openreplay/scripts
Kraiem Taha Yassine 42884550df
Api invitation link (#105)
* feat(api): invitation token to add team members

* feat(api): invitation link change password
* feat(db): changed base_auth structure

* feat(api): invitation link - regenerate/reset
* feat(api): invitation link - restore deleted user

* feat(api): invitation link for forget password
* feat(api): changed email body for invite user and reset password
2021-07-27 14:37:45 +02:00
..
helm Api invitation link (#105) 2021-07-27 14:37:45 +02:00
certbot.sh fix typos (#94) 2021-07-15 10:46:15 +02:00
README.md v1.1.0 (#31) 2021-06-11 23:31:29 +05:30

Installing OpenReplay on any VM (Debian based, preferably Ubuntu 20.04)

You can start testing OpenReplay by installing it on any VM (at least 2 vCPUs, 8 GB of RAM and 50 GB of storage). We'll initialize a single node kubernetes cluster with k3s and install OpenReplay on the cluster.

cd helm && bash install.sh

Installing OpenReplay on Kubernetes

OpenReplay runs 100% on kubernetes. So if you've got a kubernetes cluster, preferably, a cluster dedicated to OpenReplay (on a single node of 4 vCPUs, 8 GB of RAM and 50 GB of storage). You can run the script, which internally uses helm to install OpenReplay.

We hope your cluster has provision to create a service type LoadBalancer for exposing OpenReplay on the internet.

cd helm && bash kube-install.sh

OpenReplay CLI

The CLI is helpful for managing basic aspects of your OpenReplay instance, things such as restarting or reinstalling a service, accessing a component's logs or simply checking the status of your backend services. Below the list of covered operations:

  • status: status of the running services
  • logs: logs of a specific service
  • stop: stop one or all services
  • start: start one or all services
  • restart: restart one or all services

For more information:

cd helm && openreplay-cli -h