`uploads-route.noserve` and `uploads-route.internal` contained
identical location blocks for `/upload`, since differentiation was
necessary for Trusty until 33c941407b72; move the now-common sections
into `app`.
This the only differences between internal and S3 serving as a single
block which should be included or not based on config; move it to a
file which may or may not be placed in `app.d/`.
07779ea879 added an additional `proxy_set_header` of `X-Real-IP` to
`puppet/zulip/files/nginx/zulip-include-common/proxy`; as noted in
that commit, Tornado longpoll proxies already included such a line.
Unfortunately, this equates to setting that header _twice_ for Tornado
ports, like so:
```
X-Real-Ip: 198.199.116.58
X-Real-Ip: 198.199.116.58
```
...which is represented, once parsed by Django, as an IP of
`198.199.116.58, 198.199.116.58`. For IPv4, this odd "IP address" has
no problems, and appears in the access logs accordingly; for IPv6
addresses, however, its length is such that it overflows a call to
`getaddrinfo` when attempting to determine the validity of the IP.
Remove the now-duplicated inclusion of the header.
The `X-Forwarded-For` header is a list of proxies' IP addresses; each
proxy appends the remote address of the host it received its request
from to the list, as it passes the request down. A naïve parsing, as
SetRemoteAddrFromForwardedFor did, would thus interpret the first
address in the list as the client's IP.
However, clients can pass in arbitrary `X-Forwarded-For` headers,
which would allow them to spoof their IP address. `nginx`'s behavior
is to treat the addresses as untrusted unless they match an allowlist
of known proxies. By setting `real_ip_recursive on`, it also allows
this behavior to be applied repeatedly, moving from right to left down
the `X-Forwarded-For` list, stopping at the right-most that is
untrusted.
Rather than re-implement this logic in Django, pass the first
untrusted value that `nginx` computer down into Django via `X-Real-Ip`
header. This allows consistent IP addresses in logs between `nginx`
and Django.
Proxied calls into Tornado (which don't use UWSGI) already passed this
header, as Tornado logging respects it.
This verifies that the proxy is working by accessing a
highly-available website through it. Since failure of this equates to
failures of Sentry notifications and Android mobile push
notifications, this is a paging service.
All of `/var/log/nginx/` is chown'd to `zulip` and the nginx processes
themselves run as `nginx`, and would thus (on their own) create new
logfiles as `zulip`. Having `logrotate` create them as the package
default of `www-data` means that they are momentarily unreadable by
the `zulip` user just after rotation, which can cause problems with
logtail scripts.
Commit the standard `nginx` logrotate configuration, but with the
`zulip` user instead of the `www-data` user.
0663b23d54 changed zulip-puppet-apply to
use the venv, because it began using `yaml` to parse the output of
puppet to determine if changes would happen.
However, not every install ends with a venv; notably, non-frontend
servers do not have one. Attempting to run zulip-puppet-apply on them
hence now fails.
Remove this dependency on the venv, by installing a system
python3-yaml package -- though in reality, this package is already an
indirect dependency of the system. Especially since pyyaml is quite
stable, we're not using it in any interesting way, and it does not
actually add to the dependencies, it is preferable to parsing the YAML
by hand in this instance.
This reverts commit 211232978f. The
`rabbitmq` user does not exist yet on first install, and the goal is
to create the `rabbitmq-env.conf` file before the package is
installed.
In production, the `wildcard-zulipchat.com.combined-chain.crt` file is
just a symlink to the snakeoil certificates; but we do not puppet that
symlink, which makes new hosts fail to start cleanly. Instead, point
explicitly to the snakeoil certificate, and explain why.
Directives in `location` blocks may or may not inherit from
surrounding `location` blocks; specifically, `add_header` directives
do not[1]:
> There could be several add_header directives. These directives are
> inherited from the previous configuration level if and only if there
> are no add_header directives defined on the current level.
In order to maintain the same headers (including, critically,
`Access-Control-Allow-Origin`) as the surrounding block, all
`add_header` directives must thus be repeated (which includes the
`include`).
For clarity, un-nest and repeat the entire `location` block as was
used for `/static/`, but with the additional `add_header`. This is
preferred to the of an `if $request_uri` statement to add the header,
as those can have unexpected or undefined results[2].
[1] http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_headers_module.html#add_header
[2] https://www.nginx.com/resources/wiki/start/topics/depth/ifisevil/
Redis is not nagios, and this only leads to confusion as to why there
is a nagios domain setting on frontend servers; it also leaves the
`redis0` part of the name buried in the template.
Switch to an explicit variable for the redis hostname.
This is more broadly useful than for just Kandra; provide
documentation and means to install Smokescreen for stand-alone
servers, and motivate its use somewhat more.
This means that in steady-state, `zulip-puppet-apply` is expected to
produce no changes or commands to execute. The verification step of
`setup-apt-repo` is quite fast, so this cleans up the output for very
little cost.
These optimizations only makes sense when all connections at a TCP
level are coming from the same host or set of hosts; as such, they
are only enabled if `loadbalancer.ips` is set in the `zulip.conf`.
This is required for unattended upgrades to actually run regularly.
In some distributions, it may be found in 20auto-upgrades, but placing
it here makes it more discoverable.
We haven't actively used this plugin in years, and so it was never
converted from the 2014-era monitoring to detect the hostname.
This seems worth fixing since we may want to migrate this logic to a
more modern monitoring system, and it's helpful to have it correct.
79931051bd allows outgoing emails from
localhost, but outgoing recipients are still subjected to virtualmaps.
This caused all outgoing email from Zulip with destination addresses
containing `.`, `+`, or starting with `mm`, to be redirected back
through the email gateway.
Bracket the virualmap addresses used for local delivery to the mail
gateway with a restriction on the domain matching the
`postfix.mailname` configuration, regex-escaped, so those only apply
to email destined for that domain.
The hostname is _not_ moved from `mydestination` to
`virtual_alias_domains`, as that would preclude delivery to
actually-local addresses, like `postmaster@`.
We run this tool at DEBUG log level in production, so we will still
see the notice on startup there; this avoids a spammy line in the
development environment output..
`wal-g wal-push` has a known bug with occasionally hanging after file
upload to S3[1]; set a rather long timeout on the upload process, so
that we don't simply stall forever when archiving WAL segments.
[1] https://github.com/wal-g/wal-g/issues/656