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This guide will walk you through creating an account and setting up a [[Caddy]] webpage. It assumes basic knowledge about the terminal—read up on that on [[Linux]] if you're unsure!  
This guide will walk you through creating an account and setting up a [[Caddy]] webpage. It assumes basic knowledge about the terminal—read up on that on [[Linux]] if you're unsure! Also, please review the [[Acceptable Use Policy]] before getting started with Nest.
=== Creating an Account ===
=== Creating an Account ===
[[File:Screenshot 2024-02-04 at 11.06.14 PM.png|thumb|The Home tab on the Nest Bot application]]
[[File:Nest Home Tab.png|thumb|The Home tab on the Quetzal application]]
Before you are able to create an account, you must enroll. On the Hackclub Slack, add the Nest Bot application by selecting 'Add apps' and adding Nest Bot. Open the application, and under the Home tab, click 'Register yourself!'.  
Before you are able to create an account, you must verify that you are a student. Please see [[verifying your student status]] for more details. You '''cannot''' proceed with the following steps without doing this.


The signup flow will need some basic information—namely, your username, name, email address, and SSH key. You can view your SSH key.
Now, on the [https://hackclub.com/slack Hack Club Slack], open the Quetzal (Nest's mascot) app by searching "Quetzal" in the search bar, and clicking on the Quetzal app. Then, click "Register yourself!"
  cat ~/id_rsa.pub
If you don't have one, create one.
  ssh-keygen -t rsa


Once you've completed the signup flow, Nest Bot will tell you that your request is under review. Once you are approved, Nest Bot will let you know, and give you your password. This is the password that you'll use to access Nest services through [[Authentik]]. Go ahead and login to Authentik at https://identity.hackclub.app and change your password by clicking on the settings gear in the top-right corner, and then clicking the "Change password" button. Change it to something secure!
'''Warning:''' Your username cannot start with a number. Also, don't pick something like "admin" or "login" as a username.
 
The signup flow will need some basic information—namely, your username, name, email address, and [[SSH]] key, which is how you will log into the Nest server. If you don't have an SSH key, no worries - you can make one now!<blockquote>On ChromeOS? You'll have to use ChromeOS' built-in Linux integration. Go to Settings, search "Linux", and follow the instructions to get it setup if you haven't already. Once you're done, open up the Linux terminal.</blockquote>Simply open up your terminal (such as Windows Powershell or the Terminal app on MacOS), and type:
ssh-keygen -t rsa
Answer the prompts (you can accept defaults by pressing Enter), and it will generate a key for you. To get it, type this on MacOS/Linux:
cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
or this on Windows (replacing username with the name of your user on Windows):
type C:\Users\username\.ssh\id_rsa.pub
Copy the value that this outputs, and paste it into the "Public SSH Key" field of the Nest signup form.
 
Once you've completed the signup flow, Quetzal will tell you that your request is under review. Once you are approved, Quetzal will let you know, and give you your password. This is the password that you'll use to access Nest services through [[Authentik]]. It's a good idea to change this password - go ahead and login to Authentik at https://identity.hackclub.app and change your password by clicking on the settings gear in the top-right corner, and then clicking the "Change password" button. Change it to something secure!


You can also link your Authentik account to your Slack account, if you wish. This will let you login to Authentik through your Slack account. To do this, simply go to the "Connected services" tab of the same settings page, and click the "Connect" button next to the Slack icon.
You can also link your Authentik account to your Slack account, if you wish. This will let you login to Authentik through your Slack account. To do this, simply go to the "Connected services" tab of the same settings page, and click the "Connect" button next to the Slack icon.
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Now you will have to log in over [[SSH]]. From your terminal, run
Now you will have to log in over [[SSH]]. From your terminal, run
   $ ssh <username>@hackclub.app
   $ ssh <username>@hackclub.app
Replace <username> with your username. You should see an ASCII art NEST and the Hack Club dinosaur.
Replace <username> with your Nest username. You should see "Welcome to Nest!". If you see something like "Permission denied" instead, make sure you've spelled your Nest username correctly and have the SSH key that you used to sign up for Nest on your computer.


Your website is in <code>~/pub/</code>, your Caddyfile in <code>~/Caddyfile</code>, and your website accessible at <code><username>.hackclub.app</code>. From here, you have multiple options to set up your website.
Your website is in <code>~/pub/</code>, your [[Caddy#Caddyfile|Caddyfile]] (server configuration) in <code>~/Caddyfile</code>, and your website accessible at <code><username>.hackclub.app</code>. From here, you have multiple options to set up your website - Caddy will automatically serve whatever you put in <code>~/pub/</code>! If you'd like to learn more about Caddy and what it can do, check out the [[Caddy]] page.


==== The Lazy Way™ ====
==== The Lazy Way™ ====
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==== Git ====
==== Git ====
If you have your website on GitHub or GitLab, you can clone it.
If you have your website on GitHub or GitLab, you can clone it after deleting the default index.html file:
  username@nest:~$ git clone <git repo url> ~/pub/
username@nest:~$ rm ~/pub/index.html
username@nest:~$ git clone <git repo url> ~/pub/
You can setup a cronjob to pull changes daily if you don't want to pull manually.
You can setup a cronjob to pull changes daily if you don't want to pull manually.
   username@nest:~$ crontab -e
   username@nest:~$ crontab -e
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Then over SSH, navigate to pub and use
Then over SSH, navigate to pub and use
   username@nest:~/pub$ tar xvf website.tar
   username@nest:~/pub$ tar xvf website.tar
==== Uploading Files Over Croc ====
[https://schollz.com/tinker/croc6/ Croc] is a fast & simple tool for uploading files to remote machines. Install it on your local machine, zip up your files, and run
  $ croc [zip file]
Then over SSH, navigate to pub and run
  $ croc [recieve-code-from-local-machine]
to download the zip!
You can then run on the pub
  $ unzip [zip file]
to unzip your folder!
==== Not a website? No problem! ====
Since Nest is just a normal Linux server, you can host pretty much anything on it, from Slack/Discord bots to complex full-stack apps. See [[Caddy#Reverse Proxy|Caddy]] for how to reverse proxy (forward) your subdomain to your app, and [[Systemd]] for how to keep it running!

Latest revision as of 03:58, 30 October 2024

Welcome to Nest!

This guide will walk you through creating an account and setting up a Caddy webpage. It assumes basic knowledge about the terminal—read up on that on Linux if you're unsure! Also, please review the Acceptable Use Policy before getting started with Nest.

Creating an Account

The Home tab on the Quetzal application

Before you are able to create an account, you must verify that you are a student. Please see verifying your student status for more details. You cannot proceed with the following steps without doing this.

Now, on the Hack Club Slack, open the Quetzal (Nest's mascot) app by searching "Quetzal" in the search bar, and clicking on the Quetzal app. Then, click "Register yourself!"

Warning: Your username cannot start with a number. Also, don't pick something like "admin" or "login" as a username.

The signup flow will need some basic information—namely, your username, name, email address, and SSH key, which is how you will log into the Nest server. If you don't have an SSH key, no worries - you can make one now!

On ChromeOS? You'll have to use ChromeOS' built-in Linux integration. Go to Settings, search "Linux", and follow the instructions to get it setup if you haven't already. Once you're done, open up the Linux terminal.

Simply open up your terminal (such as Windows Powershell or the Terminal app on MacOS), and type:

ssh-keygen -t rsa

Answer the prompts (you can accept defaults by pressing Enter), and it will generate a key for you. To get it, type this on MacOS/Linux:

cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub

or this on Windows (replacing username with the name of your user on Windows):

type C:\Users\username\.ssh\id_rsa.pub

Copy the value that this outputs, and paste it into the "Public SSH Key" field of the Nest signup form.

Once you've completed the signup flow, Quetzal will tell you that your request is under review. Once you are approved, Quetzal will let you know, and give you your password. This is the password that you'll use to access Nest services through Authentik. It's a good idea to change this password - go ahead and login to Authentik at https://identity.hackclub.app and change your password by clicking on the settings gear in the top-right corner, and then clicking the "Change password" button. Change it to something secure!

You can also link your Authentik account to your Slack account, if you wish. This will let you login to Authentik through your Slack account. To do this, simply go to the "Connected services" tab of the same settings page, and click the "Connect" button next to the Slack icon.

Using the Account

Now you will have to log in over SSH. From your terminal, run

  $ ssh <username>@hackclub.app

Replace <username> with your Nest username. You should see "Welcome to Nest!". If you see something like "Permission denied" instead, make sure you've spelled your Nest username correctly and have the SSH key that you used to sign up for Nest on your computer.

Your website is in ~/pub/, your Caddyfile (server configuration) in ~/Caddyfile, and your website accessible at <username>.hackclub.app. From here, you have multiple options to set up your website - Caddy will automatically serve whatever you put in ~/pub/! If you'd like to learn more about Caddy and what it can do, check out the Caddy page.

The Lazy Way™

You are able to write your website straight from the terminal using your editor of choice.

  username@nest:~$ nano ~/pub/index.html

Git

If you have your website on GitHub or GitLab, you can clone it after deleting the default index.html file:

username@nest:~$ rm ~/pub/index.html
username@nest:~$ git clone <git repo url> ~/pub/

You can setup a cronjob to pull changes daily if you don't want to pull manually.

  username@nest:~$ crontab -e
  0 0 * * * cd ~/pub && git pull origin main 2>~/git-error

Uploading Files Over SCP

If you have a website locally, you can upload it to your server. On your local device, run

  $ tar cvf website.tar /path/to/website
  $ scp website.tar <username>@hackclub.app:/home/<username>/pub

Then over SSH, navigate to pub and use

  username@nest:~/pub$ tar xvf website.tar

Uploading Files Over Croc

Croc is a fast & simple tool for uploading files to remote machines. Install it on your local machine, zip up your files, and run

  $ croc [zip file]

Then over SSH, navigate to pub and run

  $ croc [recieve-code-from-local-machine]

to download the zip!

You can then run on the pub

 $ unzip [zip file]

to unzip your folder!

Not a website? No problem!

Since Nest is just a normal Linux server, you can host pretty much anything on it, from Slack/Discord bots to complex full-stack apps. See Caddy for how to reverse proxy (forward) your subdomain to your app, and Systemd for how to keep it running!