76 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
76 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
# Description
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A poorly named "Mailserver" is essentially a Whisper node that stores message history in either a LevelDB or PostgreSQL database.
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A Status app user can run their own Mailserver for faster message retrieval or additional security.
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# Service Ports
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* `30303` TCP/UDP - [DevP2P](https://github.com/ethereum/devp2p) wire protocol port. Must __ALWAYS__ be public.
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* `8545` TCP - [JSON RPC](https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/json-rpc) management port. Must __NEVER__ be public.
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* `9090` TCP - [Prometheus](https://prometheus.io/docs/concepts/data_model/) metrics port. Should not be public.
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# Setup methods
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This document describes the two alternative ways to start a Status Mailserver:
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* [Docker Compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/) - More self-contained and portable
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* [Systemd Service](https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/) - More local and configurable
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## Docker Compose
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The simplest way is to just use:
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```
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make run-mailserver-docker
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```
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This will generate the necessary config, compose and then start the container.
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For more details read the [README](_assets/compose/mailserver/README.md).
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## Systemd Service
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The other way is to run the `mailserver` under `systemd`:
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```
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make run-mailserver-systemd
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```
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This will generate the necessary config, define and then start a user service.
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Use `sudo` if you want it to be a system service.
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For more details read the [README](_assets/systemd/mailserver/README.md).
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# Service Healthcheck
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There's two simple ways to verify your Mailserver is up and running.
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## Query Metrics
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By making an HTTP request to the metrics port(`9090` by default) you can check if you Mailserver is receiving envelopes:
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```sh
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> curl -sS localhost:9090/metrics | grep '^waku_envelopes_received_total'
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waku_envelopes_received_total 123
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```
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Or numbers and types of peers connected:
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```sh
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> curl -sS localhost:9090/metrics | grep '^p2p_peers_count'
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p2p_peers_count{platform="linux-amd64",type="Statusd",version="v0.79.0"} 3
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```
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## JSON RPC Calls
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The JSON RPC port (`8545` by default) allows you to manage your node.
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You can list connected peers by doing:
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```sh
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> export RPC_HOST=localhost RPC_PORT=8545
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> _assets/scripts/rpc.sh admin_peers | jq -r '.result[].network.remoteAddress'
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34.68.132.118:30305
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134.209.136.123:30305
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178.128.141.249:443
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```
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Where [`rpc.sh`](./_assets/scripts/rpc.sh) is simply a thin wrapper around `curl`.
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You can use it to easily add peers too:
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```sh
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> _assets/scripts/rpc.sh admin_addPeer enode://7aa648d6e855950b2e3d3bf220c496e0cae4adfddef3e1e6062e6b177aec93bc6cdcf1282cb40d1656932ebfdd565729da440368d7c4da7dbd4d004b1ac02bf8@178.128.142.26:443
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{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id": 1, "result": true}
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```
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