Signed-off-by: Suguru Hirahara <acioustick@noreply.codeberg.org>
2.0 KiB
Setting up Rageshake (optional)
The playbook can install and configure the rageshake bug report server for you.
This is useful if you're developing your own applications and would like to collect bug reports for them.
Decide on a domain and path
By default, Rageshake is configured to use its own dedicated domain (rageshake.example.com
) and requires you to adjust your DNS records.
You can override the domain and path like this:
# Switch to the domain used for Matrix services (`matrix.example.com`),
# so we won't need to add additional DNS records for Rageshake.
matrix_rageshake_hostname: "{{ matrix_server_fqn_matrix }}"
# Expose under the /rageshake subpath
matrix_rageshake_path_prefix: /rageshake
Adjusting DNS records
Once you've decided on the domain and path, you may need to adjust your DNS records to point the Rageshake domain to the Matrix server.
If you've decided to reuse the matrix.
domain, you won't need to do any extra DNS configuration.
Enabling the Rageshake service
Add the following configuration to your inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml
file (adapt to your needs):
matrix_rageshake_enabled: true
Rageshake has various options which don't have dedicated Ansible variables. You can see the full list of options in the rageshake.sample.yaml
file.
To set these, you can make use of the matrix_rageshake_configuration_extension_yaml
variable like this:
matrix_rageshake_configuration_extension_yaml: |
github_token: secrettoken
github_project_mappings:
my-app: octocat/HelloWorld
Installing
After configuring the playbook, run the installation command:
ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=setup-all,start
Usage
Refer to the rageshake documentation for available APIs, etc.