This guide is long because it covers many cases and includes all commands you need.
This installation guide was created for and tested on Debian/Ubuntu operating systems. Please read doc/install/requirements.md for hardware and operating system requirements.
This is the official installation guide to set up a production server. To set up a development installation or for many other installation options please see the getting started section of the readme.
The following steps have been known to work. Please use caution when you deviate from this guide. Make sure you don't violate any assumptions Huginn makes about its environment. For example many people run into permission problems because they change the location of directories or run services as the wrong user.
If you find a bug/error in this guide please submit a pull request.
If not stated otherwise all commands should be run as user with sudo permissions or as root.
When having problems during the installation please check the troubleshooting section.
The Huginn installation consists of setting up the following components:
sudo
is not installed on Debian by default. Make sure your system is
up-to-date and install it.
# run as root!
apt-get update -y
apt-get upgrade -y
apt-get install sudo -y
Note: During this installation some files will need to be edited manually. If you are familiar with vim set it as default editor with the commands below. If you are not familiar with vim please skip this and keep using the default editor.
# Install vim and set as default editor
sudo apt-get install -y vim
sudo update-alternatives --set editor /usr/bin/vim.basic
Install the required packages (needed to compile Ruby and native extensions to Ruby gems):
sudo apt-get install -y runit build-essential git zlib1g-dev libyaml-dev libssl-dev libgdbm-dev libreadline-dev libncurses5-dev libffi-dev curl openssh-server checkinstall libxml2-dev libxslt-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libicu-dev logrotate pkg-config cmake nodejs graphviz jq shared-mime-info
Since Debian Stretch, runit
isn't started anymore automatically, but this gets handled by the init system. Additionally, Ruby requires the OpenSSL 1.0 development packages instead of 1.1. For a default installation use these packages:
sudo apt-get install -y runit-systemd libssl1.0-dev
To start runit
automatically on Ubuntu Bionic, we need to install runit-systemd
:
sudo apt-get install -y runit-systemd
The use of Ruby version managers such as RVM, rbenv or chruby with Huginn in production frequently leads to hard-to-diagnose problems. Version managers are not supported and we strongly advise everyone to follow the instructions below to use a system Ruby.
Remove the old Ruby versions if present:
sudo apt-get remove -y ruby1.8 ruby1.9
Download Ruby and compile it:
mkdir /tmp/ruby && cd /tmp/ruby
curl -L --progress-bar https://cache.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/3.2/ruby-3.2.6.tar.xz | tar xJ
cd ruby-3.2.6
./configure --disable-install-rdoc
make -j`nproc`
sudo make install
Install foreman:
sudo gem install foreman --no-document
Create a user for Huginn:
sudo adduser --disabled-login --gecos 'Huginn' huginn
Install the database packages
sudo apt-get install -y mysql-server mysql-client libmysqlclient-dev
For Debian Stretch, replace libmysqlclient-dev
with default-libmysqlclient-dev
. See the additional notes section for more information.
For Debian BullsEye:
sudo apt-get install -y default-mysql-server default-mysql-client default-libmysqlclient-dev
Check the installed MySQL version (remember if its >= 5.5.3 for the .env
configuration done later):
mysql --version
Secure your installation. During this step, you will be prompted to pick a MySQL root password (can be anything)
sudo mysql_secure_installation
The mysql_secure_installation
script does not apply the user-provided password to the MySQL root user on Ubuntu systems. To apply a password to the MySQL root user on Ubuntu systems, see the additional notes section for more information before proceeding.
Login to MySQL using the root password you set in the previous steps
mysql -u root -p
# Type the MySQL root password
Create a user for Huginn do not type the mysql>
, this is part of the prompt. Change $password
in the command below to a real password you pick
mysql> CREATE USER 'huginn'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '$password';
Ensure you can use the InnoDB engine which is necessary to support long indexes
mysql> SET default_storage_engine=INNODB;
# If this fails, check your MySQL config files (e.g. `/etc/mysql/*.cnf`, `/etc/mysql/conf.d/*`)
# for the setting "innodb = off"
Grant the Huginn user necessary permissions on the database
mysql> GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE, DROP, INDEX, ALTER, LOCK TABLES ON `huginn_production`.* TO 'huginn'@'localhost';
Use the flush privileges command to save the new permissions
mysql> FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Quit the database session
mysql> \q
Try connecting to the new database with the new user
sudo -u huginn -H mysql -u huginn -p -D huginn_production
# Type the password you replaced $password with earlier
You should now see ERROR 1049 (42000): Unknown database 'huginn_production'
which is fine because we will create the database later.
You are done installing the database and can go back to the rest of the installation.
Install the database packages
sudo apt-get install -y postgresql libpq-dev
Create a user for Huginn and set its database connection password. If you want the user to be able to create the database, add -d
sudo -u postgres -H createuser -P huginn
Create a database
sudo -u postgres -H createdb -O huginn -T template0 huginn_production
Try connecting to the new database with the new user
sudo -u huginn psql -h localhost -W huginn_production
# Type the password you set earlier
You should now be greeted by the psql
interactive client and be connected to the huginn_production
database. Quit the database session with \q
or CTRL-D
# We'll install Huginn into the home directory of the user "huginn"
cd /home/huginn
# Clone Huginn repository
sudo -u huginn -H git clone https://github.com/huginn/huginn.git -b master huginn
# Go to Huginn installation folder
cd /home/huginn/huginn
# Copy the example Huginn config
sudo -u huginn -H cp .env.example .env
# Create the log/, tmp/pids/ and tmp/sockets/ directories
sudo -u huginn mkdir -p log tmp/pids tmp/sockets
# Make sure Huginn can write to the log/ and tmp/ directories
sudo chown -R huginn log/ tmp/
sudo chmod -R u+rwX,go-w log/ tmp/
# Make sure permissions are set correctly
sudo chmod -R u+rwX,go-w log/
sudo chmod -R u+rwX tmp/
sudo -u huginn -H chmod o-rwx .env
# Copy the example Unicorn config
sudo -u huginn -H cp config/unicorn.rb.example config/unicorn.rb
# Update Huginn config file and follow the instructions
sudo -u huginn -H editor .env
If you are using a local MySQL server the database configuration should look like this (use the password of the huginn MySQL user you created earlier):
DATABASE_ADAPTER=mysql2
DATABASE_RECONNECT=true
DATABASE_NAME=huginn_production
DATABASE_POOL=20
DATABASE_USERNAME=huginn
DATABASE_PASSWORD='$password'
#DATABASE_HOST=your-domain-here.com
#DATABASE_PORT=3306
#DATABASE_SOCKET=/tmp/mysql.sock
DATABASE_ENCODING=utf8
# MySQL only: If you are running a MySQL server >=5.5.3, you should
# set DATABASE_ENCODING to utf8mb4 instead of utf8 so that the
# database can hold 4-byte UTF-8 characters like emoji.
#DATABASE_ENCODING=utf8mb4
If you are using a local PostgreSQL server the database configuration should look like this (use the password of the huginn PostgreSQL user you created earlier):
DATABASE_ADAPTER=postgresql
DATABASE_RECONNECT=true
DATABASE_NAME=huginn_production
DATABASE_POOL=20
DATABASE_USERNAME=huginn
DATABASE_PASSWORD='$password'
DATABASE_HOST=localhost
DATABASE_PORT=5432
DATABASE_ENCODING=utf8
Important: Uncomment the RAILS_ENV setting to run Huginn in the production rails environment
RAILS_ENV=production
Change the Unicorn config if needed, the requirements.md has a section explaining the suggested amount of unicorn workers:
# Increase the amount of workers if you expect to have a high load instance.
# 2 are enough for most use cases, if the server has less then 2GB of RAM
# decrease the worker amount to 1
sudo -u huginn -H editor config/unicorn.rb
Important Note: Make sure to edit both .env
and unicorn.rb
to match your setup.
Note: If you want to use HTTPS, which is what we recommend, see Using HTTPS for the additional steps.
Note: For configuration changes after finishing the initial installation you have to re-export (see Install Init Script) the init script every time you change .env
, unicorn.rb
or your Procfile
!
Note: As of bundler 1.5.2, you can invoke bundle install -jN
(where N
the number of your processor cores) and enjoy parallel gem installation with measurable difference in completion time (~60% faster). Check the number of your cores with nproc
. For more information check this post. First make sure you have bundler >= 1.5.2 (run bundle -v
) as it addresses some issues that were fixed in 1.5.2.
sudo -u huginn -H bundle install --deployment --without development test
# Create the database
sudo -u huginn -H bundle exec rake db:create RAILS_ENV=production
# Migrate to the latest version
sudo -u huginn -H bundle exec rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=production
# Create admin user and example agents using the default admin/password login
sudo -u huginn -H bundle exec rake db:seed RAILS_ENV=production SEED_USERNAME=admin SEED_PASSWORD=password
When done you see See the Huginn Wiki for more Agent examples! https://github.com/huginn/huginn/wiki
Note: This will create an initial user, you can change the username and password by supplying it in environmental variables SEED_USERNAME
and SEED_PASSWORD
as seen above. If you don't change the password (and it is set to the default one) please wait with exposing Huginn to the public internet until the installation is done and you've logged into the server and changed your password.
sudo -u huginn -H bundle exec rake assets:precompile RAILS_ENV=production
Huginn uses foreman to generate the init scripts based on a Procfile
Edit the Procfile
and choose one of the suggested versions for production
sudo -u huginn -H editor Procfile
Comment out (disable) these two lines
web: bundle exec rails server -p ${PORT-3000} -b ${IP-0.0.0.0}
jobs: bundle exec rails runner bin/threaded.rb
Enable (remove the comment) from these lines or those
# web: bundle exec unicorn -c config/unicorn.rb
# jobs: bundle exec rails runner bin/threaded.rb
Note: Ensure you have no leading spaces before web:
or jobs:
in your Procfile
file.
If you use a directory other than /home/huginn/huginn/
for the app, change the location of the runit
logfile in lib/tasks/production.rake
, for example:
run('foreman export runit -a huginn -l /opt/huginn/log /etc/service')
Export the init scripts:
sudo bundle exec rake production:export
Note: You have to re-export the init script every time you change the configuration in .env
or your Procfile
!
sudo cp deployment/logrotate/huginn /etc/logrotate.d/huginn
Change the location of the log directory if you have chosen to log to a different directory other than /home/huginn/huginn/log/
sudo bundle exec rake production:status
Note: Nginx is the officially supported web server for Huginn. If you cannot or do not want to use Nginx as your web server, the wiki has a page on how to configure apache.
sudo apt-get install -y nginx
Copy the example site config:
sudo cp deployment/nginx/huginn /etc/nginx/sites-available/huginn
sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/huginn /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/huginn
Make sure to edit the config file to match your setup, if you are running multiple nginx sites remove the default_server
argument from the listen
directives:
# Change YOUR_SERVER_FQDN to the fully-qualified
# domain name of your host serving Huginn.
sudo editor /etc/nginx/sites-available/huginn
Remove the default nginx site, if huginn is the only enabled nginx site:
sudo rm /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/default
Note: If you want to use HTTPS, which is what we recommend, replace the huginn
Nginx config with huginn-ssl
. See Using HTTPS for HTTPS configuration details.
Validate your huginn
or huginn-ssl
Nginx config file with the following command:
sudo nginx -t
You should receive syntax is okay
and test is successful
messages. If you receive errors check your huginn
or huginn-ssl
Nginx config file for typos, etc. as indicated in the error message given.
sudo service nginx restart
Visit YOUR_SERVER in your web browser for your first Huginn login. The setup has created a default admin account for you. You can use it to log in:
admin (or your SEED_USERNAME)
password (or your SEED_PASSWORD)
Enjoy! :sparkles: :star: :fireworks:
You can use cd /home/huginn/huginn && sudo bundle exec rake production:start
and cd /home/huginn/huginn && sudo bundle exec rake production:stop
to start and stop Huginn.
Be sure to read the section about how to update your Huginn installation as well! You can also use Capistrano to keep your installation up to date.
Note: We also recommend applying standard security practices to your server, including installing a firewall (ufw is good on Ubuntu and also available for Debian).
To use Huginn with HTTPS:
.env
:
FORCE_SSL
option to true
.huginn-ssl
Nginx example config instead of the huginn
config:
sudo cp deployment/nginx/huginn-ssl /etc/nginx/sites-available/huginn
YOUR_SERVER_FQDN
.ssl_certificate
and ssl_certificate_key
.Restart Nginx, export the init script and restart Huginn:
cd /home/huginn/huginn
sudo service nginx restart
sudo bundle exec rake production:export
Using a self-signed certificate is discouraged, but if you must use it follow the normal directions. Then generate the certificate:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/nginx/ssl/
cd /etc/nginx/ssl/
sudo openssl req -newkey rsa:2048 -x509 -nodes -days 3560 -out huginn.crt -keyout huginn.key
sudo chmod o-r huginn.key
If something went wrong during the installation please make sure you followed the instructions and did not miss a step.
When your Huginn instance still is not working first run the self check:
cd /home/huginn/huginn
sudo bundle exec rake production:check
We are sorry when you are still having issues, now please check the various log files for error messages:
/var/log/nginx/huginn_error.log
This file should be empty, it is the first place to look because nginx
is the first application handling the request your are sending to Huginn.
Common problems:
connect() to unix:/home/huginn/huginn/tmp/sockets/unicorn.socket failed
: The Unicorn application server is not running, ensure you uncommented one of the example configuration below the PRODUCTION
label in your Procfile and the unicorn config file (/home/huginn/huginn/config/unicorn.rb
) exists.138 open() "/home/huginn/huginn/public/..." failed (13: Permission denied)
: The /home/huginn/huginn/public
directory needs to be readable by the nginx user (which is per default www-data
)/home/huginn/huginn/log/unicorn.log
Should only contain HTTP request log entries like: 10.0.2.2 - - [18/Aug/2015:21:15:12 +0000] "GET / HTTP/1.0" 200 - 0.0110
If you see ruby exception backtraces or other error messages the problem could be one of the following:
/home/huginn/huginn/config/unicorn.rb
does not exist/home/huginn/huginn/log/production.log
This file is pretty verbose, you want to look at it if you are getting the We're sorry, but something went wrong.
error message when using Huginn. This is an example backtrace that can help you or other huginn developers locate the issue:
NoMethodError (undefined method `name' for nil:NilClass):
app/controllers/jobs_controller.rb:6:in `index'
config/initializers/silence_worker_status_logger.rb:5:in `call_with_silence_worker_status'
/home/huginn/huginn/log/*/current
Those files will contain error messages or backtraces if one of your agent is not performing as they should. The easiest way to debug an Agent is to watch all your log files for changes and trigger the agent to run via the Huginn web interface.
The log file location depends your Procfile
configuration, this command will give you a list of the available logs:
ls -al /home/huginn/huginn/log/*/current
When you want to monitor the background processes you can easily watch all the files for changes:
tail -f /home/huginn/huginn/log/*/current
You probably found an error message or exception backtrace you could not resolve. Please create a new issue and include as much information as you could gather about the problem your are experiencing.
Debian Stretch switched from MySQL to MariaDB. All packages with mysql
in the name are just wrappers around the MariaDB ones, with some containing some compatibility symlinks. Huginn should also work fine with the MariaDB packages directly, although to keep the installation instructions more compact, they still use the MySQL packages.
MySQL installations (>= 5.7.26) on Ubuntu use the UNIX auth_socket
plugin by default, such that authentication is handled by system user credientials. In order to access the MySQL root user from any system user, you have to set the MySQL root user password in the user database. Sign into the MySQL shell
sudo mysql -u root -p
# The default password upon installation is blank
Once in the MySQL shell, run the following command to set the password for the root user by replacing new-password
with a password of your choice
ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password BY 'new-password';
After the change has been made, exit the MySQL shell with \q
.
For the change to propogate, restart the MySQL server
sudo service mysql restart