mailinabox/setup/system.sh

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source setup/functions.sh # load our functions
# Basic System Configuration
# -------------------------
# ### Install Packages
# Update system packages to make sure we have the latest upstream versions of things from Ubuntu.
echo Updating system packages...
hide_output apt-get update
hide_output apt-get -y upgrade
# Install basic utilities.
#
# * haveged: Provides extra entropy to /dev/random so it doesn't stall
# when generating random numbers for private keys (e.g. during
# ldns-keygen).
# * unattended-upgrades: Apt tool to install security updates automatically.
# * software-properties-common: Provides apt-add-repository.
# * ntp: keeps the system time correct
# * fail2ban: scans log files for repeated failed login attempts and blocks the remote IP at the firewall
apt_install python3 python3-dev python3-pip \
wget curl \
software-properties-common \
haveged unattended-upgrades ntp fail2ban
# Allow apt to install system updates automatically every day.
cat > /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/02periodic <<EOF;
APT::Periodic::MaxAge "7";
APT::Periodic::Update-Package-Lists "1";
APT::Periodic::Unattended-Upgrade "1";
APT::Periodic::Verbose "1";
EOF
# ### Firewall
# Various virtualized environments like Docker and some VPSs don't provide #NODOC
# a kernel that supports iptables. To avoid error-like output in these cases, #NODOC
# we skip this if the user sets DISABLE_FIREWALL=1. #NODOC
if [ -z "$DISABLE_FIREWALL" ]; then
# Install `ufw` which provides a simple firewall configuration.
apt_install ufw
# Allow incoming connections to SSH.
ufw_allow ssh;
# ssh might be running on an alternate port. Use sshd -T to dump sshd's #NODOC
# settings, find the port it is supposedly running on, and open that port #NODOC
# too. #NODOC
SSH_PORT=$(sshd -T 2>/dev/null | grep "^port " | sed "s/port //") #NODOC
if [ ! -z "$SSH_PORT" ]; then
if [ "$SSH_PORT" != "22" ]; then
echo Opening alternate SSH port $SSH_PORT. #NODOC
ufw_allow $SSH_PORT #NODOC
fi
fi
ufw --force enable;
fi #NODOC
# ### Local DNS Service
# Install a local DNS server, rather than using the DNS server provided by the
# ISP's network configuration.
#
# We do this to ensure that DNS queries
# that *we* make (i.e. looking up other external domains) perform DNSSEC checks.
# We could use Google's Public DNS, but we don't want to create a dependency on
# Google per our goals of decentralization. `bind9`, as packaged for Ubuntu, has
# DNSSEC enabled by default via "dnssec-validation auto".
#
# So we'll be running `bind9` bound to 127.0.0.1 for locally-issued DNS queries
# and `nsd` bound to the public ethernet interface for remote DNS queries asking
# about our domain names. `nsd` is configured later.
#
# About the settings:
#
# * RESOLVCONF=yes will have `bind9` take over /etc/resolv.conf to tell
# local services that DNS queries are handled on localhost.
# * Adding -4 to OPTIONS will have `bind9` not listen on IPv6 addresses
# so that we're sure there's no conflict with nsd, our public domain
# name server, on IPV6.
# * The listen-on directive in named.conf.options restricts `bind9` to
# binding to the loopback interface instead of all interfaces.
apt_install bind9 resolvconf
tools/editconf.py /etc/default/bind9 \
RESOLVCONF=yes \
"OPTIONS=\"-u bind -4\""
if ! grep -q "listen-on " /etc/bind/named.conf.options; then
# Add a listen-on directive if it doesn't exist inside the options block.
sed -i "s/^}/\n\tlisten-on { 127.0.0.1; };\n}/" /etc/bind/named.conf.options
fi
if [ -f /etc/resolvconf/resolv.conf.d/original ]; then
echo "Archiving old resolv.conf (was /etc/resolvconf/resolv.conf.d/original, now /etc/resolvconf/resolv.conf.original)." #NODOC
mv /etc/resolvconf/resolv.conf.d/original /etc/resolvconf/resolv.conf.original #NODOC
fi
# Restart the DNS services.
restart_service bind9
restart_service resolvconf