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joplin/packages/server
2021-12-20 16:48:40 +01:00
..
assets/tests
public Server: Allow manually deleting a user flag 2021-09-28 17:42:00 +01:00
readme Tools: Use Yarn 3 to manage monorepo (#5833) 2021-12-20 15:08:43 +00:00
src Tools: Use Yarn 3 to manage monorepo (#5833) 2021-12-20 15:08:43 +00:00
.gitignore
gulpfile.js Tools: Allow the server clean command to run on Windows 2021-12-20 16:48:40 +01:00
jest.config.js Server: Improved storage command 2021-12-02 11:27:22 +00:00
jest.setup.js Server: Allow storing item content in database, filesystem or S3 (depending on config) (#5602) 2021-11-09 16:05:42 +00:00
LICENSE
nodemon.json
package.json Tools: Allow the server clean command to run on Windows 2021-12-20 16:48:40 +01:00
README.md Doc: Add instructions for Docker on Linux (#5864) 2021-12-18 15:16:57 +00:00
schema.sqlite Server: Lazy-load storage drivers 2021-11-10 11:48:06 +00:00
stripeConfig.json Server: Add support for Stripe yearly subscriptions 2021-07-31 14:42:56 +01:00
tsconfig.json

Installing

Configuration

First copy .env-sample to .env and edit the values in there:

  • APP_BASE_URL: This is the base public URL where the service will be running. For example, if you want it to run from https://example.com/joplin, this is what you should set the URL to. The base URL can include the port.
  • APP_PORT: The local port on which the Docker container will listen. You would typically map this port to 443 (TLS) with a reverse proxy.

Running the server

To start the server with default configuration, run:

docker run --env-file .env -p 22300:22300 joplin/server:latest

This will start the server, which will listen on port 22300 on localhost. By default it will use SQLite, which allows you to test the app without setting up a database. To run it for production though, you'll want to connect the container to a database, as described below.

Supported docker tags

The following tags are available:

  • latest is always the most recent released version
  • beta is always the most recent beta released version
  • Major versions, such as 2, 2-beta
  • Specific minor versions, such as 2.1, 2.2, 2.3-beta
  • Specific patch versions, such as 2.0.4, 2.2.8-beta

Setup the database

You can setup the container to either use an existing PostgreSQL server, or connect it to a new one using docker-compose

Using an existing PostgreSQL server

To use an existing PostgresSQL server, set the following environment variables in the .env file:

DB_CLIENT=pg
POSTGRES_PASSWORD=joplin
POSTGRES_DATABASE=joplin
POSTGRES_USER=joplin
POSTGRES_PORT=5432
POSTGRES_HOST=localhost

Make sure that the provided database and user exist as the server will not create them. When running on macOS or Windows through Docker Desktop, a mapping of localhost is made automatically. On Linux, you can add --net=host --add-host=host.docker.internal:127.0.0.1 to the docker run command line to make the mapping happen. Any other POSTGRES_HOST than localhost or 127.0.0.1 should work as expected without further action.

Using docker-compose

A sample docker-compose file is available to show how to use Docker to install both the database and server and connect them:

Setup reverse proxy

Once Joplin Server is running, you will then need to expose it to the internet by setting up a reverse proxy, and that will depend on how your server is currently configured, and whether you already have Nginx or Apache running:

Setup storage

By default, the item contents (notes, tags, etc.) are stored in the database and you don't need to do anything special to get that working.

However since that content can be quite large, you also have the option to store it outside the database by setting the STORAGE_DRIVER environment variable.

Setting up storage on a new installation

Again this is optional - by default items will simply be saved to the database. To save to the local filesystem instead, use:

STORAGE_DRIVER=Type=Filesystem; Path=/path/to/dir

Then all item data will be saved under this /path/to/dir directory.

Migrating storage for an existing installation

Migrating storage is a bit more complicated because the old content will have to be migrated to the new storage. This is done by providing a fallback driver, which tells the server where to look if a particular item is not yet available on the new storage.

To migrate from the database to the file system for example, you would set the environment variables like so:

STORAGE_DRIVER=Type=Filesystem; Path=/path/to/dir
STORAGE_DRIVER_FALLBACK=Type=Database; Mode=ReadAndWrite

From then on, all new and updated content will be added to the filesystem storage. When reading an item, if the server cannot find it in the filesystem, it will look for it in the database.

Fallback drivers have two write modes:

  • In ReadAndClear mode, it's going to clear the fallback driver content every time an item is moved to the main driver. It means that over time the old storage will be cleared and all content will be on the new storage.

  • In ReadAndWrite mode, it's going to write the content to the fallback driver too. This is purely for safey - it allows deploying the new storage (such as the filesystem or S3) but still keep the old storage up-to-date. So if something goes wrong it's possible to go back to the old storage until the new one is working.

It's recommended to start with ReadAndWrite mode.

This simple setup with main and fallback driver is sufficient to start using a new storage, however old content that never gets updated will stay on the database. To migrate this content too, you can use the storage import command. It takes a connection string and move all items from the old storage to the new one.

For example, to move all content from the database to the filesytem:

docker exec -it CONTAINER_ID node packages/server/dist/app.js storage import --connection 'Type=Filesystem; Path=/path/to/dir'

On the database, you can verify that all content has been migrated by running this query:

SELECT count(*), content_storage_id FROM items GROUP BY content_storage_id;

If everything went well, all items should have a content_storage_id > 1 ("1" being the database).

Other storage driver

Besides the database and filesystem, it's also possible to use AWS S3 for storage using the same environment variable:

STORAGE_DRIVER=Type=S3; Region=YOUR_REGION_CODE; AccessKeyId=YOUR_ACCESS_KEY; SecretAccessKeyId=YOUR_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY; Bucket=YOUR_BUCKET

Setup the website

Once the server is exposed to the internet, you can open the admin UI and get it ready for synchronisation. For the following instructions, we'll assume that the Joplin server is running on https://example.com/joplin.

Secure the admin user

By default, the instance will be setup with an admin user with email admin@localhost and password admin and you should change this. To do so, open https://example.com/joplin/login and login as admin. Then go to the Profile section and change the admin password.

Create a user for sync

While the admin user can be used for synchronisation, it is recommended to create a separate non-admin user for it. To do so, navigate to the Users page - from there you can create a new user. Once this is done, you can use the email and password you specified to sync this user account with your Joplin clients.

Checking the logs

Checking the log can be done the standard Docker way:

# With Docker:
docker logs --follow CONTAINER

# With docker-compose:
docker-compose --file docker-compose.server.yml logs

Setup for development

Setup up the database

SQLite

By default the server supports SQLite for development, so nothing needs to be setup.

PostgreSQL

To use Postgres, from the monorepo root, run docker-compose --file docker-compose.server-dev.yml up, which will start the PostgreSQL database.

Starting the server

From packages/server, run npm run start-dev

Changelog

View the changelog

License

Copyright (c) 2017-2021 Laurent Cozic

Personal Use License

Joplin Server is available for personal use only. For example you may host the software on your own server for non-commercial activity.

To obtain a license for commercial purposes, please contact us.