- Sometimes when postgres is not available, the daemon fails to create a database connection. In this case the daemon permanently exits with code 101 instead of trying again. - This happens more prominently when booting the system and postgres may not be available. Although tt-rss.service has Wants= and After= on postgres.service, it appears that postgres does not have proper startup notification with systemd. - This may also happen in other situations such as when temporarily restarting postgres during upgrades or backup/restore operations. - Fix the issue by make the daemon restart after a failure. This seems appropriate because the daemon is coded like a web page to fail and exit on all, even temporary, errors. Tests: - Without the patch, stop postgres@13-main.service. Start tt-rss.service. It will fail permanently and not try to restart. - With the patch, daemon-reload systemd. Notice that the intended changes reflect with systemd status. Start the service. It fails. But retries 2 minutes later with failure again. When postgres is started again, the next attempt succeeds. Signed-off-by: Sunil Mohan Adapa <sunil@medhas.org> Reviewed-by: James Valleroy <jvalleroy@mailbox.org>
FreedomBox Service (Plinth)
The core functionality and web front-end of FreedomBox.
Description
FreedomBox is a community project to develop, design and promote personal servers running free software for private, personal communications. It is a networking appliance designed to allow interfacing with the rest of the Internet under conditions of protected privacy and data security. It hosts applications such as blog, wiki, website, social network, email, web proxy and a Tor relay, on a device that can replace your Wi-Fi router, so that your data stays with you.
This module, called FreedomBox Service and also know as Plinth, is the core functionality and web interface to the functions of the FreedomBox. It is extensible and provides various applications of FreedomBox as modules. Each module or application provides simplified user interface to control the underlying functionality. As FreedomBox can act as a wireless router, it is possible to configure networking. It also allows configuration of basic system parameters such as time zone, hostname and automatic upgrades.
You can find more information about FreedomBox Service (Plinth) on the Plinth Wiki page, the FreedomBox Wiki and the FreedomBox Manual.
Getting Started
To have a running FreedomBox, first install Debian (Buster or higher) on a clean machine. Then run:
$ sudo apt install freedombox
Full instructions are available on FreedomBox Manual's QuickStart page.
For instructions on running the service on a local machine from source code, see INSTALL.md. For instructions on setting up for development purposes, see HACKING.md.
Contributing
See the HACKING.md file for contributing to FreedomBox Service (Plinth).






