* Fix path to bind9 startup options file in Ubuntu 22.04.
* tinymce has not been a Roundcube requirement recently and is no longer a package in Ubuntu 22.04
* Upgrade Vagrant box to Ubuntu 22.04
@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.
Addresses #3
Added support by adding parallel code wherever `$PUBLIC_IP` was used.
Providing an IPv6 address is completely optional.
Playing around on my IPv6-enabled mail server revealed that — before
this change — mailinabox might try to use an IPv6 address as the value
for `$PUBLIC_IP`, which wouldn't work out well.
* use a public box (the official Ubuntu 14.04 box which contra the description does have VBox Guest Additions installed)
* now that we allow SSH password logins, since Vagrant requires it, dont muck with sshd_config here
* don't put the machine on the public network because that will allow anyone to log into it with Vagrant's default username/password, duh
* adding a Vagrantfile
* in a non-interactive setup like this, create the user's first email account for them
* let the machine auto-detect its IP address using http://icanhazip.com/
* use our own justtesting.email domain to provision a subdomain for users so they can quickly get started