pleroma/installation/pleroma.service
rinpatch cc45c69fff Remove release_env
While taking a final look at instance.gen before releasing I noticed
that the release_env task outputs messages in broken english. Upon
further inspection it seems to have even more severe issues which, in
my opinion, warrant it's at least temporary removal:
- We do not explain what it actually does, anywhere. Neither the task
 docs nor instance.gen, nor installation instructions.
- It does not respect FHS on OTP releases (uses /opt/pleroma/config even
 though we store the config in /etc/pleroma/config.exs).
- It doesn't work on OTP releases, which is the main reason it exists.
Neither systemd nor openrc service files for OTP include it.
- It is not mentioned in install guides other than the ones for Debian
and OTP releases.
2020-11-08 11:56:09 +03:00

37 lines
1.5 KiB
Desktop File

[Unit]
Description=Pleroma social network
After=network.target postgresql.service
[Service]
ExecReload=/bin/kill $MAINPID
KillMode=process
Restart=on-failure
; Name of the user that runs the Pleroma service.
User=pleroma
; Declares that Pleroma runs in production mode.
Environment="MIX_ENV=prod"
; Make sure that all paths fit your installation.
; Path to the home directory of the user running the Pleroma service.
Environment="HOME=/var/lib/pleroma"
; Path to the folder containing the Pleroma installation.
WorkingDirectory=/opt/pleroma
; Path to the Mix binary.
ExecStart=/usr/bin/mix phx.server
; Some security directives.
; Use private /tmp and /var/tmp folders inside a new file system namespace, which are discarded after the process stops.
PrivateTmp=true
; The /home, /root, and /run/user folders can not be accessed by this service anymore. If your Pleroma user has its home folder in one of the restricted places, or use one of these folders as its working directory, you have to set this to false.
ProtectHome=true
; Mount /usr, /boot, and /etc as read-only for processes invoked by this service.
ProtectSystem=full
; Sets up a new /dev mount for the process and only adds API pseudo devices like /dev/null, /dev/zero or /dev/random but not physical devices. Disabled by default because it may not work on devices like the Raspberry Pi.
PrivateDevices=false
; Drops the sysadmin capability from the daemon.
CapabilityBoundingSet=~CAP_SYS_ADMIN
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target