# HAVEN HAVEN (High Availability Vault for Events on Nostr) is the most sovereign personal relay for the Nostr protocol, for storing and backing up sensitive notes like eCash, private chats and drafts. It is a relay that is not so dumb, with features like web of trust, inbox relay, cloud backups, blastr and the ability to import old notes. ## Four Relays in One **Private Relay**: This relay is only accessible by the owner of the relay. It is used for drafts, ecash and other private notes that nobody can read or write to. It is protected by Auth. **Chat Relay**: This relay is used to contact the owner by DM. Only people in the web of trust can interact with this relay, protected by Auth. It only accepts encrypted DMs and group chat kinds. **Inbox Relay**: This relay is where the owner of the relay reads from. Send your zaps, reactions and replies to this relay when you're tagging the owner. You can also pull notes from this relay if you want notes where the owner is tagged. This relay automatically pulls notes from other relays. Only notes where the owner is tagged will be accepted to this relay. **Outbox Relay**: This relay is where the owner's notes all live and are publicly accessible. You can import all your old notes to this relay. All notes sent to this relay are blasted to other relays. Only the owner can send to this relay, but anyone can read. ## Not So Dumb Relay Features **Web of Trust**: Protected from DM and Inbox spam by using a web of trust. **Inbox Relay**: Notes are pulled from other relays and stored in the inbox relay. **Cloud Backups**: Notes are backed up in the cloud and can be restored if the relay is lost. **Blastr**: Notes sent to the outbox are also blasted to other relays. **Import Old Notes**: Import your old notes and notes you're tagged in from other relays. ## Prerequisites - **Go**: Ensure you have Go installed on your system. You can download it from [here](https://golang.org/dl/). - **Build Essentials**: If you're using Linux, you may need to install build essentials. You can do this by running `sudo apt install build-essential`. ## Setup Instructions Follow these steps to get the Haven Relay running on your local machine: ### 1. Clone the repository ```bash git clone https://github.com/bitvora/haven.git cd haven ``` ### 2. Copy `.env.example` to `.env` You'll need to create an `.env` file based on the example provided in the repository. ```bash cp .env.example .env ``` ### 3. Set your environment variables Open the `.env` file and set the necessary environment variables. ### 4. Create the relays JSON files Copy the example relays JSON files for your seed and blastr relays: ```bash cp relays_import.example.json relays_import.json ``` ```bash cp relays_blastr.example.json relays_blastr.json ``` The JSON should contain an array of relay URLs, which default to wss:// if you don't explicitly specify the protocol. ### 4. Build the project Run the following command to build the relay: ```bash go build ``` ### 5. Create a Systemd Service To have the relay run as a service, create a systemd unit file. Make sure to limit the memory usage to less than your system's total memory to prevent the relay from crashing the system. 1. Create the file: ```bash sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/haven.service ``` 2. Add the following contents: ```ini [Unit] Description=Haven Relay After=network.target [Service] ExecStart=/home/ubuntu/haven/haven WorkingDirectory=/home/ubuntu/haven Restart=always [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target ``` Replace `/path/to/` with the actual paths where you cloned the repository and stored the `.env` file. 3. Reload systemd to recognize the new service: ```bash sudo systemctl daemon-reload ``` 4. Start the service: ```bash sudo systemctl start haven ``` 5. (Optional) Enable the service to start on boot: ```bash sudo systemctl enable haven ``` ### 6. Serving over nginx (optional) You can serve the relay over nginx by adding the following configuration to your nginx configuration file: ```nginx server { listen 80; server_name yourdomain.com; location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:3355; proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme; proxy_http_version 1.1; proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade; proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade"; } } ``` Replace `yourdomain.com` with your actual domain name. After adding the configuration, restart nginx: ```bash sudo systemctl restart nginx ``` ### 7. Install Certbot (optional) If you want to serve the relay over HTTPS, you can use Certbot to generate an SSL certificate. ```bash sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install certbot python3-certbot-nginx ``` After installing Certbot, run the following command to generate an SSL certificate: ```bash sudo certbot --nginx ``` Follow the instructions to generate the certificate. ### 8. Run The Import (optional) If you want to import your old notes and notes you're tagged in from other relays, run the following command: ```bash ./haven --import ``` ### 9. Access the relay Once everything is set up, the relay will be running on `localhost:3355` with the following endpoints: - `localhost:3355` (outbox) - `localhost:3355/private` - `localhost:3355/chat` - `localhost:3355/inbox` ## Cloud Backups The relay automatically backs up your database to a cloud provider of your choice. ### AWS To back up your database to AWS, you'll need to first install and configure the awscli. You can do this by running the following commands: ```bash sudo python3 -m pip install awscli aws configure ``` After configuring the awscli, you can set the following environment variables in your `.env` file: ```bash AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=your_access_key_id AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=your_secret_access_key AWS_REGION=your_region AWS_BUCKET=your_bucket ``` Replace `your_access_key_id`, `your_secret_access_key`, `your_region`, and `your_bucket` with your actual AWS credentials. ## License This project is licensed under the MIT License.