# Turn on "strict mode." See http://redsymbol.net/articles/unofficial-bash-strict-mode/. # -e: exit if any command unexpectedly fails. # -u: exit if we have a variable typo. # -o pipefail: don't ignore errors in the non-last command in a pipeline set -euo pipefail function hide_output { # This function hides the output of a command unless the command fails # and returns a non-zero exit code. # Get a temporary file. OUTPUT=$(mktemp) # Execute command, redirecting stderr/stdout to the temporary file. Since we # check the return code ourselves, disable 'set -e' temporarily. set +e "$@" &> $OUTPUT E=$? set -e # If the command failed, show the output that was captured in the temporary file. if [ $E != 0 ]; then # Something failed. echo echo FAILED: "$@" echo ----------------------------------------- cat $OUTPUT echo ----------------------------------------- exit $E fi # Remove temporary file. rm -f $OUTPUT } function apt_get_quiet { # Run apt-get in a totally non-interactive mode. # # Somehow all of these options are needed to get it to not ask the user # questions about a) whether to proceed (-y), b) package options (noninteractive), # and c) what to do about files changed locally (we don't cause that to happen but # some VM providers muck with their images; -o). # # Although we could pass -qq to apt-get to make output quieter, many packages write to stdout # and stderr things that aren't really important. Use our hide_output function to capture # all of that and only show it if there is a problem (i.e. if apt_get returns a failure exit status). DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive hide_output apt-get -y -o Dpkg::Options::="--force-confdef" -o Dpkg::Options::="--force-confnew" "$@" } function apt_install { # Install a bunch of packages. We used to report which packages were already # installed and which needed installing, before just running an 'apt-get # install' for all of the packages. Calling `dpkg` on each package is slow, # and doesn't affect what we actually do, except in the messages, so let's # not do that anymore. apt_get_quiet install "$@" } function get_default_hostname { # Guess the machine's hostname. It should be a fully qualified # domain name suitable for DNS. None of these calls may provide # the right value, but it's the best guess we can make. set -- $(hostname --fqdn 2>/dev/null || hostname --all-fqdns 2>/dev/null || hostname 2>/dev/null) printf '%s\n' "$1" # return this value } function get_publicip_from_web_service { # This seems to be the most reliable way to determine the # machine's public IP address: asking a very nice web API # for how they see us. Thanks go out to icanhazip.com. # See: https://major.io/icanhazip-com-faq/ # # Pass '4' or '6' as an argument to this function to specify # what type of address to get (IPv4, IPv6). curl -$1 --fail --silent --max-time 15 icanhazip.com 2>/dev/null || /bin/true } function get_default_privateip { # Return the IP address of the network interface connected # to the Internet. # # Pass '4' or '6' as an argument to this function to specify # what type of address to get (IPv4, IPv6). # # We used to use `hostname -I` and then filter for either # IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. However if there are multiple # network interfaces on the machine, not all may be for # reaching the Internet. # # Instead use `ip route get` which asks the kernel to use # the system's routes to select which interface would be # used to reach a public address. We'll use 8.8.8.8 as # the destination. It happens to be Google Public DNS, but # no connection is made. We're just seeing how the box # would connect to it. There many be multiple IP addresses # assigned to an interface. `ip route get` reports the # preferred. That's good enough for us. See issue #121. # # With IPv6, the best route may be via an interface that # only has a link-local address (fe80::*). These addresses # are only unique to an interface and so need an explicit # interface specification in order to use them with bind(). # In these cases, we append "%interface" to the address. # See the Notes section in the man page for getaddrinfo and # https://discourse.mailinabox.email/t/update-broke-mailinabox/34/9. # # Also see ae67409603c49b7fa73c227449264ddd10aae6a9 and # issue #3 for why/how we originally added IPv6. target=8.8.8.8 # For the IPv6 route, use the corresponding IPv6 address # of Google Public DNS. Again, it doesn't matter so long # as it's an address on the public Internet. if [ "$1" == "6" ]; then target=2001:4860:4860::8888; fi # Get the route information. route=$(ip -$1 -o route get $target 2>/dev/null | grep -v unreachable) # Parse the address out of the route information. address=$(echo $route | sed "s/.* src \([^ ]*\).*/\1/") if [[ "$1" == "6" && $address == fe80:* ]]; then # For IPv6 link-local addresses, parse the interface out # of the route information and append it with a '%'. interface=$(echo $route | sed "s/.* dev \([^ ]*\).*/\1/") address=$address%$interface fi echo $address } function ufw_allow { if [ -z "${DISABLE_FIREWALL:-}" ]; then # ufw has completely unhelpful output ufw allow "$1" > /dev/null; fi } function ufw_limit { if [ -z "${DISABLE_FIREWALL:-}" ]; then # ufw has completely unhelpful output ufw limit "$1" > /dev/null; fi } function restart_service { hide_output service $1 restart } ## Dialog Functions ## function message_box { dialog --title "$1" --msgbox "$2" 0 0 } function input_box { # input_box "title" "prompt" "defaultvalue" VARIABLE # The user's input will be stored in the variable VARIABLE. # The exit code from dialog will be stored in VARIABLE_EXITCODE. # Temporarily turn off 'set -e' because we need the dialog return code. declare -n result=$4 declare -n result_code=$4_EXITCODE set +e result=$(dialog --stdout --title "$1" --inputbox "$2" 0 0 "$3") result_code=$? set -e } function input_menu { # input_menu "title" "prompt" "tag item tag item" VARIABLE # The user's input will be stored in the variable VARIABLE. # The exit code from dialog will be stored in VARIABLE_EXITCODE. declare -n result=$4 declare -n result_code=$4_EXITCODE local IFS=^$'\n' set +e result=$(dialog --stdout --title "$1" --menu "$2" 0 0 0 $3) result_code=$? set -e } function wget_verify { # Downloads a file from the web and checks that it matches # a provided hash. If the comparison fails, exit immediately. URL=$1 HASH=$2 DEST=$3 CHECKSUM="$HASH $DEST" rm -f $DEST hide_output wget -O $DEST $URL if ! echo "$CHECKSUM" | sha1sum --check --strict > /dev/null; then echo "------------------------------------------------------------" echo "Download of $URL did not match expected checksum." echo "Found:" sha1sum $DEST echo echo "Expected:" echo "$CHECKSUM" rm -f $DEST exit 1 fi } function git_clone { # Clones a git repository, checks out a particular commit or tag, # and moves the repository (or a subdirectory in it) to some path. # We use separate clone and checkout because -b only supports tags # and branches, but we sometimes want to reference a commit hash # directly when the repo doesn't provide a tag. REPO=$1 TREEISH=$2 SUBDIR=$3 TARGETPATH=$4 TMPPATH=/tmp/git-clone-$$ rm -rf $TMPPATH $TARGETPATH git clone -q $REPO $TMPPATH || exit 1 (cd $TMPPATH; git checkout -q $TREEISH;) || exit 1 mv $TMPPATH/$SUBDIR $TARGETPATH rm -rf $TMPPATH }