Systemd configuration ---------------------- Systemd offers a convenient way to manage your funkwhale instance if you're not using docker. We'll see how to setup systemd to proprely start a funkwhale instance. First, download the sample unitfiles: .. parsed-literal:: curl -L -o "/etc/systemd/system/funkwhale.target" "https://code.eliotberriot.com/funkwhale/funkwhale/raw/|version|/deploy/funkwhale.target" curl -L -o "/etc/systemd/system/funkwhale-server.service" "https://code.eliotberriot.com/funkwhale/funkwhale/raw/|version|/deploy/funkwhale-server.service" curl -L -o "/etc/systemd/system/funkwhale-worker.service" "https://code.eliotberriot.com/funkwhale/funkwhale/raw/|version|/deploy/funkwhale-worker.service" curl -L -o "/etc/systemd/system/funkwhale-beat.service" "https://code.eliotberriot.com/funkwhale/funkwhale/raw/|version|/deploy/funkwhale-beat.service" This will download three unitfiles: - ``funkwhale-server.service`` to launch the funkwhale web server - ``funkwhale-worker.service`` to launch the funkwhale task worker - ``funkwhale-beat.service`` to launch the funkwhale task beat (this is for recurring tasks) - ``funkwhale.target`` to easily stop and start all of the services at once You can of course review and edit them to suit your deployment scenario if needed, but the defaults should be fine. Once the files are downloaded, reload systemd: .. code-block:: shell systemctl daemon-reload And start the services: .. code-block:: shell systemctl start funkwhale.target You can check the statuses of all processes like this: .. code-block:: shell systemctl status funkwhale-\*