# Advanced Post-installation Tasks This page explains some advanced tasks and configuration options that can be performed after the bot installation and may be uselful in some environments. If you do not know what things mentioned here mean, you probably do not need it. ## Configure the bot running as a systemd service Copy the `freqtrade.service` file to your systemd user directory (usually `~/.config/systemd/user`) and update `WorkingDirectory` and `ExecStart` to match your setup. After that you can start the daemon with: ```bash systemctl --user start freqtrade ``` For this to be persistent (run when user is logged out) you'll need to enable `linger` for your freqtrade user. ```bash sudo loginctl enable-linger "$USER" ``` If you run the bot as a service, you can use systemd service manager as a software watchdog monitoring freqtrade bot state and restarting it in the case of failures. If the `internals.sd_notify` parameter is set to true in the configuration or the `--sd-notify` command line option is used, the bot will send keep-alive ping messages to systemd using the sd_notify (systemd notifications) protocol and will also tell systemd its current state (Running or Stopped) when it changes. The `freqtrade.service.watchdog` file contains an example of the service unit configuration file which uses systemd as the watchdog. !!! Note The sd_notify communication between the bot and the systemd service manager will not work if the bot runs in a Docker container. ## Logging to syslog or journald On many systems the bot can be configured to send its log messages to `syslog` or `journald`. The special values for the `--logfilename` option can be used for this: * `--logfilename journald` -- send log messages to `journald`. This needs the `systemd` python package installed as the dependency. Not available on Windows. * `--logfilename syslog:` -- send log messages to `syslog` server using the `` as syslog address. The syslog address can be either a Unix domain socket (socket filename) or a UDP socket specification, consisting of IP address and UDP port, separated by the ':' character. So, the following are the examples of possible usages: * `--logfilename syslog:/dev/log` -- log to syslog (rsyslog) using the `/dev/log` socket, suitable for most systems. * `--logfilename syslog` -- same as above, the shortcut for `/dev/log`. * `--logfilename syslog:/var/run/syslog` -- log to syslog (rsyslog) using the `/var/run/syslog` socket. Use this on MacOS. * `--logfilename syslog:localhost:514` -- log to local syslog using UDP socket, if it listens on port 514. * `--logfilename syslog::514` -- log to remote syslog at IP address and port 514. This may be used on Windows for remote logging to external syslog server. Log messages are send to `journald` and `syslog` with the `user` facility. So you can see them with the following commands: * `tail -f /var/log/user`, or install a comprehansive graphical viewer (for instance, 'Log File Viewer' for Ubuntu) for the `syslog` case; * `journalctl -f` when logging to `journald`. On many systems rsyslog (syslog) fetches data from journald, so both `--logfilename syslog` or `--logfilename journald` can be used and the messages be viewed with both journalctl and the syslog viewer utility. For rsyslog the messages from the bot can be redirected into a separate dedicated log file. To achieve this, add ``` if $programname startswith "freqtrade" then -/var/log/freqtrade.log ``` to one of the rsyslog configuration files, for example at the end of the `/etc/rsyslog.d/50-default.conf`. For syslog (rsyslog), the reduction mode can be switched on. This will reduce the number of repeating messages. For instance, multiple bot Heartbeat messages will be reduced to the single message when nothing else happens with the bot. To achieve this, set in `/etc/rsyslog.conf`: ``` # Filter duplicated messages $RepeatedMsgReduction on ```