#!/usr/bin/env node import app from "./app.js"; import sessionParser from "./routes/session_parser.js"; import fs from "fs"; import http from "http"; import https from "https"; import config from "./services/config.js"; import log from "./services/log.js"; import appInfo from "./services/app_info.js"; import ws from "./services/ws.js"; import utils from "./services/utils.js"; import port from "./services/port.js"; import host from "./services/host.js"; import semver from "semver"; // setup basic error handling even before requiring dependencies, since those can produce errors as well process.on('unhandledRejection', (error: Error) => { // this makes sure that stacktrace of failed promise is printed out console.log(error); // but also try to log it into file log.info(error); }); function exit() { console.log("Caught interrupt/termination signal. Exiting."); process.exit(0); } process.on('SIGINT', exit); process.on('SIGTERM', exit); if (!semver.satisfies(process.version, ">=10.5.0")) { console.error("Trilium only supports node.js 10.5 and later"); process.exit(1); } startTrilium(); async function startTrilium() { /** * The intended behavior is to detect when a second instance is running, in that case open the old instance * instead of the new one. This is complicated by the fact that it is possible to run multiple instances of Trilium * if port and data dir are configured separately. This complication is the source of the following weird usage. * * The line below makes sure that the "second-instance" (process in window.ts) is fired. Normally it returns a boolean * indicating whether another instance is running or not, but we ignore that and kill the app only based on the port conflict. * * A bit weird is that "second-instance" is triggered also on the valid usecases (different port/data dir) and * focuses the existing window. But the new process is start as well and will steal the focus too, it will win, because * its startup is slower than focusing the existing process/window. So in the end, it works out without having * to do a complex evaluation. */ if (utils.isElectron()) { (await import('electron')).app.requestSingleInstanceLock(); } log.info(JSON.stringify(appInfo, null, 2)); // for perf. issues it's good to know the rough configuration const cpuInfos = (await import('os')).cpus(); if (cpuInfos && cpuInfos[0] !== undefined) { // https://github.com/zadam/trilium/pull/3957 const cpuModel = (cpuInfos[0].model || "").trimEnd(); log.info(`CPU model: ${cpuModel}, logical cores: ${cpuInfos.length}, freq: ${cpuInfos[0].speed} Mhz`); } const httpServer = startHttpServer(); ws.init(httpServer, sessionParser as any); // TODO: Not sure why session parser is incompatible. if (utils.isElectron()) { const electronRouting = await import('./routes/electron.js'); electronRouting.default(app); } } function startHttpServer() { app.set('port', port); app.set('host', host); // Check from config whether to trust reverse proxies to supply user IPs, hostnames and protocols if (config['Network']['trustedReverseProxy']) { if (config['Network']['trustedReverseProxy'] === true || config['Network']['trustedReverseProxy'].trim().length) { app.set('trust proxy', config['Network']['trustedReverseProxy']) } } log.info(`Trusted reverse proxy: ${app.get('trust proxy')}`) let httpServer; if (config['Network']['https']) { if (!config['Network']['keyPath'] || !config['Network']['keyPath'].trim().length) { throw new Error("keyPath in config.ini is required when https=true, but it's empty"); } if (!config['Network']['certPath'] || !config['Network']['certPath'].trim().length) { throw new Error("certPath in config.ini is required when https=true, but it's empty"); } const options = { key: fs.readFileSync(config['Network']['keyPath']), cert: fs.readFileSync(config['Network']['certPath']) }; httpServer = https.createServer(options, app); log.info(`App HTTPS server starting up at port ${port}`); } else { httpServer = http.createServer(app); log.info(`App HTTP server starting up at port ${port}`); } /** * Listen on provided port, on all network interfaces. */ httpServer.keepAliveTimeout = 120000 * 5; const listenOnTcp = port !== 0; if (listenOnTcp) { httpServer.listen(port, host); // TCP socket. } else { httpServer.listen(host); // Unix socket. } httpServer.on('error', error => { let message = error.stack || "An unexpected error has occurred."; // handle specific listen errors with friendly messages if ("code" in error) { switch (error.code) { case 'EACCES': message = `Port ${port} requires elevated privileges. It's recommended to use port above 1024.`; break; case 'EADDRINUSE': message = `Port ${port} is already in use. Most likely, another Trilium process is already running. You might try to find it, kill it, and try again.`; break; case 'EADDRNOTAVAIL': message = `Unable to start the server on host '${host}'. Make sure the host (defined in 'config.ini' or via the 'TRILIUM_HOST' environment variable) is an IP address that can be listened on.`; break; } } if (utils.isElectron()) { import("electron").then(({ app, dialog }) => { // Not all situations require showing an error dialog. When Trilium is already open, // clicking the shortcut, the software icon, or the taskbar icon, or when creating a new window, // should simply focus on the existing window or open a new one, without displaying an error message. if ("code" in error && error.code == 'EADDRINUSE') { if (process.argv.includes('--new-window') || !app.requestSingleInstanceLock()) { console.error(message); process.exit(1); } } dialog.showErrorBox("Error while initializing the server", message); process.exit(1); }); } else { console.error(message); process.exit(1); } }); httpServer.on('listening', () => { if (listenOnTcp) { log.info(`Listening on port ${port}`) } else { log.info(`Listening on unix socket ${host}`) } }); return httpServer; }