NadekoBot/LinuxSetup.md
2016-07-14 18:14:19 +02:00

8.5 KiB

#SETTING UP NADEKO ON LINUX UBUNTU 14+

######If you want Nadeko to play music for you 24/7 without having to hosting it on your PC and want to keep it cheap, reliable and convenient as possible, you can try Nadeko on Linux Digital Ocean Droplet using the link http://m.do.co/c/46b4d3d44795/ (and using this link will be supporting Nadeko and will give you $10 credit)

######Keep this helpful video handy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=icV4_WPqPQk&feature=youtu.be (thanks to klincheR) it contains how to set up the Digital Ocean droplet aswell.

Assuming you have followed the link above to created an account in Digital Ocean and video to set up the bot until you get the IP address and root password (in email) to login, its time to begin:

DOWNLOAD PuTTY

http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/download.html

DOWNLOAD and INSTALL CyberDuck (for accessing filesystem using SFTP)

https://cyberduck.io

Follow the steps below:

Open PuTTY.exe that you downloaded before, and paste or enter your IP address and then click Open

If you entered your Droplets IP address correctly, it should show login as: in a newly opened window.

Now for login as:, type root and hit enter.

It should then, ask for password, type the root password you have received in your email address registered with Digital Ocean, then hit Enter

(as you are running it for the first time, it will most likely to ask you to change your root password, for that, type the "password you received through email", hit Enter, enter a "new password", hit Enter and confirm that "new password" again. SAVE that new password somewhere safe not just in mind

After you done that, you are ready to write commands.

Copy and just paste using mouse right-click (it should paste automatically)

######MONO (Source: http://www.mono-project.com/docs/getting-started/install/linux/)

1)

sudo apt-key adv --keyserver hkp://keyserver.ubuntu.com:80 --recv-keys 3FA7E0328081BFF6A14DA29AA6A19B38D3D831EF
echo "deb http://download.mono-project.com/repo/debian wheezy main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/mono-xamarin.list
sudo apt-get update

Note if the command is not be initiated, hit Enter

2)

echo "deb http://download.mono-project.com/repo/debian wheezy-apache24-compat main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/mono-xamarin.list

2.5) ONLY DEBIAN 8 and later

echo "deb http://download.mono-project.com/repo/debian wheezy-libjpeg62-compat main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/mono-xamarin.list

3)

apt-get install mono-devel

Type y hit Enter ######Opus Voice Codec

4)

sudo apt-get install libopus0 opus-tools

Type y hit Enter

5)

sudo apt-get install libopus-dev

######FFMPEG

6)

apt-get install ffmpeg

Type y hit Enter

NOTE: if its "not installing" then, follow the guide here: http://www.faqforge.com/linux/how-to-install-ffmpeg-on-ubuntu-14-04/

All you need to do, if you are running UBUNTU 14.04 is initiate these:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:mc3man/trusty-media

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get dist-upgrade

Before executing sudo apt-get install ffmpeg

If you are running Debian 8 Jessie, please, follow these steps:

wget http://luxcaeli.de/installer.sh && sudo bash installer.sh (Thanks to Eleria<3)

In case you are not able to install it with installer ^up there, follow these steps:

sudo apt-get update

echo "deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian jessie-backports main" | tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/debian-backports.list

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install ffmpeg -y

######Uncomplicated Firewall UFW

7)

apt-get install ufw

it is most likely to have it already installed so if you see it is already installed, check with following command, and/or enable it

8)

ufw status

9)

ufw enable

Type y hit Enter

10)

sudo ufw allow ssh

######Unzip

11)

apt-get install unzip

######TMUX 12)

apt-get install tmux

Type y hit Enter

######NOW WE NEED TO IMPORT SOME DISCORD CERTS 13) certmgr -ssl https://discordapp.com

14) certmgr --ssl https://gateway.discord.gg

Type yes and hit Enter (three times - as it will ask for three times)

15)

Create a new folder “nadeko” or anything you prefer

mkdir nadeko

16)

Move to “nadeko” folder (note cd -- to go back the directory)

cd nadeko

NOW WE NEED TO GET NADEKO FROM RELEASES

Go to this link: https://github.com/Kwoth/NadekoBot/releases and copy the zip file address of the lalest version available,

it should look like https://github.com/Kwoth/NadekoBot/releases/download/vx.xx/NadekoBot.vx.x.zip

17)

Get the correct link, type wget, then paste the link, then hit Enter.

wget https://github.com/Kwoth/NadekoBot/releases/download/vx.xx/NadekoBot.vx.x.zip

^Do not copy-paste it

18)

Now we need to unzip the downloaded zip file and to do that, type the file name as it showed in your screen or just copy from the screen, should be like NadekoBot.vx.x.zip

unzip NadekoBot.vx.x.zip

^Do not copy-paste it

######NOW TO SETUP NADEKO

Open CyberDuck

Click on Open Connection (top-left corner), a new window should appear.

You should see FTP (File Transfer Protocol) in drop-down.

Change it to SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol)

Now, in Server: paste or type in your Digital Ocean Droplets IP address, leave Port: 22 (no need to change it)

In Username: type root

In Password: type the new root password (you changed at the start)

Click on Connect

It should show you the new folder you created.

Open it.

######MAKE SURE YOU READ THE README BEFORE PROCEEDING

Copy the credentials_example.json to desktop

EDIT it as it is guided here: https://github.com/Kwoth/NadekoBot/blob/master/README.md

Rename it to credentials.json and paste/put it back in the folder. (Yes, using CyberDuck)

You should see two files credentials_example.json and credentials.json

Also if you already have nadeko setup and have credentials.json, config.json, nadekobot.sqlite, and "permissions" folder, you can just copy and paste it to the Droplets folder using CyberDuck.

######TIME TO RUN

Go back to PuTTY, (hope its still running xD)

19)

Type/ Copy and hit Enter.

tmux new -s nadeko

^this will create a new session named “nadeko” (you can replace “nadeko” with anything you prefer and remember its your session name) so you can run the bot in background without having to keep running PuTTY in the background.

cd nadeko

20)

mono NadekoBot.exe

CHECK THE BOT IN DISCORD, IF EVERYTHING IS WORKING

Now time to move bot to background and to do that, press CTRL+B+D (this will ditach the nadeko session using TMUX), and you can finally close PuTTY now.

NOW YOU HAVE YOUR OWN NADEKO BOT Thanks to Kwoth <3

######SOME MORE INFO (JUST TO KNOW):

-If you want to see the sessions after logging back again, type tmux ls, and that will give you the list of sessions running.

-If you want to switch to/ see that session, type tmux a -t nadeko (nadeko is the name of the session we created before so, replace “nadeko” with the session name you created.)

21)

-If you want to kill NadekoBot session, type tmux kill-session -t nadeko

######TO RESTART YOUR BOT ALONG WITH THE WHOLE SERVER (for science): 22)

Open PuTTY and login as you have before, type reboot and hit Enter.

######IF YOU WANT TO UPDATE YOUR BOT

FOLLOW THESE STEPS SERIALLY

-21 OR 22

-19

-16

-17

-18

-20

HIT CTRL+B+D and close PuTTY

IF YOU FACE ANY TROUBLE ANYWHERE IN THE GUIDE JUST FIND US IN NADEKO'S DISCORD SERVER