The [Discourse Docker Image][dd] makes it easy to set up Discourse on a cloud server. We will use [Digital Ocean][do], although these steps will work on other similar services. This guide assumes that you have no knowledge of Ruby/Rails or Linux shell. Feel free to skip steps you are comfortable with. # Create New Digital Ocean Droplet Discourse requires a minimum of 1 GB RAM. 2 GB RAM is recommended. We'll use "discourse" as the Hostname. Install Discourse on Ubuntu 12.04.3 LTS x64. We always recommend using [the current LTS distribution][lts]. You will receive a mail from Digital Ocean with the root password to your Droplet. (However, if you use SSH keys, you may not need a password to log in.) # Access Your Droplet Connect to your Droplet via SSH: ssh root@192.168.1.1 (Alternately, use [Putty][put] on Windows) Replace `192.168.1.1` with the IP address of your Droplet. You will be asked for permission to connect, type `yes`, then the root password, which is in the email Digital Ocean sent you when the Droplet was set up. Enter it. # Install Git sudo apt-get install git # Generate SSH Key **We strongly recommend setting a SSH key because you may need to access the Rails console for debugging purposes. This cannot be done after bootstrapping the app.** ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "your_email@example.com" (We want the default settings, so when asked to enter a file in which to save the key, just press enter. Via [GitHub's SSH guide][ssh].) # Install Docker sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install linux-image-generic-lts-raring linux-headers-generic-lts-raring Reboot the server: sudo reboot This will log you out from your SSH session, so reconnect: ssh root@192.168.1.1 Finish installing Docker: sudo wget -qO- https://get.docker.io/ | sh # Install Discourse Create a `/var/docker` folder where all the Docker related stuff will reside: mkdir /var/docker Clone the [Official Discourse Docker Image][dd] into this `/var/docker` folder: git clone https://github.com/SamSaffron/discourse_docker.git /var/docker Switch to your Docker folder: cd /var/docker Copy the `samples/standalone.yml` file into the `containers` folder as `app.yml`, so the path becomes `containers/app.yml`: cp samples/standalone.yml containers/app.yml Edit `app.yml`: nano containers/app.yml (We recommend Nano because it works like a typical GUI text editor, just use your arrow keys. Hit CtrlO then Enter to save and CtrlX to exit. However, feel free to choose whatever text editor you like. In the below screenshot we use Vim.) Edit as desired, but at minimum set `DISCOURSE_DEVELOPER_EMAILS` and `DISCOURSE_HOSTNAME`. I renamed `DISCOURSE_HOSTNAME` to `discourse.techapj.com`, this means that I want to host my instance of Discourse on `http://discourse.techapj.com/`. You'll need to modify your DNS records to reflect the IP address and preferred URL address of your server. # Mail Setup **Email is critical to Discourse. We strongly recommend configuring mail settings before bootstrapping.** - If you already have a mail server, put your existing mail server credentials in the `app.yml` file. - Otherwise, create a free account on [**Mandrill**][man] (or [Mailgun][gun], or [Mailjet][jet]), and put your mail credentials (available via the Mandrill dashboard) in the `app.yml` file. The settings you want to change are `DISCOURSE_SMTP_ADDRESS`, `DISCOURSE_SMTP_PORT`, `DISCOURSE_SMTP_USER_NAME`, `DISCOURSE_SMTP_PASSWORD`. # Add Your SSH Key If you successfully generated the SSH key as described earlier, get it: cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub Copy the entire output and paste it into the `ssh_key` setting in the `app.yml` file. # Bootstrap Discourse Be sure to save the `app.yml` file, and begin bootstrapping Discourse: sudo ./launcher bootstrap app This command may take some time, so be prepared to wait. It is automagically configuring your Discourse environment. After that completes, start Discourse: sudo ./launcher start app Congratulations! You now have your own instance of Discourse, accessible via the domain name you entered in `app.yml` earlier. You can also access it by visiting the server IP address directly, e.g. `http://192.168.1.1`. # Log In and Become Admin Sign into your Discourse instance. If you configured `DISCOURSE_DEVELOPER_EMAILS` and your email matches, your account will be made Admin by default. If your account was not made admin, try SSH'ing into your container (assuming you entered your SSH key in the `app.yml` file): ./launcher ssh my_container sudo -iu discourse cd /var/www/discourse RAILS_ENV=production bundle exec rails c u = User.last u.admin = true u.save This will manually make the first user an admin. If anything needs to be improved in this guide, feel free to ask on [meta.discourse.org][meta], or even better, submit a pull request. [dd]: https://github.com/discourse/discourse_docker [man]: https://mandrillapp.com [ssh]: https://help.github.com/articles/generating-ssh-keys [meta]: https://meta.discourse.org [do]: https://www.digitalocean.com/ [lts]: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LTS [jet]: http://www.mailjet.com/pricing [gun]: http://www.mailgun.com/ [put]: http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/download.html