This library was absolutely essential as part of our Python 2->3
migration process, but all of its calls should be either no-ops or
encode/decode operations.
Note also that the library has been wrong since the incorrect
refactoring in 1f9244e060.
Fixes#10807.
This commit allows specifying Subject Alternative Names to issue certs
for multiple domains using certbot. The first name passed to certbot-auto
becomes the common name for the certificate; common name and the other
names are then added to the SAN field. All of these arguments are now
positional. Also read the following for the certbot syntax reference:
https://community.letsencrypt.org/t/how-to-specify-subject-name-on-san/Fixes#10674.
In scripts/setup/terminate-psql-sessions line 16:
major=$(echo "$version" | cut -d. -f1,2)
^-- SC2034: major appears unused. Verify use (or export if used externally).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
In scripts/setup/terminate-psql-sessions line 5:
[ "$1" = "`echo -e "$1\n$2" | sort -V | tail -n1`" ]
^-- SC2006: Use $(..) instead of legacy `..`.
^-- SC1117: Backslash is literal in "\n". Prefer explicit escaping: "\\n".
In scripts/setup/terminate-psql-sessions line 20:
major=$(echo $version | cut -d. -f1,2)
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
In scripts/setup/terminate-psql-sessions line 24:
tables=$(echo "'$@'" | sed "s/ /','/g")
^-- SC2145: Argument mixes string and array. Use * or separate argument.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
In scripts/setup/setup-certbot line 64:
if [ -z "$DOMAIN" -o -z "$EMAIL" ]; then
^-- SC2166: Prefer [ p ] || [ q ] as [ p -o q ] is not well defined.
In scripts/setup/setup-certbot line 73:
method_args=(--webroot --webroot-path=/var/lib/zulip/certbot-webroot/)
^-- SC2191: The = here is literal. To assign by index, use ( [index]=value ) with no spaces. To keep as literal, quote it.
In scripts/setup/setup-certbot line 112:
if [ -z "$deploy_hook" ]; then
^-- SC2128: Expanding an array without an index only gives the first element.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
In scripts/setup/postgres-init-db line 12:
records=`su "$POSTGRES_USER" -c "psql -Atc 'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM zulip.zerver_message;' zulip" | cat`
^-- SC2006: Use $(..) instead of legacy `..`.
In scripts/setup/postgres-init-db line 35:
source "$(dirname "$0")/terminate-psql-sessions" postgres zulip zulip_base
^-- SC1090: Can't follow non-constant source. Use a directive to specify location.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
In scripts/setup/install line 18:
if [ $failed = 1 ]; then
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
In scripts/setup/install line 19:
echo -e "\033[0;31m"
^-- SC1117: Backslash is literal in "\0". Prefer explicit escaping: "\\0".
In scripts/setup/install line 25:
echo -e "\033[0m"
^-- SC1117: Backslash is literal in "\0". Prefer explicit escaping: "\\0".
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
In scripts/setup/initialize-database line 38:
echo -e "\033[32mPopulating default database failed."
^-- SC1117: Backslash is literal in "\0". Prefer explicit escaping: "\\0".
In scripts/setup/initialize-database line 42:
echo -e "\033[0m"
^-- SC1117: Backslash is literal in "\0". Prefer explicit escaping: "\\0".
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
In scripts/setup/generate-self-signed-cert line 36:
if [ -n "$EXISTS_OK" ] && [ -e "$KEYFILE" -a -e "$CERTFILE" ]; then
^-- SC2166: Prefer [ p ] && [ q ] as [ p -a q ] is not well defined.
In scripts/setup/generate-self-signed-cert line 40:
if [ -z "$FORCE" ] && [ -e "$KEYFILE" -o -e "$CERTFILE" ]; then
^-- SC2166: Prefer [ p ] || [ q ] as [ p -o q ] is not well defined.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
In scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq line 13:
sudo rabbitmqctl $RABBITMQ_FLAGS delete_user "$RABBITMQ_USERNAME" || true
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
In scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq line 14:
sudo rabbitmqctl $RABBITMQ_FLAGS delete_user zulip || true
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
In scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq line 15:
sudo rabbitmqctl $RABBITMQ_FLAGS delete_user guest || true
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
In scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq line 16:
sudo rabbitmqctl $RABBITMQ_FLAGS add_user "$RABBITMQ_USERNAME" "$RABBITMQ_PASSWORD"
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
In scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq line 17:
sudo rabbitmqctl $RABBITMQ_FLAGS set_user_tags "$RABBITMQ_USERNAME" administrator
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
In scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq line 18:
sudo rabbitmqctl $RABBITMQ_FLAGS set_permissions -p / "$RABBITMQ_USERNAME" '.*' '.*' '.*'
^-- SC2086: Double quote to prevent globbing and word splitting.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
--agree-tos is useful for the Docker environment, where we won't have
an interactive shell present for agreeing to the ToS.
--deploy-hook is also useful for the Docker environment; it makes it
possible to customize what deploy hook (if any) we pass into the
underlying cerbot command.
This is multi-stage build which first builds tsearch-extras with the
current version of postgres and then configs postgres for zulip. The
zulip config installs the hunspell dictionaries, stop words file,
tsearch-extras, and creates the initial database.
**Testing Plan:**
1) `docker-compose up` the existing config.
2) Build the new image
3) Edit docker-compose.yml to use the new image id
4) `docker-compose up` and verify full text search is still working.
The zulip user has no need to see this file; it's used by nginx.
And when we set up the cert early in install, there's no zulip user
yet anyway, so this fails.
Thanks to the magic of `set -x`, I noticed this:
```
+ cat
++ ssl-cert
/tmp/src/zulip-server/scripts/setup/generate-self-signed-cert: line 49: ssl-cert: command not found
+ apt-get install -y openssl
[...]
```
In other words, we were trying to run `ssl-cert` -- the name of a
Debian package I meant to refer to in a comment inside the templated
temporary config file for `openssl req` -- as if it were a command.
It wasn't, hence the error.
Because `set -e` has loopholes like a sieve, this didn't cause the
script to exit, just produced this funny output and presumably caused
the config file's comment to be missing a word. In principle, it
could do something surprising if for some reason there were a command
named `ssl-cert` on PATH.
Fix it.
This gives us just one way of adopting a self-signed cert, rather than
one script which would generate a new one and an option to another
which would symlink to the system's snakeoil cert. Now those two
codepaths converge, and do the same thing.
The small advantage of generating our own over the alternative is that
it lets us set the name in the cert to EXTERNAL_HOST, rather than the
system's hostname as embedded in the system snakeoil certs. Not a big
deal, but might make things go slightly smoother if some browsers are
lenient (in a way that they probably shouldn't be.)
Take the core of the logic from how Debian generates the system's
/etc/ssl/certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem ; that gives me more confidence
in the various config choices, and it also demonstrates a much cleaner
way to use the `openssl` tool. Also replace the outer shell logic for
CLI and logging with a cleaner version.
It's not appropriate for our script to pass the `--agree-tos` flag
without any evidence of the user actually having any knowledge of,
let alone intent to agree to, any such ToS. Stop doing that.
Fortunately this script hasn't been part of any release, so it's
likely that no users have gone down this path.
The script already won't work without them; so if the user gets the
invocation wrong, give a halfway-reasonable error rather than just
crash into the ground.
This allows the installer to continue using this script for the
`standalone` method, while the no-argument form now uses the same
`webroot` method as the renewal cron job, suitable for running
by hand to adopt Certbot after initial install.
This causes the cron job to run only when a Zulip-managed certbot
install is actually set up.
Inside `install`, zulip.conf doesn't yet exist when we run
setup-certbot, so we write the setting later. But we also give
setup-certbot the ability to write the setting itself, so that we
can recommend it in instructions for adopting certbot in an
existing Zulip installation.
This helps make this script suitable to run on existing installations,
by mitigating any worry about clobbering existing certs with links to
the new ones, in case the admin changes their mind or was using the
certs for something else too.
This enforces our use of a consistent style in how we access Python
modules; "from os.path import dirname" is a particularly popular
abbreviation inconsistent with our style, and so it deserves a lint
rule.
Commit message and error text tweaked by tabbott.
Fixes#6543.
This causes `upgrade-zulip-from-git`, as well as a no-option run of
`tools/build-release-tarball`, to produce a Zulip install running
Python 3, rather than Python 2. In particular this means that the
virtualenv we create, in which all application code runs, is Python 3.
One shebang line, on `zulip-ec2-configure-interfaces`, explicitly
keeps Python 2, and at least one external ops script, `wal-e`, also
still runs on Python 2. See discussion on the respective previous
commits that made those explicit. There may also be some other
third-party scripts we use, outside of this source tree and running
outside our virtualenv, that still run on Python 2.
We may not necessarily be running out of /root/zulip or any particular path,
but the point this comment was really trying to make in the first place stands.
Make it more clearly and still-accurately.
This will simplify step 1 of prod-install instruction to reduce
suffering in testing/experimenting production environments.
Attribution: the scripts/setup/configure-certs is based on @galexrt's
5c0daf6211
Further tweaked by tabbott to rename the script and edit the messages.
This replaces nvm in npm-wrapper by harcoding the path the way we do
with node. The main benefit is that this saves a few hundred
milliseconds every time we invoke npm.
When we added support for automatically adding new secrets in
generate_secrets.py, we failed to account for the possibility that a
human editor might have let the secrets file without a trailing
newline.
We address this by adding a leading newline before our new secret.
Fixes#5209.
Now, generate_secrets.py will never overwrite existing secrets. In
addition to being a safer model in generate, this fixes 2 significant
issues:
(1) It makes it much easier to preserve secrets like Oauth tokens in a
development environment (previously, provision would destroy them).
(2) It makes it possible to automatically add new secrets as part of
the upgrade process. In particular, this is useful for the
zulip_org_id settings.
Fixes#4797.
This fixes a significant performance issue with LaTeX rendering (and
other things that invoked node) where starting up node took a few
hundred milliseconds due to nvm initialization.
Tweaked by tabbott to avoid copying the node binary itself, instead
using a tiny wrapper script.
This is important primarily because it's possible a future version of
node will expect to find libraries/dependencies/etc. installed via NVM
at some path related to the path of the node binary itself, and that's
more guaranteed with this new model.
Fixes#4618.
Now that we're no longer actively debugging this tool, there's no need
to have it print everything it's doing.
This will make `test-backend` a lot nicer to use.
generate-secrets.py now requires --development for development environment
setup or --production for production environment setup (and one of these
options is mandatory).
This solves the problem that it was somewhat easy to accidentally run
generate-secrets.py without the `-d` option while doing manual development
environment setup.
Fixes: #1911.
NVM takes a specific node version and installs the node package and
a corresponding compatible npm package.
We use it in a somewhat hackish way to install node/npm globally with
a pinned version, since that's how we actually want to consume node in
our development environment.
Other details:
- Travis CI now is configured to use the version of node installed by
provision; the easiest way to do this was to sabotage the existing node
installation.
- jsdom is upgraded to a current version, which both requires recent
node and also is required for the tests to pass with recent node.
This fixes running the node tests on Xenial.
Fixes#1498.
[tweaked by tabbott]
The manage.py change effectively switches the Zulip production server
to use the virtualenv, since all of our supervisord commands for the
various Python services go through manage.py.
Additionally, this migrates the production scripts and Nagios plugins
to use the virtualenv as well.
Previously, we used shell quoting that would result in the shell variable not
being substituted. Instead, we use `"`s that will allow for variable
substitution.
Previously these were hardcoded in zproject/settings.py to be accessed
on localhost.
[Modified by Tim Abbott to adjust comments and fix configure-rabbitmq]