HelpCommunities
About the control node in Status Communities
jorge-campo
on Sep 24, 2024

Only relevant to:
Owners
Status app is currently in beta stage
The Status app is currently in its beta stage. This means the application is still undergoing active development, and certain features described in this document may function differently or be unavailable within the app.
info
You can only administer communities and run a control node using the Status desktop app.

Status Communities require a computer called the control node for administration purposes. When you create a community, your computer becomes a control node. The control node is the administration hub and the only computer to change your community's settings and configuration.

As the community Owner, the control node runs automatically in your Status desktop app if you use the same profile and computer where you set up the community.

info
The control node doesn't determine community ownership by itself. You establish ownership by holding the Owner token.

caution
Don't try to use more than one installation of Status desktop as your community control node. Running your community with multiple control nodes will cause unforeseen issues and increase your community bandwidth requirements.

The community control node maintains your community's settings, configuration and functionality. Keep Status desktop running with your owner profile online daily, or at least once every six days.

If the control node goes offline, your community functionality is affected. You can set up a new control node if the initial Status desktop fails or becomes inaccessible.

If you want to administer your community from another computer, set up the same Status profile on that computer. This process doesn't create a new control node, and you can complete it on as many computers as you want.

Using a different computer is helpful if you run your Status Community on your desktop computer but want to travel with your laptop, for example. Additionally, you can delegate admin permissions to others using tokens.

No matter how many computers you use to administer your community, they all forward the tasks to the control node. For example, if you accept a join request to your community from a computer that is not the control node, your computer forwards the request to the control node.

If you run Status desktop on multiple computers and are unsure which one is the control node, follow these steps:

  1. 1
    From the navigation sidebar, click your community.
  2. 2
    At the top of the channel sidebar, click your community logo.
  3. 3
    Click
    Overview
    .
  4. 4
    At the bottom of the content area, look for the
    This device is currently the control node
    message.
Updated by
jorge-campo
on Sep 24, 2024
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