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SAMMY WELCOMES YOU TO YOUR DROPLET!


THINGS TO DO WITH THIS SCRIPT

This message is coming to you via a simple NodeJS application that's live on
your Droplet! This droplet is all set up with NodeJS, PM2 for process
management, and nginx.

Run all pm2 commands using the nodejs user or a second instance of pm2 will
start. The login and password are stored in the NODE_USER* values you see when
you call cat /root/.digitalocean_passwords while logged in over SSH.

This app is running at port 3000, and is being served to you by nginx, which has
mapped port 3000 to be served as the root URI over HTTP (port 80) -- a technique
known as a "reverse proxy." We'll be teaching you how to use this technique
right here on this page. If you want to kick the tires right now, try some of
these things:

 * SSH into your Droplet and modify this script at /var/www/html/hello.js and
   see the results live by calling pm2 restart hello
 * Run pm2 list to see code scheduled to start at boot time
 * Run pm2 delete hello to stop running this script and pm2 save to stop it from
   running on Droplet boot


GET YOUR CODE ON HERE

 * SSH into your Droplet, and git clone your NodeJS code onto the droplet,
   anywhere you like
    * Note: If you're not using a source control, you can directly upload the
      files to your droplet using SFTP.

 * cd into the directory where your NodeJS code lives, and install any
   dependencies. For example, if you have a package.json file, run npm install.
 * Launch your app by calling pm2 start <your-file>, then map the port your app
   runs on to an HTTP URL by running nano /etc/nginx/sites-available/default and
   adding another location. Use the existing entry for the port 3000 "hello" app
   as a basis.
 * Call sudo systemctl restart nginx to enable your new nginx config.
 * Call pm2 save to schedule your code to run at launch.
 * Repeat these steps for any other NodeJS apps that need to run concurrently --
   schedule them to run at boot time on whatever internal port you like using
   PM2, then map that port to an HTTP/HTTPS URL in the nginx config. Build out
   the URL directory structure you need by mapping applications to URL paths;
   that's the reverse proxy method in a nutshell!


GET PRODUCTION-READY

There's a lot you'll want to do to make sure you're production-ready.

 * Set up a non-root user for day-to-day use
 * Review your firewall settings by calling sudo ufw status, and make any
   changes you need. By default, only SSH/SFTP (port 22), HTTP (port 80), and
   HTTPS (port 443) are open. You can also disable this firewall by calling sudo
   ufw disable and use a DigitalOcean cloud firewall instead, if you like
   (they're free).
 * Register a custom domain
 * Have data needs? You can mount a volume (up to 16TB) to this server to expand
   the filesyem, provision a database cluster (that runs MySQL, Redis, or
   PostgreSQL), or use a Space, which is an S3-compatible bucket for storing
   objects.