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.
git clone (which uses curl) underneath was failing. Curiously, the same
git clone command would work on my macos host machine.
From the screenshot it looks like curl was somehow not able to negotiate
the connection. Might have been a missing CA certificate for Comodo, but
I was not able to determine if that was the issue.
fixes#1393closes#1387closes#1400
Our wget_verify function uses wget to download a file and then check
the file's hash. If wget fails, i.e. because of a 404 or other HTTP
or network error, we exited setup without displaying any output because
normally there are no errors and -q keeps the setup output clean.
Wrapping wget with our hide_output function, and dropping -q, captures
wget's output and shows it and exits setup just if wget fails.
see #1297
Passwords must be eight characters long; when passwords are changed via the users page the dialog states that passwords need to be at least four characters but only eight or more are acceptable.
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