pip<6.1 + setuptools>=34 have a problem with packages that
try to update setuptools during installation, like cryptography.
See https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/4253. The Ubuntu 14.04
package versions are pip 1.5.4 and setuptools 3.3. When we
install cryptography under those versions, it tries to update
setuptools to version 34, which became available about 10 days
ago, and then pip gets permanently broken with errors like
"ImportError: No module named 'packaging'".
The easiest work-around on systems that aren't already broken is
to upgrade pip and setuptools individually before we install any
package that tries to update setuptools.
Also try to detect a broken system and forcibly remove setuptools
first before trying to install/upgrade pip.
fixes#1080, fixes#1081, fixes#1086
see #1083
see https://discourse.mailinabox.email/t/error-with-pip-and-python/1880
see https://discourse.mailinabox.email/t/error-installing-mib/1875
Backup location and maximum age can now be configured in the admin panel.
For now only S3 is supported, but adding other duplicity supported backends should be straightforward.
* Use `cryptography` instead of parsing openssl's output.
* When checking if we can reuse the primary domain certificate or a www-parent-domain certificate for a domain, avoid shelling out to openssl entirely.
cc333b3965 worked for fresh systems, but if the system already had the daemon running the api.key file would already exist and the test would pass to early. Now removing the file first.
fixes#322
Duplicity will manage the process of creating incremental backups for us.
Although duplicity can both encrypt & copy files to a remote host, I really
don't like PGP and so I don't want to use that.
Instead, we'll back up to a local directory unencrypted, then manually
encrypt the full & incremental backup files. Synchronizing the encrypted
backup directory to a remote host is a TODO.
* Created a new Python/flask-based management daemon.
* Moved the mail user management core code from tools/mail.py to the new daemon.
* tools/mail.py is a wrapper around the daemon and can be run as a non-root user.
* Adding a new initscript for the management daemon.
* Moving dns_update.sh to the management daemon, called via curl'ing the daemon's API.
This also now runs the DNS update after mail users and aliases are added/removed,
which sets up new domains' DNS as needed.