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de2d04f06b
closes #2461
37 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
37 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
# Advanced Post-installation Tasks
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This page explains some advanced tasks and configuration options that can be performed after the bot installation and may be uselful in some environments.
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If you do not know what things mentioned here mean, you probably do not need it.
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## Configure the bot running as a systemd service
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Copy the `freqtrade.service` file to your systemd user directory (usually `~/.config/systemd/user`) and update `WorkingDirectory` and `ExecStart` to match your setup.
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!!! Note
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Certain systems (like Raspbian) don't load service unit files from the user directory. In this case, copy `freqtrade.service` into `/etc/systemd/user/` (requires superuser permissions).
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After that you can start the daemon with:
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```bash
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systemctl --user start freqtrade
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```
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For this to be persistent (run when user is logged out) you'll need to enable `linger` for your freqtrade user.
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```bash
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sudo loginctl enable-linger "$USER"
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```
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If you run the bot as a service, you can use systemd service manager as a software watchdog monitoring freqtrade bot
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state and restarting it in the case of failures. If the `internals.sd_notify` parameter is set to true in the
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configuration or the `--sd-notify` command line option is used, the bot will send keep-alive ping messages to systemd
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using the sd_notify (systemd notifications) protocol and will also tell systemd its current state (Running or Stopped)
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when it changes.
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The `freqtrade.service.watchdog` file contains an example of the service unit configuration file which uses systemd
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as the watchdog.
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!!! Note
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The sd_notify communication between the bot and the systemd service manager will not work if the bot runs in a Docker container.
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