# Getting Started ```{toctree} :hidden: installation.md configurations.md config_editor.md authentication.md requirements.md faq.md config_cheatsheet.md ``` ## Getting Started To get started with Auto Archiver, there are 3 main steps you need to complete. 1. [Install Auto Archiver](installation.md) 2. [Setup up your configuration](configurations.md) (if you are ok with the default settings, you can skip this step) 3. Run the archiving process The way you run the Auto Archiver depends on how you installed it (docker install or local install) ### Running a Docker Install If you installed Auto Archiver using docker, open up your terminal, and copy-paste / type the following command: ```bash docker run -it --rm -v $PWD/secrets:/app/secrets -v $PWD/local_archive:/app/local_archive bellingcat/auto-archiver ``` breaking this command down: 1. `docker run` tells docker to start a new container (an instance of the image) 2. `-it` tells docker to run in 'interactive mode' so that we get nice colour logs 3. `--rm` makes sure this container is removed after execution (less garbage locally) 4. `-v $PWD/secrets:/app/secrets` - your secrets folder with settings 1. `-v` is a volume flag which means a folder that you have on your computer will be connected to a folder inside the docker container 2. `$PWD/secrets` points to a `secrets/` folder in your current working directory (where your console points to), we use this folder as a best practice to hold all the secrets/tokens/passwords/... you use 3. `/app/secrets` points to the path the docker container where this image can be found 5. `-v $PWD/local_archive:/app/local_archive` - (optional) if you use local_storage 1. `-v` same as above, this is a volume instruction 2. `$PWD/local_archive` is a folder `local_archive/` in case you want to archive locally and have the files accessible outside docker 3. `/app/local_archive` is a folder inside docker that you can reference in your orchestration.yml file ### Example invocations The invocations below will run the auto-archiver Docker image using a configuration file that you have specified ```bash # Have auto-archiver run with the default settings, generating a settings file in ./secrets/orchestration.yaml docker run -it --rm -v $PWD/secrets:/app/secrets -v $PWD/local_archive:/app/local_archive bellingcat/auto-archiver # uses the same configuration, but with the `gsheet_feeder`, a header on row 2 and with some different column names # Note this expects you to have followed the [Google Sheets setup](how_to/google_sheets.md) and added your service_account.json to the `secrets/` folder # notice that columns is a dictionary so you need to pass it as JSON and it will override only the values provided docker run -it --rm -v $PWD/secrets:/app/secrets -v $PWD/local_archive:/app/local_archive bellingcat/auto-archiver --feeders=gsheet_feeder --gsheet_feeder.sheet="use it on another sheets doc" --gsheet_feeder.header=2 --gsheet_feeder.columns='{"url": "link"}' # Runs auto-archiver for the first time, but in 'full' mode, enabling all modules to get a full settings file docker run -it --rm -v $PWD/secrets:/app/secrets -v $PWD/local_archive:/app/local_archive bellingcat/auto-archiver --mode full ``` ------------ ### Running a Local Install ### Example invocations Once all your [local requirements](#installing-local-requirements) are correctly installed, the ```bash # all the configurations come from ./secrets/orchestration.yaml auto-archiver --config secrets/orchestration.yaml # uses the same configurations but for another google docs sheet # with a header on row 2 and with some different column names # notice that columns is a dictionary so you need to pass it as JSON and it will override only the values provided auto-archiver --config secrets/orchestration.yaml --gsheet_feeder.sheet="use it on another sheets doc" --gsheet_feeder.header=2 --gsheet_feeder.columns='{"url": "link"}' # all the configurations come from orchestration.yaml and specifies that s3 files should be private auto-archiver --config secrets/orchestration.yaml --s3_storage.private=1 ```