https://developers.eveonline.com/applications) to create one. For **scopes** your SSO app needs to have at least `publicData`. Additional scopes depends on which Alliance Auth apps you will be using. For convenience, we recommend adding all available ESO scopes to your SSO app. Note that Alliance Auth will always ask the users to approve specific scopes before they are used. As **callback URL** you want to define the URL of your Alliance Auth site plus the route: `/sso/callback`. Example for a valid callback URL: `https://auth.example.com/sso/callback` In `local.py` you will need to set `ESI_USER_CONTACT_EMAIL` to an email address to ensure that CCP has reliable contact information for you. ### Alliance Auth Project Update Pip before installing python packages: ```bash pip install -U pip setuptools ``` Ensure wheel is available before continuing: ```bash pip install wheel ``` You can install **Alliance Auth** with the following command. This will install AA and all its Python dependencies. ```bash pip install allianceauth ``` You should also install Gunicorn now unless you want to use another WSGI server (see [Gunicorn](#gunicorn) for details): ```bash pip install gunicorn ``` Now you need to create the application that will run the **Alliance Auth** install. Ensure you are in the allianceserver home directory by issuing: ```bash cd /home/allianceserver ``` The following command bootstraps a Django project which will run your **Alliance Auth** instance. You can rename it from `myauth` to anything you'd like. Note that this name is shown by default as the site name but that can be changed later. ```bash allianceauth start myauth ``` The settings file needs configuring. Edit the template at `myauth/myauth/settings/local.py`. Be sure to configure the EVE SSO as defined earlier in **Eve Online Settings** and valid Email settings. Django needs to install models to the database before it can start. ```bash python /home/allianceserver/myauth/manage.py migrate ``` Now we need to round up all the static files required to render templates. Make a directory to serve them from and populate it. ```bash python /home/allianceserver/myauth/manage.py collectstatic ``` Check to ensure your settings are valid. ```bash python /home/allianceserver/myauth/manage.py check ``` ```eval_rst .. hint:: If you are using root, ensure the allianceserver user has read/write permissions to this directory before proceeding:: chown -R allianceserver:allianceserver /home/allianceserver/myauth ``` ## Services Alliance Auth needs some additional services to run, which we will set up and configure next. ### Gunicorn To run the **Alliance Auth** website a [WSGI Server](https://www.fullstackpython.com/wsgi-servers.html) is required. For this [Gunicorn](http://gunicorn.org/) is highly recommended for its ease of configuring. It can be manually run from within your `myauth` base directory with `gunicorn --bind 0.0.0.0 myauth.wsgi` or automatically run using Supervisor. The default configuration is good enough for most installations. Additional information is available in the [gunicorn](gunicorn.md) doc. ## Superuser Before using your auth site, it is essential to create a superuser account. This account will have all permissions in Alliance Auth. It's OK to use this as your personal auth account. ```bash python /home/allianceserver/myauth/manage.py createsuperuser ``` Once your install is complete, the superuser account is accessed by logging in via the admin site at `https://example.com/admin`. If you intend to use this account as your personal auth account you need to add a main character. Navigate to the normal user dashboard (at `https://example.com`) after logging in via the admin site and select `Change Main`. Once a main character has been added, it is possible to use SSO to login to this account. ### Supervisor [Supervisor](http://supervisord.org/) is a process watchdog service: it makes sure other processes are started automatically and kept running. It can be used to automatically start the WSGI server and Celery workers for background tasks. ```eval_rst .. note:: You will need to exit the allianceserver user back to a user with sudo capabilities to install supervisor:: exit ``` Ubuntu 1804, 2004, 2204: ```bash sudo apt-get install supervisor ``` CentOS 7: ```bash sudo dnf install supervisor ``` ```bash sudo systemctl enable supervisord.service ``` ```bash sudo systemctl start supervisord.service ``` CentOS Stream 8, Stream 9: ```bash sudo dnf install supervisor ``` ```bash sudo systemctl enable supervisord.service ``` ```bash sudo systemctl start supervisord.service ``` Once installed, it needs a configuration file to know which processes to watch. Your Alliance Auth project comes with a ready-to-use template which will ensure the Celery workers, Celery task scheduler and Gunicorn are all running. Ubuntu 1804, 2004: ```bash ln -s /home/allianceserver/myauth/supervisor.conf /etc/supervisor/conf.d/myauth.conf ``` CentOS: ```bash ln -s /home/allianceserver/myauth/supervisor.conf /etc/supervisord.d/myauth.ini ``` Activate it with `supervisorctl reload`. You can check the status of the processes with `supervisorctl status`. Logs from these processes are available in `/home/allianceserver/myauth/log` named by process. ```eval_rst .. note:: Any time the code or your settings change you'll need to restart Gunicorn and Celery. :: supervisorctl restart myauth: ``` ## Webserver Once installed, decide on whether you're going to use [NGINX](nginx.md) or [Apache](apache.md) and follow the respective guide. Note that Alliance Auth is designed to run with web servers on HTTPS. While running on HTTP is technically possible, it is not recommended for production use, and some functions (e.g. Email confirmation links) will not work properly. ## Updating Periodically [new releases](https://gitlab.com/allianceauth/allianceauth/tags) are issued with bug fixes and new features. Be sure to read the [release notes](https://gitlab.com/allianceauth/allianceauth/-/releases) which will highlight changes. To update your install, swap to your allianceserver user ```bash sudo su allianceserver ``` Activate your virtual environment ```bash source /home/allianceserver/venv/auth/bin/activate ``` and update with: ```bash pip install --upgrade allianceauth ``` Some releases come with changes to the base settings. Update your project's settings with: ```bash allianceauth update /home/allianceserver/myauth ``` Some releases come with new or changed models. Update your database to reflect this with: ```bash python /home/allianceserver/myauth/manage.py migrate ``` Finally, some releases come with new or changed static files. Run the following command to update your static files folder: ```bash python /home/allianceserver/myauth/manage.py collectstatic ``` Always restart AA, Celery and Gunicorn after updating: ```bash supervisorctl restart myauth: ```