@joshdata squashed pull request #1398, removed some comments, and added these notes:
* The old init.d script for the management daemon is replaced with a systemd service.
* A systemd service configuration is added to configure permissions for munin on startup.
* nginx SSL settings are updated because nginx's options and defaults have changed, and we now enable http2.
* Automatic SSHFP record generation is updated to know that 22 is the default SSH daemon port, since it is no longer explicit in sshd_config.
* The dovecot-lucene package is dropped because the Mail-in-a-Box PPA where we built the package has not been updated for Ubuntu 18.04.
* The stock postgrey package is installed instead of the one from our PPA (which we no longer support), which loses the automatic whitelisting of DNSWL.org-whitelisted senders.
* Drop memcached and the status check for memcached, which we used to use with ownCloud long ago but are no longer installing.
* Other minor changes.
fixes#1409
This reverts commit 82844ca651 ("make certbot auto-agree to TOS if NONINTERACTIVE=1 env var is set (#1399)") and instead *always* auto-agree. If we don't auto-agree, certbot asks the user interactively, but our "curl | bash" setup line does not permit interactive prompts, so certbot failed to register and all certificate things were broken until the command was re-run interactively.
Starting with 2.4, Z-Push no longer provides tarballs on their download server. The only options are getting the code from their git repository or using one of their distribution packages. Their Ubuntu 18.04 packaes don't seem to actually work in Ubuntu 18.04, so thinking ahead that's currently a bad choice. In 78d1c9be6e we switched from doing a git clone to using wget on their downloads server because of a problem with something related to stash.z-hub.io's SSL certificate. But wget also seems to work on their source code repository, so we can use that.
In 0088fb4553 I changed the management daemon's startup
script from a symlink to a Python script to a bash script that activated the new virtualenv
and then launched Python. As a result, the init.d script that starts the daemon would
write the pid of bash to the pidfile, and when trying to kill it, it would kill bash but
not the Python process.
Using exec to start Python fixes this problem by making the Python process have the pid
that the init.d script knows about.
fixes#1339
The cryptography package has created all sorts of installation trouble over the last few years, probably because of mismatches between OS-installed packages and pip-installed packages. Using a virtualenv for all Python packages used by the management daemon should make sure everything is consistent.
See #1298, see #1264.
The PHP5 packages have a dependency on (apache2 or php5-cgi or php5-fpm), and since removing php5-fpm apache2 started getting installed during setup, which caused a conflict with nginx of course.
These packages don't seem to be needed by Roundcube or Nextcloud --- Roundcube includes the ones it needs.
see #1264, #1298
* The Mozilla recommendations must have been updated in the last few years.
* The HSTS header must have >=6 months to get an A+ at ssllabs.com/ssltest.
Nextcloud 12 adds a new OC_VersionCanBeUpgradedFrom field to /usr/local/lib/owncloud/version.php which lists
prior NC/OC version numbers, which confuses our check for what the installed version is. Make our regex more strict.
merges #1238
* Install PHP7 via a PPA, enable unattended upgrades for the PPA, and switch all of our PHP configuration to the PHP7 install.
* Keep installing PHP5 for ownCloud/Nextcloud packages because we need it to possibly run transitional updates to ownCloud/Nextcloud versions less than 12. But replace PHP5 packages with PHP7 packages elsewhere.
* Update to Nextcloud 12 which requires PHP7, with a transitional upgrade to Nextcloud 11.0.3.
* Disable TLS cert validation by Roundcube when connecting to localhost IMAP and SMTP. Validation became the default in PHP7 but we don't necessarily have a (non-self-)signed certificate and it definitely isn't valid for the IP address 127.0.0.1.
Merges #1140
* sshfp records from nonstandard ports
If port 22 is not open, dns_update.py will not create SSHFP records
because it only scans port 22 for keys. This commit modifies
dns_update.py to parse the sshd_config file for open ports, and
then obtains keys from one of them (even if port 22 is not open).
* modified test of s per JoshData request
* edit CHANGELOG per JoshData
* fix typo
Seems like if REQUEST_METHOD is set to GET, then we can drop two redundant ways the query string is given. munin-cgi-graph itself reads the environment variables only, but its calls to Perl's CGI::param will look at the command line if REQUEST_METHOD is not used, otherwise it uses environment variables like CGI used to work.
Since this is all behind admin auth anyway, there isn't a public vulnerability. #914 was opened without comment which lead me to notice the redundancy and worry about a vulnerability, before I realized this is admin-only anyway.
The vulnerability was created by 6d6f3ea391.
See #914.
This is the v0.19b hotfix commit.
DavDroid's latest version's account configuration no longer just asked for a hostname. Its email address & password configuration mode did not work without a SRV record.
In the earlier commit, I added a Dovecot userdb lookup. Without a userdb lookup, Dovecot would use the password db for user lookups. With a userdb lookup we can support iterating over users.
But I forgot the WHERE clause in the query, resulting in every incoming message being accepted if the user database contained any users at all. Since the mailbox path template is the same for all users, mail was delivered correctly except that mail that should have been rejected was delivered too.
On some machines localhost is defined as something other than 127.0.0.1, and if we mix "127.0.0.1" and "localhost" then some connections won't be to to the address a service is actually running on.
This was the case with DKIM: It was running on "localhost" but Postfix was connecting to it at 127.0.0.1. (https://discourse.mailinabox.email/t/opendkim-is-not-running-port-8891/1188/12.)
I suppose "localhost" could be an alias to an IPv6 address? We don't really want local services binding on IPv6, so use "127.0.0.1" to be explicit and don't use "localhost" to be sure we get an IPv4 address.
Fixes#797
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1
iQEcBAABAgAGBQJW/mJqAAoJELkgQfTBC92B/F8H/2s6wKhzzeoqkhLU2nvYJh0B
Q1d0SbtdQWIWrTQbcjIR3aGYwJzJ+HC7rylrwS4lB2ugpJBA0MnfD+ktwbe/EyDa
pN6WLlmnXyAw28//ubq0FQqC8Gawsj4WMfmSEw/XuDShik8XJmU7QUEnewClJ7So
ko4eVp9KL8MU3Rj/DebhyoW0EjpB/qrJvLSqtj4KCxKYES9J8nUVBFVRDL48yNx4
2KTIjqreGZmtW0/wxPnganMeV6DZn3B6vBmqOYYvw7bf6r/cY0ZkNK/ENlo+ntJD
3jFKki4TJChhGVWH5T4Tw2bys4Cua1+SA3cleNRH1rYSvRWyOCwK+LS4YBJHYp4=
=umMp
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
merge hotfix release tag 'v0.17c' into master
The hotfixes were all already applied to master in original PRs. This merge merely brings over the CHANGELOG and the updated install instructions (v0.17b=>v0.17c), including to bootstrap.sh which is what triggers v0.17c being the latest release.
This was originally fixed in 143bbf37f4 (February 16, 2015). Then I broke it in 7a93d219ef (November 2015) while doing some refactoring ahead of v0.15.