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scrutiny/docs/INSTALL_MANUAL.md

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# Manual Install
While the easiest way to get started with [Scrutiny is using Docker](https://github.com/AnalogJ/scrutiny#docker),
it is possible to run it manually without much work. You can even mix and match, using Docker for one component and
a manual installation for the other. There's also [an installer](INSTALL_ANSIBLE.md) which automates this manual installation procedure.
Scrutiny is made up of three components: an influxdb Database, a collector and a webapp/api. Here's how each component can be deployed manually.
> Note: the `/opt/scrutiny` directory is not hardcoded, you can use any directory name/path.
## InfluxDB
Please follow the official InfluxDB installation guide. Note, you'll need to install v2.2.0+.
https://docs.influxdata.com/influxdb/v2.2/install/
## Webapp/API
### Dependencies
Since the webapp is packaged as a stand alone binary, there isn't really any software you need to install other than `glibc`
which is included by most linux OS's already.
### Directory Structure
Now let's create a directory structure to contain the Scrutiny files & binary.
```
mkdir -p /opt/scrutiny/config
mkdir -p /opt/scrutiny/web
mkdir -p /opt/scrutiny/bin
```
### Config file
While it is possible to run the webapp/api without a config file, the defaults are designed for use in a container environment,
and so will need to be overridden. So the first thing you'll need to do is create a config file that looks like the following:
```
# stored in /opt/scrutiny/config/scrutiny.yaml
version: 1
web:
database:
# The Scrutiny webapp will create a database for you, however the parent directory must exist.
location: /opt/scrutiny/config/scrutiny.db
src:
frontend:
# The path to the Scrutiny frontend files (js, css, images) must be specified.
# We'll populate it with files in the next section
path: /opt/scrutiny/web
# if you're runnning influxdb on a different host (or using a cloud-provider) you'll need to update the host & port below.
# token, org, bucket are unnecessary for a new InfluxDB installation, as Scrutiny will automatically run the InfluxDB setup,
# and store the information in the config file. If you 're re-using an existing influxdb installation, you'll need to provide
# the `token`
influxdb:
host: localhost
port: 8086
# token: 'my-token'
# org: 'my-org'
# bucket: 'bucket'
```
> Note: for a full list of available configuration options, please check the [example.scrutiny.yaml](https://github.com/AnalogJ/scrutiny/blob/master/example.scrutiny.yaml) file.
### Download Files
Next, we'll download the Scrutiny API binary and frontend files from the [latest Github release](https://github.com/analogj/scrutiny/releases).
The files you need to download are named:
- **scrutiny-web-linux-amd64** - save this file to `/opt/scrutiny/bin`
- **scrutiny-web-frontend.tar.gz** - save this file to `/opt/scrutiny/web`
### Prepare Scrutiny
Now that we have downloaded the required files, let's prepare the filesystem.
```
# Let's make sure the Scrutiny webapp is executable.
chmod +x /opt/scrutiny/bin/scrutiny-web-linux-amd64
# Next, lets extract the frontend files.
# NOTE: after extraction, there **should not** be a `dist` subdirectory in `/opt/scrutiny/web` directory.
cd /opt/scrutiny/web
tar xvzf scrutiny-web-frontend.tar.gz --strip-components 1 -C .
# Cleanup
rm -rf scrutiny-web-frontend.tar.gz
```
### Start Scrutiny Webapp
Finally, we start the Scrutiny webapp:
```
/opt/scrutiny/bin/scrutiny-web-linux-amd64 start --config /opt/scrutiny/config/scrutiny.yaml
```
The webapp listens for traffic on `http://0.0.0.0:8080` by default.
## Collector
### Dependencies
Unlike the webapp, the collector does have some dependencies:
- `smartctl`, v7+
- `cron` (or an alternative process scheduler)
Unfortunately the version of `smartmontools` (which contains `smartctl`) available in some of the base OS repositories is ancient.
So you'll need to install the v7+ version using one of the following commands:
- **Ubuntu (22.04/Jammy/LTS):** `apt-get install -y smartmontools`
- **Ubuntu (18.04/Bionic):** `apt-get install -y smartmontools=7.0-0ubuntu1~ubuntu18.04.1`
- **Centos8:**
- `dnf install https://extras.getpagespeed.com/release-el8-latest.rpm`
- `dnf install smartmontools`
- **FreeBSD:** `pkg install smartmontools`
### Directory Structure
Now let's create a directory structure to contain the Scrutiny collector binary.
```
mkdir -p /opt/scrutiny/bin
```
### Download Files
Next, we'll download the Scrutiny collector binary from the [latest Github release](https://github.com/analogj/scrutiny/releases).
The file you need to download is named:
- **scrutiny-collector-metrics-linux-amd64** - save this file to `/opt/scrutiny/bin`
### Prepare Scrutiny
Now that we have downloaded the required files, let's prepare the filesystem.
```
# Let's make sure the Scrutiny collector is executable.
chmod +x /opt/scrutiny/bin/scrutiny-collector-metrics-linux-amd64
```
### Start Scrutiny Collector, Populate Webapp
Next, we will manually trigger the collector, to populate the Scrutiny dashboard:
> NOTE: if you need to pass a config file to the scrutiny collector, you can provide it using the `--config` flag.
```
/opt/scrutiny/bin/scrutiny-collector-metrics-linux-amd64 run --api-endpoint "http://localhost:8080"
```
### Schedule Collector with Cron
Finally you need to schedule the collector to run periodically.
This may be different depending on your OS/environment, but it may look something like this:
```
# open crontab
crontab -e
# add a line for Scrutiny
*/15 * * * * . /etc/profile; /opt/scrutiny/bin/scrutiny-collector-metrics-linux-amd64 run --api-endpoint "http://localhost:8080"
```