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m2dev-server/docs/server-management.md
2026-04-14 13:14:37 +02:00

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Server Management

This document describes the current Debian-side control plane for the production Metin runtime.

Inventory

The channel topology now lives in one versioned file:

  • deploy/channel-inventory.json

It defines:

  • auth and DB listener ports
  • channel ids
  • per-core public ports and P2P ports
  • whether a channel is public/client-visible
  • whether a special channel should always be included by management tooling

This inventory is now the source used by:

  • channel_inventory.py
  • channels.py compatibility exports
  • install.py
  • deploy/systemd/install_systemd.py
  • metinctl

metinctl

The Debian deployment installs:

  • /usr/local/bin/metinctl

metinctl is a lightweight operational CLI for:

  • viewing inventory
  • listing managed units
  • checking service status
  • listing declared ports
  • restarting the whole stack or specific channels/instances
  • viewing logs
  • running the root-only headless healthcheck

Examples

Show inventory:

metinctl inventory

Show current unit state:

metinctl status

Show declared ports and whether they are currently listening:

metinctl ports --live

Restart only channel 1 cores:

metinctl restart channel:1

Restart one specific game instance:

metinctl restart instance:channel1_core2

Tail auth logs:

metinctl logs auth -n 200 -f

Run the end-to-end healthcheck:

metinctl healthcheck

systemd installer behavior

deploy/systemd/install_systemd.py now uses the same inventory and installs metinctl.

It also reconciles enabled game instance units against the selected channels:

  • selected game units are enabled
  • stale game units are disabled
  • if --restart is passed, stale game units are disabled with --now

This makes channel enablement declarative instead of depending on whatever happened to be enabled previously.