Update notifications for nextcloud clients
This app attempts to solve the issue where Nextcloud clients have to periodically check the server if any files have been changed. In order to keep sync snappy, clients wants to check for updates often, which increases the load on the server.
With many clients all checking for updates a large portion of the server load can consist of just these update checks.
By providing a way for the server to send update notifications to the clients, the need for the clients to make these checks can be greatly reduced.
Update notifications are provided on a "best effort" basis, updates might happen without a notification being sent and a notification can be sent even if no update has actually happened. Clients are advised to still perform periodic checks for updates on their own, although these can be run on a much lower frequency.
This app requires a redis server to be setup and for nextcloud to be configured to use the redis server.
The app comes with a setup wizard that should guide you through the setup process for most setups.
- Install the "Client Push" (
notify_push
) app from the appstore - Run
occ notify_push:setup
and follow the provided instructions, If the setup wizard fails you can find manual instructions below.
The setup required consists of three steps
- Install the
notify_push
app from the appstore - Setting up the push server
- Configuring the reverse proxy
- Configuring the nextcloud app
For Nextcloud Snap users:
The snap team made a wiki page how to install Client Push in Nextcloud snap. See their Wiki page!
The push server should be setup to run as a background daemon, the recommended way is by setting it up as a system service in the init system. If you're not using systemd then any init or process management system that runs the push server binary with the described environment variables will work.
For systemd based setups, you can create a systemd service by creating a file named /etc/systemd/system/notify_push.service
with the following
content.
[Unit]
Description = Push daemon for Nextcloud clients
Documentation=https://github.com/nextcloud/notify_push
[Service]
Environment = PORT=7867 # Change if you already have something running on this port
ExecStart = /path/to/push/binary/notify_push /path/to/nextcloud/config/config.php
User=www-data
[Install]
WantedBy = multi-user.target
For OpenRC based setups, you can create an OpenRC service by creating a file named /etc/init.d/notify_push
with the following content.
#!/sbin/openrc-run
description="Push daemon for Nextcloud clients"
output_log=${output_log:-/var/log/$RC_SVCNAME.log}
pidfile=${pidfile:-/run/$RC_SVCNAME.pid}
command=${command:-/path/to/push/binary/notify_push}
command_user=${command_user:-www-data:www-data}
command_args="--port 7867 /path/to/nextcloud/config/config.php"
command_background=true
depend() {
need net redis
use nginx php-fpm8 mariadb postgresql
}
start_pre() {
checkpath --file --owner $command_user $output_log
}
Adjust the paths, ports and user as needed.
The push server can be configured either by loading the config from the nextcloud config.php
or by setting all options through environment variables.
Re-using the configuration from nextcloud is the recommended way, as it ensures that the configuration remains in sync.
If using the config.php
isn't possible, you can configure the push server by setting the following environment variables:
DATABASE_URL
connection url for the Nextcloud database, e.g.postgres://user:password@db_host/db_name
DATABASE_PREFIX
database prefix configured in Nextcloud, e.g.oc_
REDIS_URL
connection url for redis, e.g.redis://redis_host
NEXTCLOUD_URL
url for the nextcloud instance, e.g.https://cloud.example.com
Or you can specify the options as command line arguments, see notify_push --help
for information about the command line arguments.
If a config option is set in multiple sources, the values from the command line argument overwrite values from the environment
which in turns overwrites the values from the config.php
.
The port the server listens to can only be configured through the environment variable PORT
, or --port
argument and defaults to 7867.
Alternatively you can configure the server to listen on a unix socket by setting the SOCKET_PATH
environment variable or --socket-path
argument.
Note that Nextcloud load all files matching *.config.php
in the config directory in additional to the main config file.
You can enable this same behavior by passing the --glob-config
option.
The push server can be configured to serve over TLS. This is mostly intended for securing the traffic between the push server and the reverse proxy if they are running on different hosts, running without a reverse proxy (or load balancer) is not recommended.
TLS can be enabled by setting the --tls-cert
and --tls-key
arguments (or the TLS_CERT
and TLS_KEY
environment variables).
Once the systemd service file is set up with the correct configuration you can start it using
- systemd:
sudo systemctl start notify_push
- OpenRc:
sudo rc-service notify_push start
and enable it to automatically start on boot using
- systemd:
sudo systemctl enable notify_push
- OpenRc:
sudo rc-update add notify_push
Every time this app receives an update you should restart the systemd service using
- systemd:
sudo systemctl restart notify_push
- OpenRc:
sudo rc-service notify_push restart
Alternatively, you can do this automatically via systemctl by creating the following systemd service and path (click to expand)
First create a oneshot service to trigger the daemon restart
/etc/systemd/system/notify_push-watcher.service
[Unit]
Description=Restart Push daemon for Nextcloud clients when it receives updates
Documentation=https://github.com/nextcloud/notify_push
Requires=notify_push.service
After=notify_push.service
StartLimitIntervalSec=10
StartLimitBurst=5
[Service]
Type=oneshot
ExecStart=/usr/bin/systemctl restart notify_push.service
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Then create a path
job to trigger the restart whenever the push binary is changed
/etc/systemd/system/notify_push-watcher.path
[Unit]
Description=Restart Push daemon for Nextcloud clients when it receives updates
Documentation=https://github.com/nextcloud/notify_push
PartOf=notify_push-watcher.service
[Path]
PathModified=/path/to/push/binary/notify_push
Unit=notify_push-watcher.service
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Adjusting the path as needed.
Finally, enable it with
sudo systemctl enable notify_push-watcher.path
It is strongly recommended to set up the push service behind a reverse proxy, this both removes the need to open a new port to the internet and handles the TLS encryption of the connection to prevent sending credentials in plain text.
You can probably use the same webserver that you're already using for your nextcloud.
If you're using nginx, add the following location
block to the existing server
block of the nextcloud server.
location ^~ /push/ {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:7867/;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "Upgrade";
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
}
Note that both trailing slashes are required.
Once the nginx configuration is edit you can reload nginx using.
sudo nginx -s reload
To use apache as a reverse proxy you first need to enable the proxy modules using
sudo a2enmod proxy
sudo a2enmod proxy_http
sudo a2enmod proxy_wstunnel
Then add the following lines to the <VirtualHost>
block used for the Nextcloud server.
ProxyPass /push/ws ws://127.0.0.1:7867/ws
ProxyPass /push/ http://127.0.0.1:7867/
ProxyPassReverse /push/ http://127.0.0.1:7867/
Afterwards you can restart apache using
sudo systemctl restart apache2
handle_path /push/* {
reverse_proxy http://127.0.0.1:7867
}
Once the push server is configured and the reverse proxy setup, you can enable the notify_push
app and tell it where
the push server is listening.
- enable the app
occ app:enable notify_push
- set the url of the push server
occ notify_push:setup https://cloud.example.com/push
The app will automatically run some tests to verify that the push server is configured correctly.
By default, the push server only logs warnings, you can temporarily change the log level with an occ command
occ notify_push:log <level>
Where level is error
, warn
, info
, debug
or trace
, or restore the log level to the previous value using
occ notify_push:log --restore
Alternatively you can set the log level of the push server in the LOG
environment variable.
The push server can expose some basic metrics about the number of connected clients and the traffic flowing through the server
by setting the METRICS_PORT
environment variable.
Once set the metrics are available in a prometheus compatible format at /metrics
on the configured port.
Additionally you can manually check the metrics by running the occ notify_push:metrics
command, this will function even if you haven't setup METRICS_PORT
.
If your nextcloud is using a self-signed certificate then you either need to set the NEXTCLOUD_URL
to a non-https, local url,
or disable certificate verification by setting ALLOW_SELF_SIGNED=true
.
When running into issues you should always first ensure that you're on the latest release, as your issue might either already be fixed or additional diagnostics might have been added.
-
Ensure you haven't added a duplicate
trusted_proxies
list to yourconfig.php
. -
If you're modified your
forwarded_for_headers
config, ensure thatHTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR
is included. -
If your nextcloud hostname resolves do a dynamic ip you can try setting the
NEXTCLOUD_URL
to the internal ip of the server.Alternatively, editing the
/etc/hosts
file to point your nextcloud domain to the internal ip can work in some setups. -
If you're running your setup in docker and your containers are linked, you should be able to use the name of the nextcloud container as hostname in the
NEXTCLOUD_URL
For information about how to use the push server in your own app or client, see DEVELOPING.md
For development and testing purposes a test client is provided which can be downloaded from
the current release page.
(Click on test_client
to download the binary.)
Please note: the Test client is only build for x86_64 Linux currently.
test_client https://cloud.example.com username password
Note that this does not support two-factor authentication of non-default login flows, you can use an app-password in those cases.