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1 rakinar2 575 ---
2     title: Getting Started - SudoBot
3     short_name: Getting Started
4     ---
5    
6     import Callout from "@/components/Alerts/Callout";
7    
8     # Getting Started
9    
10     This guide will help you get started with SudoBot. You will learn how to build the bot from source, configure and run it on your own server, so that it does exactly what you want.
11    
12     <Callout type="info">
13     If you don't want to set the bot up yourself and want a pre-hosted solution
14     for free, you can contact
15     [@rakinar2](https://discord.com/users/774553653394538506) at Discord.
16     </Callout>
17    
18     ## Prerequisites
19    
20     Before you start, you need to have the following installed on your system:
21    
22     - A Discord API Application token (bot token). Go to the [Discord Developer Portal](https://discord.com/developers/applications) to create a new application, and get the token.
23     - A [PostgreSQL](https://www.postgresql.org/) database server. You can use a local server or use a cloud service like [Supabase](https://supabase.com/).
24    
25     Additionally, you can also set these up if you want to use them:
26    
27     - Cat and dog API Token, for fetching cat and dog images using `cat` and `dog` commands, the tokens can be obtained at [thecatapi.com](https://thecatapi.com) and [thedogapi.com](https://thedogapi.com).
28     - Pixabay API Token to use the `pixabay` command. See [Pixabay's API Docs](https://pixabay.com/api/docs/) for more information.
29     - A Discord Webhook URL for sending error reports.
30     - [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) (v21 or higher) or [Bun](https://bun.sh) (v1.1.12 or higher). These will be installed automatically if you don't install them, during the build process.
31     - [Git](https://git-scm.com/) (optional; to clone the repository)
32    
33     Lastly, we expect you to have a very basic understanding of how to use a terminal or command prompt, and how to run commands.
34    
35     ## Installation
36    
37     To install SudoBot, you need to clone the repository first, if you have Git installed. Run the following command in your terminal:
38    
39     ```bash
40     git clone https://github.com/onesoft-sudo/sudobot
41     ```
42    
43     If you don't have Git installed, you can download the repository as a zipball/tarball from the [GitHub Releases Page](https://github.com/onesoft-sudo/sudobot/releases/latest).
44     Then, extract the downloaded file to a directory of your choice.
45    
46     Next, navigate to the directory where you have cloned the repository using Git, or extracted the zipball/tarball, by running the following command in your terminal:
47    
48     ```bash
49     cd sudobot
50     ```
51    
52     Now, to build the project, we'll use [BlazeBuild](https://github.com/onesoft-sudo/sudobot/tree/main/blazebuild), which is a blazingly fast build tool, for TypeScript and JavaScript projects.
53     To use BlazeBuild, you don't need to install anything including BlazeBuild itself, as it will be installed and set-up automatically during the build process.
54     BlazeBuild will also make sure to install any missing SDKs or tools required for building the project.
55    
56     The repository already contains the BlazeBuild wrapper (blazew). To build the project, run the following command in your terminal:
57    
58     ```bash
59     ./blazew build
60     ```
61    
62     This will build, compile and package the project into a `build` directory in the project root, which contains the compiled JavaScript files.
63     Depending on your system, the build process may take a few seconds to a few minutes to complete.
64     We recommend using a system with at least 8GB of RAM and 2 CPU cores for faster build times.
65    
66     If you don't have enough resources, this command will fail with heap allocation errors. If that happens, or if you don't want to build it yourself, don't worry. You can download prebuilt versions for every release. The builds are tested on Node.js **v21**, however they should also work with **v20**.
67     You might see that only Linux and macOS (darwin) releases are available. This doesn't mean you cannot run the bot on Windows systems - only the native bindings are platform dependent. You don't need to worry about that in most cases and the bot will just work fine.
68     You can download the prebuilt versions in the GitHub releases page: https://github.com/onesoft-sudo/sudobot/releases/latest
69    
70     As always if you ever encounter errors with commands or you see something is not working as you expect, you can join our [Discord Server](https://discord.gg/892GWhTzgs) and ask for help!
71    
72     ## Configuration
73    
74     After building the project, you need to configure the bot to run on your server.
75     You'll need to configure the following:
76    
77     - The environment variables
78     - The configuration files
79    
80     ### Environment Variables
81    
82     The bot uses environment variables for storing secret credentials like your bot's token. You can set these in a `.env` file in the project root.
83    
84     Create a new file named `.env` in the project root, and add the following environment variables:
85    
86     ```bash
87     # Your bot's token from the Discord Developer Portal.
88     TOKEN=your-bot-token
89    
90     # Client ID of your bot from the Discord Developer Portal.
91     CLIENT_ID=your-bot-client-id
92    
93     # Client Secret of your bot from the Discord Developer Portal.
94     CLIENT_SECRET=your-bot-client-secret
95    
96     # The ID of the guild where you want to register the commands,
97     # during development mode, and where the bot will send error reports.
98     # The bot will also search for emojis in this guild.
99     HOME_GUILD_ID=your-home-guild-id
100    
101     # Your PostgreSQL database connection URL.
102     # Sometimes your database provider might provide a connection URL
103     # exactly in this format. Otherwise if they give you the details
104     # separately, you can format it to look like this.
105     DB_URL=postgresql://username:password@hostname:port/database
106    
107     # JWT Secret for generating JWT tokens.
108     # On systems with openssl installed, you can generate a random
109     # secret using the following command:
110     #
111     # openssl rand -base64 32
112     #
113     # Replace `your-jwt-secret` with the generated secret.
114     JWT_SECRET=your-jwt-secret
115    
116     # Optionally, you can uncomment the following to turn on debug mode
117     # to see more detailed logs, and enable certain development features.
118    
119     # NODE_ENV=development
120     ```
121    
122     There are a lot of other environment variables that you can set, but these are the most important ones. You can check out all the environment variables in the [environment variable schema file](https://github.com/onesoft-sudo/sudobot/blob/main/src/main/typescript/schemas/EnvironmentVariableSchema.ts).
123    
124     ### Configuration Files
125    
126     The bot uses configuration files for storing settings like the bot's prefix, the system administrator IDs, and more.
127     Some of these settings are guild-wide, and some are global.
128     The guild-wide configuration file is `config.json`, and the global system-level configuration file is `system.json`.
129     The files are located at `config/` in the project root. These configuration files don't contain any specific setting, they are just a starting point for you to configure the bot.
130     You can edit these files to your liking.
131    
132     To see all the possible configuration options, please refer to these schema files:
133    
134     - [Guild Configuration Schema](https://github.com/onesoft-sudo/sudobot/blob/main/src/main/typescript/schemas/GuildConfigSchema.ts)
135     - [System Configuration Schema](https://github.com/onesoft-sudo/sudobot/blob/main/src/main/typescript/schemas/SystemConfigSchema.ts)
136    
137     ## Setting up the Database
138    
139     The bot uses a PostgreSQL database to store data like guild settings, user settings, and more.
140    
141     To set up the database, make sure you've set the `DB_URL` environment variable in the `.env` file.
142     Then, run the following command in your terminal to run the database migrations:
143    
144     ```bash
145     ./blazew migrate
146     ```
147    
148     This will create the required tables in the database.
149    
150     ## Running the Bot
151    
152     After configuring the bot, you can run it using the following command:
153    
154     ```bash
155     ./blazew run
156     ```
157    
158     By default, BlazeBuild will use [Bun](https://bun.sh) to run the bot. If you want to use Node.js instead, you can run the following command:
159    
160     ```bash
161     ./blazew run -- --node
162     ```
163    
164     This will start the bot, and you should see the bot online in your Discord server.
165     Congratulations! You have successfully set up a custom instance of SudoBot on your server 🎉
166    
167     ## Next steps
168    
169     ### Registering application commands
170    
171     The bot uses [Discord's Application Commands](https://discord.com/developers/docs/interactions/application-commands) for slash commands and context menus.
172     To register the application commands to the Discord API, you can run the following command:
173    
174     ```bash
175     ./blazew run -- -- -u
176     ```
177    
178     If you have debug mode enabled and have `HOME_GUILD_ID` set in the `.env` file, the bot will register the commands in the development guild.
179     If you don't have debug mode enabled, the bot will register the commands globally.
180    
181     If you want to force the bot to register the commands globally, you can run the following command:
182    
183     ```bash
184     ./blazew run -- -- -u -g
185     ```
186    
187     To clear the registered commands, you can run the following command:
188    
189     ```bash
190     ./blazew run -- -- -c
191     ```
192    
193     Once again, if you have debug mode enabled, the bot will clear the commands in the development guild. Otherwise, it will clear the commands globally.
194     To force the bot to clear the commands globally, you can run the following command:
195    
196     ```bash
197     ./blazew run -- -- -c -g
198     ```
199    
200     ## Emojis
201    
202     The bot uses some custom emojis and it will try to find those emojis in the Home Guild (The main server, which is configured in `HOME_GUILD_ID` environment variable).
203    
204     The emojis are freely available for download at the [download server](https://www.onesoftnet.eu.org/downloads/sudo/emojis/). The bot uses some other emojis as well, if you want you can download them from [emoji.gg](https://emoji.gg).
205    
206     If you don't add these emojis, the bot may send messages that look unformatted or broken.
207    
208     ## Help & Support
209    
210     In case if you're facing issues, feel free to open an issue at [GitHub](https://github.com/onesoft-sudo/sudobot/issues). Or you can contact the Author of the bot in the following ways:
211    
212     - Email: [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])
213     - Discord: [@rakinar2](https://discord.com/users/774553653394538506)
214     - Discord Servers: [Official OSN Server](https://discord.gg/JJDy9SHzGv)
215    
216     Give the repository a star to show your support! We'll be really thankful if you do.

[email protected]
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