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330 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
330 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# Migrating to the new Pixelfed Docker setup
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There is [*a lot* of changes](https://github.com/pixelfed/pixelfed/pull/4844) in how Pixelfed Docker/Docker Compose images work - it's a complete rewrite - with a bunch of breaking changes.
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## No more anonymous Docker Compose volumes
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The old `docker-compose.yml` configuration file [declared four anonymous volumes](https://github.com/pixelfed/pixelfed/blob/b1ff44ca2f75c088a11576fb03b5bad2fbed4d5c/docker-compose.yml#L72-L76) for storing Pixelfed related data within.
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These are no longer used, instead favoring a [Docker bind volume](https://docs.docker.com/storage/bind-mounts/) approach where content are stored directly on the server disk, outside
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of a Docker volume.
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The consequence of this change is that *all* data stored in the - now unsupported - Docker volumes will no longer be accessible by Pixelfed.
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* The `db-data` volume *definitely* contain important data - it's your database after all!
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* The `app-storage` volume *definitely* contain important data - it's files uploaded to - or seen by - your server!
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* The `redis-data` volume *might* contain important data (depending on your configuration)
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* The `app-bootstrap` volume does not contain any important data - all of it will be generated automatically in the new setup on startup. We will *not* be migrating this!
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### Migrating off anonymous Docker Compose volumes
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#### Caveats and warnings
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**NOTE**: This is a best-effort guide to help migrate off the old system, the operation is potentially rather complicated (and risky), so please do be careful!
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***PLEASE MAKE SURE TO BACKUP YOUR SERVER AND DATA BEFORE ATTEMPTING A MIGRATION***
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We provide a "migration container" for your convenience that can access both the new and old volumes, allowing you to copy the data into the setup.
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**It's important to note that this is a *copy* operation - so disk usage will (temporarily) double while you migrate**
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**YOUR INSTANCE WILL BE *DOWN* WHILE DOING THE MIGRATION, PLEASE PLAN ACCORDINGLY, DEPENDING ON DATA SIZE IT COULD TAKE ANYWHERE FROM 5 *MINUTES* TO 5 *HOURS***
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#### 0. Backup, rollout, and rollback plan
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1. Make sure to backup your server (ideally *after* step 1 below has completed, but *before* is better than not at all!)
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1. Capture the current Git version / Pixelfed release you are on (e.g. `git --no-pager log -1` outputs the commit reference as the 2nd word in first line)
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1. Backup your `.env` file (we will do this in step 3 as well)
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1. Backup your `docker-compose.yml` file (`cp docker-compose.yml docker-compose.yml.old`)
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1. Read through the *entire* document before starting
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#### 1. Migrate your ".env" file
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The new `.env` file for Docker is a bit different from the old one (many new settings!) so the easiest is to grab the new `.env.docker` file and modify it from scratch again.
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```shell
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$ cp .env .env.old
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$ wget -O .env.new https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pixelfed/pixelfed/dev/.env.docker
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```
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Then open your old `.env.old` configuration file, and for each of the key/value pairs within it, find and update the key in the new `.env.new` configuration file.
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Don't worry though, the file might *look* different (and significantly larger) but it behaves *exactly* the way the old file did, it just has way more options!
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If a key is missing in `.env.new`, don't worry, you can just add those key/value pairs back to the new file - ideally in the `Other configuration` section near the end of the file - but anywhere *should* be fine.
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This is a great time to review your settings and familiarize you with all the new settings.
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In *particular* the following sections
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* `PHP configuration` section (near the end of the file) where
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* The `PHP_VERSION` settings controls your PHP version
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* The `PHP_MEMORY_LIMIT` settings controls your PHP memory limit
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* `Docker Specific configuration` section (near the end of the file) where
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* The `DOCKER_DATA_ROOT` setting dictate where the new migrated data will live.
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* The `DOCKER_RUN_ONE_TIME_SETUP_TASKS` controls if the `One time setup tasks` should run or not. We do *not* want this, since your Pixelfed instance already is set up!
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* [Frequently Asked Question / FAQ](faq.md)
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* [How do I use my own Proxy server?](faq.md#how-do-i-use-my-own-proxy-server)
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* [How do I use my own SSL certificate?](faq.md#how-do-i-use-my-own-ssl-certificate)
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#### 2. Stop all running containers
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Stop *all* running containers (web, worker, redis, db)
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```shell
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$ docker compose down
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```
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#### 3. Pull down the new source code
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Update your project to the latest release of Pixelfed by running
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```shell
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$ git pull origin $release
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```
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Where `$release` is either `dev`, `staging` or a [tagged release](https://github.com/pixelfed/pixelfed/releases) such as `v0.12.0`.
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#### 4. Run the migration container
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You can access the Docker container with both old and new volumes by running the following command
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```shell
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$ docker compose -f docker-compose.migrate.yml run migrate bash
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```
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This will put you in the `/migrate` directory within the container, containing 8 directories like shown here
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```plain
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|-- app-storage
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| |-- new
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| `-- old
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|-- db-data
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| |-- new
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| `-- old
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`-- redis-data
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|-- new
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`-- old
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```
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#### 5. Check the folders
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##### Old folders
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The following commands should all return *SOME* files and data - if they do not - then there might be an issue with the anonymous volume binding.
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```shell
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$ ls app-storage/old
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$ ls db-data/old
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$ ls redis-data/old
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```
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##### New folders
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The following commands should all return *NO* files and data - if they contain data - you need to either delete it (backup first!) or skip that migration step.
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If you haven't run `docker compose up` since you updated your project in step (2) - they should be empty and good to go.
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```shell
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$ ls app-storage/new
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$ ls db-data/new
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$ ls redis-data/new
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```
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#### 6. Copy the data
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Now we will copy the data from the old volumes, to the new ones.
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The migration container has [`rsync`](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-use-rsync-to-sync-local-and-remote-directories) installed - which is perfect for that kind of work!
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**NOTE** It's important that the "source" (first path in the `rsync` command) has a trailing `/` - otherwise the directory layout will turn out wrong!
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**NOTE** Depending on your server, these commands might take some time to finish, each command should provide a progress bar with rough time estimation.
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**NOTE** `rsync` should preserve ownership, permissions, and symlinks correctly for you as well for all the files copied.
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Lets copy the data by running the following commands:
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```shell
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$ rsync -avP app-storage/old/ app-storage/new
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$ rsync -avP db-data/old/ db-data/new
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$ rsync -avP redis-data/old/ redis-data/new
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```
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#### 7. Sanity checking
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Lets make sure everything copied over successfully!
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Each *new* directory should contain *something* like (but not always exactly) the following - **NO** directory should have a single folder called `old`, if they do, the `rsync` commands above didn't work correctly - and you need to move the content of the `old` folder into the "root" of the `new` folder like shown a bit in the following sections.
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The **redis-data/new** directory might also contain a `server.pid`
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```shell
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$ ls redis-data/new
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appendonlydir
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```
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The **app-storage/new** directory should look *something* like this
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```shell
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$ ls app-storage/new
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app debugbar docker framework logs oauth-private.key oauth-public.key purify
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```
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The **db-data/new** directory should look *something* like this. There might be a lot of files, or very few files, but there *must* be a `mysql`, `performance_schema`, and `${DB_DATABASE}` (e.g. `pixelfed_prod` directory)
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```shell
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$ ls db-data/new
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aria_log_control ddl_recovery-backup.log ib_buffer_pool ib_logfile0 ibdata1 mariadb_upgrade_info multi-master.info mysql performance_schema pixelfed_prod sys undo001 undo002 undo003
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```
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If everything looks good, type `exit` to leave exit the migration container
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#### 6. Starting up the your Pixelfed server again
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With all an updated Pixelfed (step 2), updated `.env` file (step 3), migrated data (step 4, 5, 6 and 7) we're ready to start things back up again.
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But before we start your Pixelfed server back up again, lets put the new `.env` file we made in step 1 in its right place.
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```shell
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$ cp .env.new .env
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```
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##### The Database
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First thing we want to try is to start up the database by running the following command and checking the logs
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```shell
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$ docker compose up -d db
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$ docker compose logs --tail 250 --follow db
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```
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if there are no errors and the server isn't crashing, great! If you have an easy way of connecting to the Database via a GUI or CLI client, do that as well and verify the database and tables are all there.
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##### Redis
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Next thing we want to try is to start up the Redis server by running the following command and checking the logs
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```shell
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$ docker compose up -d redis
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$ docker compose logs --tail 250 --follow redis
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```
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if there are no errors and the server isn't crashing, great!
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##### Worker
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Next thing we want to try is to start up the Worker server by running the following command and checking the logs
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```shell
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$ docker compose up -d worker
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$ docker compose logs --tail 250 --follow worker
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```
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The container should output a *lot* of logs from the [docker-entrypoint system](customizing.md#running-commands-on-container-start), but *eventually* you should see these messages
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* `Configuration complete; ready for start up`
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* `Horizon started successfully.`
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If you see one or both of those messages, great, the worker seems to be running.
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If the worker is crash looping, inspect the logs and try to resolve the issues.
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You can consider the following additional steps:
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* Enabling `ENTRYPOINT_DEBUG` which will show even more log output to help understand whats going on
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* Enabling `DOCKER_ENSURE_OWNERSHIP_PATHS` against the path(s) that might have permission issues
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* Fixing permission issues directly on the host since your data should all be in the `${DOCKER_DATA_ROOT}` folder (`./docker-compose-state/data` by default)
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##### Web
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The final service, `web`, which will bring your site back online! What a journey it has been.
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Lets get to it, run these commands to start the `web` service and inspect the logs.
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```shell
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$ docker compose up -d web
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$ docker compose logs --tail 250 --follow web
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```
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The output should be pretty much identical to that of the `worker`, so please see that section for debugging tips if the container is crash looping.
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If the `web` service came online without issues, start the rest of the (optional) services, such as the `proxy`, if enabled, by running
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```shell
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$ docker compose up -d
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$ docker compose logs --tail 250 --follow
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```
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If you changed anything in the `.env` file while debugging, some containers might restart now, thats perfectly fine.
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#### 7. Verify
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With all services online, it's time to go to your browser and check everything is working
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1. Upload and post a picture
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1. Comment on a post
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1. Like a post
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1. Check Horizon (`https://${APP_DOMAIN}/horizon`) for any errors
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1. Check the Docker compose logs via `docker compose logs --follow`
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If everything looks fine, yay, you made it to the end! Lets do some cleanup
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#### 8. Final steps + cleanup
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With everything working, please take a new snapshot/backup of your server *before* we do any cleanup. A post-migration snapshot is incredibly useful, since it contains both the old and new configuration + data, making any recovery much easier in a rollback scenario later.
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Now, with all the data in the new folders, you can delete the old Docker Container volumes (if you want, completely optional)
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List all volumes, and give them a look:
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```shell
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$ docker volume ls
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```
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The volumes we want to delete *ends* with the volume name (`db-data`, `app-storage`, `redis-data`, and `app-bootstrap`.) but has some prefix in front of them.
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Once you have found the volumes in in the list, delete each of them by running:
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```shell
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$ docker volume rm $volume_name_in_column_two_of_the_output
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```
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You can also delete the `docker-compose.yml.old` and `.env.old` file since they are no longer needed
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```shell
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$ rm docker-compose.yml.old
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$ rm .env.old
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```
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### Rollback
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Oh no, something went wrong? No worries, we you got backups and a quick way back!
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#### Move `docker-compose.yml` back
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```shell
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$ cp docker-compose.yml docker-compose.yml.new
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$ cp docker-compose.yml.old docker-compose.yml
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```
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#### Move `.env` file back
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```shell
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$ cp env.old .env
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```
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#### Go back to old source code version
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```shell
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$ git checkout $commit_id_from_step_0
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```
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#### Start things back up
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```shell
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docker compose up -d
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```
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#### Verify it worked
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