certbot-auto doesn’t work on Ubuntu 20.04, and won’t be updated; we
migrate to instead using the certbot package shipped with the OS
instead. Also made sure that sure certbot gets installed when running
zulip-puppet-apply, to handle existing systems.
/bin/sh and /usr/bin/env are the only two binaries that NixOS provides
at a fixed path (outside a buildFHSUserEnv sandbox).
This discussion was split from #11004.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
In scripts/lib/certbot-maybe-renew line 8:
case "$(echo "$value" | tr A-Z a-z)" in
^-- SC2019: Use '[:upper:]' to support accents and foreign alphabets.
^-- SC2018: Use '[:lower:]' to support accents and foreign alphabets.
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.
Certbot replaces the cert files under /etc/letsencrypt/live/,
which our nginx config refers to symlinks to; but it doesn't
tell nginx there's been an update, so nginx keeps serving the
old cert.
This is fine as long as nginx is restarted, or just told to
reload its config, at some point before the cert actually
expires about 30 days later. Which is probably the common
case, but of course we should make it just work. So, if we
actually renew a cert, tell nginx to reload its config now.
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.