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Setting Up a Public UI

This page explains how to set up a polkadot-js/apps UI for Edgeware, using the Edgeware branch of apps. The main difference is that the Edgeware branch supports the types defined in Edgeware's voting and governance modules.

0. Provisioning a server

Provision an appropriately sized server from one of the recommended VPS providers.

We assume you are using Ubuntu 18.04 x64; other versions or operating systems will require adjustments to these instructions.

Set up DNS pointing to the server, from e.g. apps.edgewa.re. It is strongly recommended that you do this now.

SSH into the server.

1. Installing apps and setting it up as a system service

Clone the apps repo:

git clone https://github.com/hicommonwealth/apps.git
cd apps

Install nodejs 11.x and yarn. You will need to add new package repositories:

curl -sS https://dl.yarnpkg.com/debian/pubkey.gpg | sudo apt-key add -
echo "deb https://dl.yarnpkg.com/debian/ stable main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/yarn.list
curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_11.x | sudo -E bash -
apt update
apt install -y nodejs yarn

Install dependencies:

yarn

Create the apps service:

{
echo '[Unit]'
echo 'Description=EdgewareApps'
echo '[Service]'
echo 'Type=exec'
echo 'WorkingDirectory='`pwd`
echo 'Environment=ENV=production'
echo 'ExecStart=yarn run start'
echo '[Install]'
echo 'WantedBy=multi-user.target'
} > /etc/systemd/system/apps.service

Start and check the service is running:

systemctl start apps
systemctl status apps
curl localhost:3000

2. Configuring an SSL certificate

To make apps available in a secure manner, we will use Let's Encrypt and certbot to make the server available via SSL.

Install Certbot:

apt -y install software-properties-common
add-apt-repository universe
add-apt-repository ppa:certbot/certbot
apt update
apt -y install certbot python-certbot-nginx

Run certbot to get a certificate from Let's Encrypt:

certbot --nginx

Certbot will ask you some questions, start its own web server, and talk to Let's Encrypt to issue a certificate.

When it asks you whether to redirect traffic from port 80 to SSL, you should respond yes.

3. Updating the nginx configuration

Set the intended public address of the server, e.g. apps.edgewa.re, as an environment variable:

export name=apps.edgewa.re

Set up an nginx configuration. This will inject the public address you have just defined.

{
echo 'user www-data; ## Default: nobody'
echo 'worker_processes 5; ## Default: 1'
echo 'error_log /var/log/nginx/error.log;'
echo 'pid /var/run/nginx.pid;'
echo 'worker_rlimit_nofile 8192;'
echo ''
echo 'events {'
echo ' worker_connections 4096; ## Default: 1024'
echo '}'
echo ''
echo 'http {'
echo ' map $http_upgrade $connection_upgrade {'
echo ' default upgrade;'
echo " \'\' close;"
echo ' }'
echo ' server {'
echo ' listen 443 ssl;'
echo ' server_name '$name';'
echo ''
echo ' ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/'$name'/cert.pem;'
echo ' ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/'$name'/privkey.pem;'
echo ' ssl_session_timeout 5m;'
echo ' ssl_protocols SSLv2 SSLv3 TLSv1;'
echo ' ssl_ciphers HIGH:!aNULL:!MD5;'
echo ' ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;'
echo ''
echo ' location / {'
echo ' proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:3000 ;'
echo ' }'
echo ' }'
echo '}'
} > /etc/nginx/nginx.conf

Start nginx, and ensure it is run on system startup:

systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl start nginx
systemctl enable nginx

Check your server is running from your local browser.