Installation Commands starting with # are to be is to run as root. 1. Get the sources Get the source code by running $ git clone https://git.freesoftwareextremist.com/bloat You can also download the latest source tarball from the URL "https://git.freesoftwareextremist.com/bloat/snapshot/bloat-master.tar.gz" 2. Build and install Install GO from your system's package manager or from https://golang.org/dl, then run make to compile the source. $ make # make install This will perform a system wide installation of bloat. By default, it will install the binary in /usr/local/bin, data files in /var/bloat and config file in /etc. You can change these paths by editing the Makefile. 3. Edit the config file Comments in the config file describe what each config value does. For most cases, you only need to change the value of "client_website". # $EDITOR /etc/bloat.conf 4. Create a separate user account to run bloat It's not required to create a separate user account, but it's a good practice to do so. # useradd _bloat # chown -R _bloat:_bloat /var/bloat Replace /var/bloat with the value you specified in the Makefile. 5. Run the binary # su _bloat -c bloat Now you should create an init script to automatically start the service at system startup. 6. Setup TLS You can use an HTTP server as a reverse proxy to serve bloat over HTTPS. Here's a config file snippet for nginx: ` server { server_name bloat.example.com; location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080; } } server { server_name bloat.example.com; listen 443 ssl; ssl_trusted_certificate /etc/ssl/example.com.crt; ssl_certificate /etc/ssl/example.com.fullchain.pem; ssl_certificate_key /etc/ssl/private/example.com.key; location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080; } } ` This configuration accepts for connections for bloat.example.com (specified by "client_website" in config) over both HTTP and HTTPS and forwards them to bloat's listen address (specified by "listen_address" in config).