Files
HOA_Financial_Platform/docs/DEPLOYMENT.md
olsch01 2c215353d4 refactor: remove Docker nginx from production, use host nginx directly
The production stack no longer runs a Docker nginx container. Instead,
the host-level nginx handles SSL termination AND request routing:
  /api/* → 127.0.0.1:3000 (backend)
  /*     → 127.0.0.1:3001 (frontend)

Changes:
- docker-compose.prod.yml: set nginx replicas to 0, expose backend and
  frontend on 127.0.0.1 only (loopback)
- nginx/host-production.conf: new ready-to-copy host nginx config with
  SSL, rate limiting, proxy buffering, and AI endpoint timeouts
- docs/DEPLOYMENT.md: rewritten production deployment and SSL sections
  to reflect the simplified single-nginx architecture

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-02 20:08:32 -05:00

18 KiB
Raw Blame History

HOA LedgerIQ — Deployment Guide

Version: 2026.3.2 (beta) Last updated: 2026-03-02


Table of Contents

  1. Prerequisites
  2. Deploy to a Fresh Docker Server
  3. Production Deployment
  4. SSL with Certbot (Let's Encrypt)
  5. Backup the Local Test Database
  6. Restore a Backup into the Staged Environment
  7. Running Migrations on the Staged Environment
  8. Verifying the Deployment
  9. Environment Variable Reference

Prerequisites

On the target server, ensure the following are installed:

Tool Minimum Version
Docker Engine 24+
Docker Compose v2+
Git 2.x
psql (client) 15+ (optional, for manual DB work)

The app runs four containers in production — backend (NestJS), frontend (React/nginx), PostgreSQL 15, and Redis 7. A fifth nginx container is used in dev mode only. Total memory footprint is roughly 12 GB idle.

For SSL, the server must also have:

  • A public hostname with a DNS A record pointing to the server's IP (e.g., staging.yourdomain.com → 203.0.113.10)
  • Ports 80 and 443 open in any firewall / security group

Deploy to a Fresh Docker Server

1. Clone the repository

ssh your-staging-server

git clone <repo-url> /opt/hoa-ledgeriq
cd /opt/hoa-ledgeriq

2. Create the environment file

Copy the example and fill in real values:

cp .env.example .env
nano .env          # or vi, your choice

Required changes from defaults:

# --- CHANGE THESE ---
POSTGRES_PASSWORD=<strong-random-password>
JWT_SECRET=<random-64-char-string>

# Database URL must match the password above
DATABASE_URL=postgresql://hoafinance:<same-password>@postgres:5432/hoafinance

# AI features (get a key from build.nvidia.com)
AI_API_KEY=nvapi-xxxxxxxxxxxx

# --- Usually fine as-is ---
POSTGRES_USER=hoafinance
POSTGRES_DB=hoafinance
REDIS_URL=redis://redis:6379
NODE_ENV=development        # keep as development for staging
AI_API_URL=https://integrate.api.nvidia.com/v1
AI_MODEL=qwen/qwen3.5-397b-a17b
AI_DEBUG=false

Tip: Generate secrets quickly:

openssl rand -hex 32    # good for JWT_SECRET
openssl rand -base64 24 # good for POSTGRES_PASSWORD

3. Build and start the stack

docker compose up -d --build

This will:

  • Build the backend and frontend images
  • Pull postgres:15-alpine, redis:7-alpine, and nginx:alpine
  • Initialize the PostgreSQL database with the shared schema (db/init/00-init.sql)
  • Start all services on the hoanet bridge network

4. Wait for healthy services

docker compose ps

All containers should show Up (postgres and redis should also show (healthy)). If the backend is restarting, check logs:

docker compose logs backend --tail=50

5. (Optional) Seed with demo data

If deploying a fresh environment for testing and you want the Sunrise Valley HOA demo tenant:

docker compose exec -T postgres psql -U hoafinance -d hoafinance < db/seed/seed.sql

This creates:

  • Platform admin: admin@hoaledgeriq.com / password123
  • Tenant admin: admin@sunrisevalley.org / password123
  • Tenant viewer: viewer@sunrisevalley.org / password123

6. Access the application

Service URL
App (UI) http://<server-ip>
API http://<server-ip>/api
Postgres <server-ip>:5432 (direct)

At this point the app is running over plain HTTP in development mode. For any environment that will serve real traffic, continue to the Production Deployment section.


Production Deployment

The base docker-compose.yml runs everything in development mode (Vite dev server, NestJS in watch mode, no connection pooling). This is fine for local development but will fail under even light production load.

docker-compose.prod.yml provides a production overlay that fixes this:

Component Dev mode Production mode
Frontend Vite dev server (single-threaded, HMR) Static build served by nginx
Backend nest start --watch (ts-node, file watcher) Compiled JS, clustered across CPU cores
DB pooling None (new connection per query) Pool of 30 reusable connections
Postgres Default config (100 connections) Tuned: 200 connections, optimized buffers
Nginx Docker nginx routes all traffic Disabled — host nginx routes directly
Restart None unless-stopped on all services

Deploy for production

cd /opt/hoa-ledgeriq

# Ensure .env has NODE_ENV=production and strong secrets
nano .env

# Build and start with the production overlay
docker compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.prod.yml up -d --build

The production overlay disables the Docker nginx container — request routing and SSL are handled by the host-level nginx. Backend and frontend are exposed on 127.0.0.1 only (loopback), so they aren't publicly accessible without the host nginx in front.

Host nginx setup (required for production)

A ready-to-use host nginx config is included at nginx/host-production.conf. It handles SSL termination, request routing, rate limiting, proxy buffering, and extended timeouts for AI endpoints.

# Copy the reference config
sudo cp nginx/host-production.conf /etc/nginx/sites-available/app.yourdomain.com

# Edit the hostname (replace all instances of app.yourdomain.com)
sudo sed -i 's/app.yourdomain.com/YOUR_HOSTNAME/g' \
  /etc/nginx/sites-available/app.yourdomain.com

# Enable the site
sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/app.yourdomain.com /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/

# Get an SSL certificate (certbot modifies the config automatically)
sudo certbot --nginx -d YOUR_HOSTNAME

# Test and reload
sudo nginx -t && sudo systemctl reload nginx

The host config routes traffic directly to the Docker services:

  • /api/*http://127.0.0.1:3000 (NestJS backend)
  • /http://127.0.0.1:3001 (React frontend served by nginx)

See nginx/host-production.conf for the full config including rate limiting, proxy buffering, and extended AI endpoint timeouts.

Tip: Create a shell alias to avoid typing the compose files every time:

echo 'alias dc="docker compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.prod.yml"' >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
dc up -d --build

What the production overlay does

Backend (backend/Dockerfile)

  • Multi-stage build: compiles TypeScript once, runs node dist/main
  • No dev dependencies shipped (smaller image, faster startup)
  • Node.js clustering: forks one worker per CPU core (up to 4)
  • Connection pool: 30 reusable PostgreSQL connections shared across workers

Frontend (frontend/Dockerfile)

  • Multi-stage build: npm run build produces optimized static assets
  • Served by a lightweight nginx container (not Vite)
  • Static assets cached with immutable headers (Vite filename hashing)

Host Nginx (nginx/host-production.conf)

  • SSL termination + HTTP→HTTPS redirect (via certbot on host)
  • Rate limiting on API routes (10 req/s per IP, burst 30)
  • Proxy buffering to prevent 502s during slow responses
  • Extended timeouts for AI endpoints (180s for investment/health-score calls)
  • Routes /api/* → backend:3000, / → frontend:3001

PostgreSQL

  • max_connections=200 (up from default 100)
  • shared_buffers=256MB, effective_cache_size=512MB
  • Tuned checkpoint, WAL, and memory settings

Capacity guidelines

With the production stack on a 2-core / 4GB server:

Metric Expected capacity
Concurrent users 50100
API requests/sec ~200
DB connections 30 per backend worker × workers
Frontend serving Static files, effectively unlimited

For higher loads, scale the backend horizontally with Docker Swarm or Kubernetes replicas.


SSL with Certbot (Let's Encrypt)

SSL is handled entirely at the host level using certbot with the host nginx. No Docker containers are involved in SSL termination.

Prerequisites

  • A public hostname with DNS pointing to this server
  • Ports 80 and 443 open in the firewall
  • Host nginx installed: sudo apt install nginx (Ubuntu/Debian)
  • Certbot installed: sudo apt install certbot python3-certbot-nginx

Obtain a certificate

If you followed the "Host nginx setup" section above, certbot was already run as part of that process. If not:

# Ensure the host nginx config is in place first
sudo certbot --nginx -d YOUR_HOSTNAME

Certbot will:

  1. Verify domain ownership via an ACME challenge on port 80
  2. Obtain the certificate from Let's Encrypt
  3. Automatically modify the nginx config to enable SSL
  4. Set up an HTTP → HTTPS redirect

Verify HTTPS

# Should return 200 with SSL
curl -I https://YOUR_HOSTNAME

# Should return 301 redirect to HTTPS
curl -I http://YOUR_HOSTNAME

Auto-renewal

Certbot installs a systemd timer (or cron job) that checks for renewal twice daily. Verify it's active:

sudo systemctl status certbot.timer

To test renewal without actually renewing:

sudo certbot renew --dry-run

Certbot automatically reloads nginx after a successful renewal.


Backup the Local Test Database

From your local development machine where the app is currently running:

cd /path/to/HOA_Financial_Platform

# Dump the entire database (all schemas, roles, data)
docker compose exec -T postgres pg_dump \
  -U hoafinance \
  -d hoafinance \
  --no-owner \
  --no-privileges \
  --format=custom \
  -f /tmp/hoafinance_backup.dump

# Copy the dump file out of the container
docker compose cp postgres:/tmp/hoafinance_backup.dump ./hoafinance_backup.dump

The --format=custom flag produces a compressed binary format that supports selective restore. The file is typically 5080% smaller than plain SQL.

Alternative: Plain SQL dump

If you prefer a human-readable SQL file:

docker compose exec -T postgres pg_dump \
  -U hoafinance \
  -d hoafinance \
  --no-owner \
  --no-privileges \
  > hoafinance_backup.sql

Backup a single tenant schema

To export just one tenant (e.g., Pine Creek HOA):

docker compose exec -T postgres pg_dump \
  -U hoafinance \
  -d hoafinance \
  --no-owner \
  --no-privileges \
  --schema=tenant_pine_creek_hoa_q33i \
  > pine_creek_backup.sql

Finding a tenant's schema name:

docker compose exec -T postgres psql -U hoafinance -d hoafinance \
  -c "SELECT name, schema_name FROM shared.organizations WHERE status = 'active';"

Restore a Backup into the Staged Environment

1. Transfer the backup to the staging server

scp hoafinance_backup.dump user@staging-server:/opt/hoa-ledgeriq/

2. Ensure the stack is running

cd /opt/hoa-ledgeriq
docker compose up -d

3. Drop and recreate the database (clean slate)

# Connect to postgres and reset the database
docker compose exec -T postgres psql -U hoafinance -d postgres -c "
  SELECT pg_terminate_backend(pid)
  FROM pg_stat_activity
  WHERE datname = 'hoafinance' AND pid <> pg_backend_pid();
"
docker compose exec -T postgres dropdb -U hoafinance hoafinance
docker compose exec -T postgres createdb -U hoafinance hoafinance

4a. Restore from custom-format dump

# Copy the dump into the container
docker compose cp hoafinance_backup.dump postgres:/tmp/hoafinance_backup.dump

# Restore
docker compose exec -T postgres pg_restore \
  -U hoafinance \
  -d hoafinance \
  --no-owner \
  --no-privileges \
  /tmp/hoafinance_backup.dump

4b. Restore from plain SQL dump

docker compose exec -T postgres psql \
  -U hoafinance \
  -d hoafinance \
  < hoafinance_backup.sql

5. Restart the backend

After restoring, restart the backend so NestJS re-establishes its connection pool and picks up the restored schemas:

docker compose restart backend

Running Migrations on the Staged Environment

Migrations live in db/migrations/ and are numbered sequentially. After restoring an older backup, you may need to apply newer migrations.

Check which migrations exist:

ls -la db/migrations/

Apply them in order:

# Run all migrations sequentially
for f in db/migrations/*.sql; do
  echo "Applying $f ..."
  docker compose exec -T postgres psql \
    -U hoafinance \
    -d hoafinance \
    < "$f"
done

Or apply a specific migration:

docker compose exec -T postgres psql \
  -U hoafinance \
  -d hoafinance \
  < db/migrations/010-health-scores.sql

Note: Migrations are idempotent where possible (IF NOT EXISTS, DO $$ ... $$ blocks), so re-running one that has already been applied is generally safe.


Verifying the Deployment

Quick health checks

# Backend is responding
curl -s http://localhost:3000/api/auth/login | head -c 100

# Database is accessible
docker compose exec -T postgres psql -U hoafinance -d hoafinance \
  -c "SELECT count(*) AS tenants FROM shared.organizations WHERE status = 'active';"

# Redis is working
docker compose exec -T redis redis-cli ping

Full smoke test

  1. Open https://YOUR_HOSTNAME (or http://<server-ip>) in a browser
  2. Log in with a known account
  3. Navigate to Dashboard — verify health scores load
  4. Navigate to Capital Planning — verify Kanban columns render
  5. Navigate to Projects — verify project list loads
  6. Check the Settings page — version should read 2026.3.2 (beta)

Verify SSL (if enabled)

# Check certificate details
echo | openssl s_client -connect YOUR_HOSTNAME:443 -servername YOUR_HOSTNAME 2>/dev/null \
  | openssl x509 -noout -subject -issuer -dates

# Check that HTTP redirects to HTTPS
curl -sI http://YOUR_HOSTNAME | grep -E 'HTTP|Location'

View logs

docker compose logs -f              # all services
docker compose logs -f backend      # backend only
docker compose logs -f postgres     # database only
docker compose logs -f frontend     # frontend nginx
sudo tail -f /var/log/nginx/access.log  # host nginx access log
sudo tail -f /var/log/nginx/error.log   # host nginx error log

Environment Variable Reference

Variable Required Description
POSTGRES_USER Yes PostgreSQL username
POSTGRES_PASSWORD Yes PostgreSQL password (change from default)
POSTGRES_DB Yes Database name
DATABASE_URL Yes Full connection string for the backend
REDIS_URL Yes Redis connection string
JWT_SECRET Yes Secret for signing JWT tokens (change from default)
NODE_ENV Yes development or production
AI_API_URL Yes OpenAI-compatible inference endpoint
AI_API_KEY Yes API key for AI provider (Nvidia)
AI_MODEL Yes Model identifier for AI calls
AI_DEBUG No Set true to log raw AI prompts/responses

Architecture Overview

  Development:
                     ┌──────────────────┐
  Browser ─────────► │  nginx :80       │
                     └────────┬─────────┘
                   ┌──────────┴──────────┐
                   ▼                     ▼
          ┌──────────────┐       ┌──────────────┐
          │ backend :3000│       │frontend :5173│
          │   (NestJS)   │       │ (Vite/React) │
          └──────┬───────┘       └──────────────┘
            ┌────┴────┐
            ▼         ▼
    ┌────────────┐ ┌───────────┐
    │postgres:5432│ │redis :6379│
    │  (PG 15)   │ │ (Redis 7) │
    └────────────┘ └───────────┘

  Production (host nginx handles SSL + routing):
                     ┌────────────────────────────────┐
  Browser ─────────► │  Host nginx :80/:443 (SSL)     │
                     │  /api/* → 127.0.0.1:3000       │
                     │  /*     → 127.0.0.1:3001       │
                     └────────┬───────────┬───────────┘
                              ▼           ▼
                   ┌──────────────┐ ┌──────────────┐
                   │ backend :3000│ │frontend :3001│
                   │  (compiled)  │ │ (static nginx)│
                   └──────┬───────┘ └──────────────┘
                     ┌────┴────┐
                     ▼         ▼
             ┌────────────┐ ┌───────────┐
             │postgres:5432│ │redis :6379│
             │  (PG 15)   │ │ (Redis 7) │
             └────────────┘ └───────────┘

Multi-tenant isolation: Each HOA organization gets its own PostgreSQL schema (e.g., tenant_pine_creek_hoa_q33i). The shared schema holds cross-tenant tables (users, organizations, market rates). Tenant context is resolved from the JWT token on every API request.