beaglebone.txt 229KB

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  1. #+TITLE: FreedomBone
  2. #+AUTHOR: Bob Mottram
  3. #+EMAIL: bob@robotics.uk.to
  4. #+KEYWORDS: freedombox, debian, beaglebone, friendica, email, web server, home server, internet, censorship, surveillance, social network, irc, jabber
  5. #+DESCRIPTION: Turn the Beaglebone Black into a personal communications server
  6. #+OPTIONS: ^:nil
  7. #+STYLE: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="index.css" />
  8. #+BEGIN_CENTER
  9. *How to turn the Beaglebone Black into a FreedomBox-like personal communications server*
  10. #+END_CENTER
  11. [[./images/freedombone_small.jpg]]
  12. #+BEGIN_CENTER
  13. Copyright (C) 2014 Bob Mottram
  14. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the [[https://gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html][GNU Free Documentation License]], Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.
  15. Source for this web site in [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Org-mode][Emacs org-mode]] format is available [[/beaglebone.txt][here]]. Comments or patches may be submitted via [[https://github.com/bashrc/freedombone][Github]].
  16. #+END_CENTER
  17. * Introduction
  18. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  19. /If you look at it from an engineering perspective, an iterative perspective, it’s clear that you have to try something rather than do nothing./
  20. -- Edward J. Snowden
  21. #+END_VERSE
  22. ** What is FreedomBone?
  23. Today many of us rely upon "free" services in the cloud, such as Gmail, Facebook, Google+ and so on. It might appear that these services are indispensible infrastructure of the modern internet, but actually they're not strictly needed and the amount of value which they deliver to the average internet user is very marginal. It is possible to be a citizen of the internet and yet not use those things - to disintermediate the most well known companies and cut out their prurient or merely cringeworthy business models.
  24. FreedomBone is a personal home communications server based upon the BeagleBone Black hardware. It's small and cheap and will allow you to use email, have your own web site and do social networking in a federated way without needing to rely upon any intermediary companies other than your ISP.
  25. ** Do I need any prior knowledge?
  26. In these instructions only a minimal level of familiarity with Linux is assumed. It's assumed that you know the basics of the /nano/ and /emacs/ editors, but it would be simple to also use other editors if you prefer.
  27. ** Why should I do this?
  28. You should consider doing this if you are a freedom-oriented sort of person and you want to maintain sovereignty over your information. Laws in many places in the world consider you to have relinquished any property rights over data which you put onto a server not owned by youself (i.e. owned by a third party, such as Google or Facebook).
  29. If you don't like the idea of having all your communications intercepted and investigated by the Surveillance State then you should consider running a FreedomBone. If your profession involves maintaining confidentiality as an essential feature, such as legal or medical services, counselling, teaching or any sort of activism then you should consider running a FreedomBone. Especially if your activities include [[https://firstlook.org/theintercept/article/2014/03/20/inside-nsa-secret-efforts-hunt-hack-system-administrators/][systems administration]] or [[http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/gchq-and-nsa-targeted-private-german-companies-a-961444.html][software engineering for any communications-related systems]] then it is highly likely that you have already been targeted and "tasked" by the surveillance apparatus.
  30. As Eben Moglen noted in his now famous [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOEMv0S8AcA]["Freedom in The Cloud"]] talk the simple fact of you keeping your own internet logs (found in the /var/log directory) puts a certain amount of power in your hands and takes it away from parties who would otherwise sell that information without your knowledge or permission to advertisers or other shady outfits who may not have your best interests at heart.
  31. ** After it's installed will it need a lot of maintenance?
  32. So long as the hardware is ok the amount of maintenance needed should be very small. Unlike on Windows based systems you don't need to defragment drives or mess about with anti-virus programs. I ran a similar Sheevaplug system between 2010 and 2013 with only occasional software updates or reboots, and uptime was probably 99% or better.
  33. ** Is it secure?
  34. Nothing is totally secure or infallible. You could have the most secure technology and yet still use easy to guess passwords. In general any software described as "uncrackable" or "guaranteed secure" is likely to be bogus and should be treated with suspicion. No matter what the hype may claim, all software has bugs so it's really a question of whether your communications are more secure or less secure. Using something like Freedombone will be likely to increase your degree of communications security to a level which is above average.
  35. This system will not defend you from an attacker who is actively trying to block or corrupt your communications, but I assume that doesn't apply in the majority of cases. Another thing to be aware of is that running a FreedomBone could make you more vulnerable to traffic analysis, since the server is associated with your home address and isn't a giant aggregation of users somewhere in the cloud. You need to weigh this alongside the additional legal protection which owning the server and having it in your own home gives you.
  36. FreedomBone should be far more secure than using popular cloud-based services which have spying built into them as a core feature (although not one which is typically advertised), but it is not necessarily any kind of impenetrable information fortress.
  37. This project is not only about security. It's also about having independence and at least in the realm of information being able to have more control over your own life, without having gatekeepers, censors or companies in the middle. That's the way that the internet was designed to be in the first place.
  38. ** Will running a server all the time affect my electricity bill?
  39. Hardly at all. The BeagleBone Black consumes very little power - less than 5W. It would even be potentially possible to run it from a solar panel.
  40. ** Can I use a Raspberry Pi or Cubieboard instead?
  41. These instructions are not highly specific to the Beaglebone Black and so will likely also work on other single board computers (SBCs) such as the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raspberry_pi][Raspberry Pi]] or [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubieboard][Cubieboard]]. The original Raspberry Pi only had 256MB of RAM and so the performance of some services may be more limited. The Beaglebone Black was chosen mainly because of its low cost, relatively good CPU performance for the price (by the standards of 2013) and also low electricity consumption. The Cubieboard is also another good alternative, with the A20 version having similar specifications but twice as much RAM as the BeagleBone Black.
  42. ** Why should I trust the packages or source code downloaded from this site?
  43. If you're particularly security conscious then you shouldn't. Binary or source packages have only been included here for convenience and to avoid confusion. "/Go and find a Debian installation for the BeagleBone Black somewhere on the web/" is too vague an instruction for my liking, and I've attempted to keep things as concise and unambiguous as possible - particularly with an average or new Linux user in mind.
  44. However, for maximum security for those software systems which are not already packaged within the Debian repositories then seek out the original sources and verify the hashes independently.
  45. It's worth adopting an attitude of "/trust but verify/". Don't let fear of mass surveillance and [[https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20140207/08354426130/gchq-has-entire-program-dirty-tricks-including-honeypots-using-journalists-deleting-online-accounts.shtml]["dirty tricks"]] paralyse you into trusting nothing and consequently doing nothing. Doing nothing means that the surveillance apparatus has succeeded in keeping you under observation at all times.
  46. * Inventory
  47. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  48. /You can’t help someone just by making a wish to do so, you have to take action./
  49. -- Dalai Lama
  50. #+END_VERSE
  51. These instructions assume that you have the following ingredients.
  52. ** A BeagleBone Black (BBB)
  53. It should come with a suitable USB cable for the initial setup. To make things look nicer you may also want to get a case for it.
  54. ** An internet connection
  55. It is assumed that the most common situation is via a router installed at home. The router should have ethernet sockets on it and a web interface which allows you to forward ports (sometimes under the "firewall" settings), so that you can forward ssh and web traffic to the BBB.
  56. ** microSD card
  57. To use as the main storage for the BBB. 16 or 32GB is fine, and can be obtained quite cheaply. Try to use Sandisk (class 10 or better) where possible and avoid cheaper cards which often have poor performance.
  58. You may also need an SD card adaptor or USB card reader in order to flash the operating image to the microSD card. For instance, many laptops have an SD card slot but not a microSD slot.
  59. ** 5V/2A power supply
  60. With a plug suitable for powering the BBB. If you have some device with a USB socket nearby you may also be able to just use that for electrical power. However, powering from the USB cable alone might result in crashes when the system is under load, depending upon how many milliamps can be supplied by the USB hub/socket. If the system crashes due to running out of power then you will see that the LEDs on the BBB are continuously on, rather than flashing. One way to test whether the board has enough power is to try compiling a Linux kernel on it, but any CPU and disk intensive program will also suffice as a test.
  61. [[http://beagleboard.org/Support/FAQ][beagleboard.org]] gives the following advice on power supplies:
  62. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  63. /Power over USB is sufficient as long as the software and system running perform some management to keep it under the USB current limit threshold. For simplicity and maximum capability, powering over the 5V barrel connector is typically recommended./
  64. /The power adapter is required to provide 5V over a 5.5mm outer diameter and 2.1mm inner diameter barrel connector (a barrel connector length of 9.5mm is more than sufficient). The recommended supply current is at least 1.2A (or 6W), but at least 2A (or 10W) is recommended if you are going to connect up anything over the USB./
  65. #+END_VERSE
  66. The plug should be /centre positive/, meaning that the centre/tip is positive and the outer part is negative.
  67. ** An ethernet patch cable
  68. Just an ordinary cat5 or cat6 cable that you can get from most electrical/computer stores.
  69. * Installing Debian onto the microSD card
  70. ** Beaglebone Black
  71. The Debian Linux OS will be installed onto a small flash drive. It's a good idea to do this rather than using the internal flash, because it will allow you to easily create backups of the entire system if necessary using the dd command.
  72. Download the image.
  73. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  74. cd ~/
  75. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/debian-7.2-console-armhf-2013-11-15.tar.xz
  76. #+END_SRC
  77. Verify it.
  78. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  79. sha256sum debian-7.2-console-armhf-2013-11-15.tar.xz
  80. 262ea96d6bff530ad545e001eb2aa50b26a999c02f0c0e2e5f8536edf21c973a debian-7.2-console-armhf-2013-11-15.tar.xz
  81. #+END_SRC
  82. Uncompress it.
  83. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  84. tar xJf debian-7.2-console-armhf-2013-11-15.tar.xz
  85. cd debian-7.2-console-armhf-2013-11-15
  86. #+END_SRC
  87. Create the disk image, where sdX is the name of the flash drive (probably it will be sdb or sdc). An easy way to find out the device name of the flash drive is to enter the command:
  88. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  89. ls /dev/sd*
  90. #+END_SRC
  91. then plug in the flash drive and type the same command again. You'll be able to see the difference. Once you know the device name then you can proceed to install the image onto the flash drive.
  92. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  93. sudo apt-get install u-boot-tools dosfstools git-core kpartx wget parted
  94. sudo ./setup_sdcard.sh --mmc /dev/sdX --uboot bone --swap-file 1024
  95. #+END_SRC
  96. Once completed then safely remove the microSD card via your file manager (usually right click and "safely remove" or "eject").
  97. ** Cubieboard
  98. The Debian Linux OS will be installed onto a small flash drive. It's a good idea to do this rather than using the internal flash, because it will allow you to easily create backups of the entire system if necessary using the dd command.
  99. Download the Cubieboard image from http://cubian.org/downloads/
  100. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  101. sudo apt-get install p7zip-full
  102. 7z x CUBIAN_IMAGE.7z
  103. #+END_SRC
  104. Create the disk image, where sdX is the name of the flash drive (probably it will be sdb or sdc). An easy way to find out the device name of the flash drive is to enter the command:
  105. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  106. ls /dev/sd*
  107. #+END_SRC
  108. then plug in the flash drive and type the same command again. You'll be able to see the difference. Once you know the device name then you can proceed to install the image onto the flash drive.
  109. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  110. sudo dd if=EXTRACTED_CUBIAN_IMAGE of=/dev/sdX bs=4096; sync
  111. #+END_SRC
  112. * Setup
  113. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  114. /Build the tools for a future you would want to live in/
  115. -- Kurt Opsahl
  116. #+END_VERSE
  117. ** Things to be aware of
  118. *** A note on ssh
  119. When using ssh to log into the BBB if you get warnings of the type "/the ECDSA host key for domain differs from the key for the IP address/" then run the command:
  120. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  121. ssh-keygen -R <IP address>
  122. #+END_SRC
  123. *** Passwords
  124. It's highly recommended that you use a password manager, such as KeepassX, and make all your passwords long random strings. It's also a good idea to use different passwords for different pieces of software, instead of one or two passwords for the whole system. That compartmentalises the security such that even if an attacker gains access to one system they can't necessarily get access to others.
  125. *** HTTPS
  126. Throughout these instructions self signed SSL certificates are used to implement access to web pages via HTTPS. The whole HTTPS security model upon which much of the internet currently rests seems broken in that it usually depends upon "trusted certificate authorities" who are not really trusted, except perhaps by the maintainers of certain web browser software. So all that HTTPS really guarantees is that you have an encrypted connection, but an encrypted connection /to who/ can be subject to doubt. As was seen in 2013 with the [[https://www.schneier.com/essay-455.html][information coming from Edward Snowden]], and also the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavabit][Lavabit email service]], it's possible for companies/organisations to be compromised or bribed and SSL private keys for all users can be demanded using gagging orders or secret laws without any individual user ever being able to know that their communications is no longer secure..
  127. Not knowing who you're really connecting to is especially true for self-signed certificates, so it is in principle possible that when logging into a site with a username and password a system such as [[http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2013/11/uk-spies-continue-quantum-insert-attack-via-linkedin-slashdot-pages/][Quantum Insert]], or a compromised [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_Name_System][DNS service]], could be used to direct the user to a fake copy of the login screen for the purposes of obtaining their login details. While this doesn't seem to be a major problem at the time of writing it's something to keep in mind. So if you can't log in or if you log in and what you see doesn't look like your site then it's possible that such a compromise could have taken place. Using a password manager with different login details for each site is one way to ensure that if one system is compromised then the attacker can't necessarily get access to all your other stuff.
  128. ** Initial
  129. Eject the microSD card from your computer and plug it into the BBB, then connect the USB cable between the two. You may need to wait for a couple of minutes for the BBB to boot from the card, then you can then open a terminal and login via ssh.
  130. Note that if you're using a Cubieboard then the ssh login is different (see https://github.com/cubieplayer/Cubian/wiki/Get-started-with-Cubian) and it may be easier to directly edit the following files with the microSD card plugged into your laptop.
  131. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  132. ssh debian@192.168.7.2
  133. #+END_SRC
  134. The default password is /temppwd/
  135. Then log in as root:
  136. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  137. su
  138. #+END_SRC
  139. The default password is /root/
  140. The first thing to do is to change the passwords from their defaults.
  141. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  142. passwd
  143. #+END_SRC
  144. Then you will need to change the network interfaces. The main task here is to comment out the stuff related to usb0. That will enable you to plug the BBB into the back of a router and for it to be detectable on the network.
  145. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  146. nano /etc/network/interfaces
  147. #+END_SRC
  148. The resulting interfaces file should look like this:
  149. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  150. # This file describes the network interfaces available on your system
  151. # and how to activate them. For more information, see interfaces(5).
  152. # The loopback network interface
  153. auto lo
  154. iface lo inet loopback
  155. # The primary network interface
  156. allow-hotplug eth0
  157. iface eth0 inet static
  158. address 192.168.1.60
  159. netmask 255.255.255.0
  160. gateway 192.168.1.254
  161. dns-nameservers 213.73.91.35 85.214.20.141
  162. # Example to keep MAC address between reboots
  163. #hwaddress ether DA:AD:CE:EF:CA:FE
  164. # WiFi Example
  165. #auto wlan0
  166. #iface wlan0 inet dhcp
  167. # wpa-ssid "essid"
  168. # wpa-psk "password"
  169. # Ethernet/RNDIS gadget (g_ether)
  170. # ... or on host side, usbnet and random hwaddr
  171. # Note on some boards, usb0 is automaticly setup with an init script
  172. # in that case, to completely disable remove file [run_boot-scripts] from the boot partition
  173. #iface usb0 inet static
  174. # address 192.168.7.2
  175. # netmask 255.255.255.0
  176. # network 192.168.7.0
  177. # gateway 192.168.7.1
  178. #+END_SRC
  179. CTRL-o followed by ENTER to save, then CTRL-x to exit.
  180. In the above example "address 192.168.1.60" is a static IP address for the BBB, which will allow incoming network traffic to be directed from the router in a reliable manner. It should be outside of the DHCP range set up on the router.
  181. "gateway 192.168.1.254" should be the IP address of the router.
  182. Note that setting the DNS servers with dns-nameservers is important because some home routers do not allow you to change the DNS settings.
  183. Edit resolv.conf.
  184. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  185. nano /etc/resolv.conf
  186. #+END_SRC
  187. It should look something like the following:
  188. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  189. domain localdomain
  190. search localdomain
  191. nameserver 213.73.91.35
  192. nameserver 85.214.20.141
  193. #+END_SRC
  194. It's not a good idea to use the DNS servers provided by default by your ISP, since those are almost certainly subject to censorship and monitoring. Other possible IP addresses are:
  195. | DNS IP | Organisation | Location |
  196. |-----------------+--------------------------------+-------------|
  197. | 85.214.73.63 | Digitalcourage | Germany |
  198. | 87.118.100.175 | German Privacy Foundation e.V. | Germany |
  199. | 94.75.228.29 | German Privacy Foundation e.V. | Germany |
  200. | 85.25.251.254 | German Privacy Foundation e.V. | Germany |
  201. | 2.141.58.13 | German Privacy Foundation e.V. | Germany |
  202. | 213.73.91.35 | Chaos Computer Club Berlin | Germany |
  203. | 212.82.225.7 | ClaraNet | Germany |
  204. | 212.82.226.212 | ClaraNet | Germany |
  205. | 58.6.115.42 | OpenNIC | Australia |
  206. | 58.6.115.43 | OpenNIC | Australia |
  207. | 119.31.230.42 | OpenNIC | Australia |
  208. | 200.252.98.162 | OpenNIC | Brazil |
  209. | 217.79.186.148 | OpenNIC | Germany |
  210. | 81.89.98.6 | OpenNIC | Germany |
  211. | 78.159.101.37 | OpenNIC | Germany |
  212. | 203.167.220.153 | OpenNIC | New Zealand |
  213. | 82.229.244.191 | OpenNIC | France |
  214. | 82.229.244.191 | OpenNIC | Czechnya |
  215. | 216.87.84.211 | OpenNIC | USA |
  216. | 66.244.95.20 | OpenNIC | USA |
  217. | 207.192.69.155 | OpenNIC | USA |
  218. | 72.14.189.120 | OpenNIC | USA |
  219. | 194.145.226.26 | PowerNS | Germany |
  220. | 77.220.232.44 | PowerNS | Germany |
  221. | 78.46.89.147 | ValiDOM | Germany |
  222. | 88.198.75.145 | ValiDOM | Germany |
  223. | 85.25.149.144 | Freie Unzensierte Nameserver | Germany |
  224. | 87.106.37.196 | Freie Unzensierte Nameserver | Germany |
  225. | 209.59.210.167 | Christoph Hochstätter | USA |
  226. | 85.214.117.11 | Christoph Hochstätter | Germany |
  227. | 83.243.5.253 | private | Germany |
  228. | 88.198.130.211 | private | Germany |
  229. | 85.10.211.244 | private | Germany |
  230. CTRL-o followed by ENTER to save, then CTRL-x to exit.
  231. Now disconnect the BBB from your computer and plug it into the router. You'll need an ethernet patch cable and you may also need a 5V/1A power supply for the BBB.
  232. If you go to the web administration screen for your internet router (often it's on 192.168.2.1 or 192.168.1.254) then after a few minutes you should see the BBB appear on the network. It's name will be "arm".
  233. If you're using a Cubieboard:
  234. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  235. nano /etc/apt/sources.list
  236. #+END_SRC
  237. Delete the existing sources and replace them with the sources [[Example software sources][listed here]], then save and exit. If you use the default Cubian software sources then dependency problems will occur later on.
  238. ** Add a user
  239. Ssh back in to the BBB and login as root. In this example the BBB's IP address is 192.168.1.60.
  240. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  241. ssh-keygen -f "/home/myusername/.ssh/known_hosts" -R 192.168.1.60
  242. ssh debian@192.168.1.60
  243. su
  244. #+END_SRC
  245. Then make a new user. It's a bad idea to add users to the sudo group, because that then means that an attacker potentially only needs to know one password in order to get administrator access to the system. With no sudoers an attacker needs to know, or be able to obtain, two separate passwords to be able to really compromise the system.
  246. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  247. adduser myusername
  248. #+END_SRC
  249. Exit from the ssh login by typing "exit" a couple of times, then ssh back in as the new user. Make sure you use a difficult to guess password/phrase, or ideally a randomly generated password used together with a password manager such as KeepassX.
  250. Remove the default debian user.
  251. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  252. userdel -r debian
  253. #+END_SRC
  254. ** Text editor
  255. For an editor which is less erratic than vi when used within a remote console such as Terminator.
  256. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  257. apt-get update
  258. apt-get install emacs
  259. update-alternatives --set editor /usr/bin/emacs23
  260. #+END_SRC
  261. Some basic Emacs keys which will be useful to new users are:
  262. | Load a file | CTRL-x CTRL-f |
  263. | Save | CTRL-x CTRL-s |
  264. | Exit | CTRL-x CTRL-c |
  265. ** Enable backports
  266. To enable some newer packages add backports to the repositories.
  267. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  268. echo "deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian wheezy-backports main" >> /etc/apt/sources.list
  269. apt-get update
  270. apt-get dist-upgrade
  271. apt-get install ca-certificates
  272. #+END_SRC
  273. ** Configure your location/language
  274. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  275. dpkg-reconfigure locales
  276. apt-get install keyboard-configuration
  277. reboot
  278. #+END_SRC
  279. After reboot is complete ssh back in as the root user, then to verify the change.
  280. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  281. locale -a
  282. #+END_SRC
  283. Set your time zone with:
  284. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  285. tzselect
  286. #+END_SRC
  287. For example, for British time:
  288. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  289. export TZ='Europe/London'
  290. echo "export TZ='Europe/London'" >> ~/.bashrc
  291. echo "export TZ='Europe/London'" >> /home/myusername/.bashrc
  292. #+END_SRC
  293. ** Upgrade the kernel
  294. Using a more recent kernel should improve stability of the system and also allow it to make use of hardware random number generation, which improves the overall security. Please note that this kernel is specific to the BBB, so if you're using a Raspberry Pi, Cubieboard or other SBC then look elsewhere on the web for information about upgrading the kernel.
  295. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  296. cd /tmp
  297. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/kernel-3.14.tar.gz
  298. #+END_SRC
  299. Verify it.
  300. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  301. sha256sum kernel-3.14.tar.gz
  302. c489a451b2ab0442ff9105c72307061cfe6858350dacceb29e094b9a20c18739
  303. #+END_SRC
  304. Then extract and install it.
  305. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  306. mkdir kernel-3.14
  307. cd kernel-3.14
  308. tar -xzvf ../kernel-3.14.tar.gz
  309. sh install-me.sh
  310. #+END_SRC
  311. If you get a certificate error then edit *install-me.sh* and change the /https/ to /http/, save and try again. Once the installation has completed then you can reboot by typing:
  312. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  313. reboot
  314. #+END_SRC
  315. After the system has rebooted you can ssh back unto it and log in as the root user. You can check that the kernel version has changed with the command:
  316. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  317. uname -mrs
  318. #+END_SRC
  319. Now enable zram.
  320. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  321. editor /etc/modprobe.d/zram.conf
  322. #+END_SRC
  323. Add the following:
  324. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  325. options zram num_devices=1
  326. #+END_SRC
  327. Save and exit, then create an initialisation script.
  328. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  329. editor /etc/init.d/zram
  330. #+END_SRC
  331. Add the following:
  332. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  333. #!/bin/bash
  334. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  335. # Provides: zram
  336. # Required-Start:
  337. # Required-Stop:
  338. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  339. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  340. # Short-Description: Increased Performance In Linux With zRam (Virtual Swap Compressed in RAM)
  341. # Description: Adapted from systemd scripts at https://github.com/mystilleef/FedoraZram
  342. ### END INIT INFO
  343. start() {
  344. # get the number of CPUs
  345. num_cpus=$(grep -c processor /proc/cpuinfo)
  346. # if something goes wrong, assume we have 1
  347. [ "$num_cpus" != 0 ] || num_cpus=1
  348. # set decremented number of CPUs
  349. decr_num_cpus=$((num_cpus - 1))
  350. # get the amount of memory in the machine
  351. mem_total_kb=$(grep MemTotal /proc/meminfo | grep -E --only-matching '[[:digit:]]+')
  352. mem_total=$((mem_total_kb * 1024))
  353. # load dependency modules
  354. modprobe zram num_devices=$num_cpus
  355. # initialize the devices
  356. for i in $(seq 0 $decr_num_cpus); do
  357. echo $((mem_total / num_cpus)) > /sys/block/zram$i/disksize
  358. done
  359. # Creating swap filesystems
  360. for i in $(seq 0 $decr_num_cpus); do
  361. mkswap /dev/zram$i
  362. done
  363. # Switch the swaps on
  364. for i in $(seq 0 $decr_num_cpus); do
  365. swapon -p 100 /dev/zram$i
  366. done
  367. }
  368. stop() {
  369. # get the number of CPUs
  370. num_cpus=$(grep -c processor /proc/cpuinfo)
  371. # set decremented number of CPUs
  372. decr_num_cpus=$((num_cpus - 1))
  373. # Switching off swap
  374. for i in $(seq 0 $decr_num_cpus); do
  375. if [ "$(grep /dev/zram$i /proc/swaps)" != "" ]; then
  376. swapoff /dev/zram$i
  377. sleep 1
  378. fi
  379. done
  380. sleep 1
  381. rmmod zram
  382. }
  383. case "$1" in
  384. start)
  385. start
  386. ;;
  387. stop)
  388. stop
  389. ;;
  390. restart)
  391. stop
  392. sleep 3
  393. start
  394. ;;
  395. *)
  396. echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart}"
  397. RETVAL=1
  398. esac
  399. exit $RETVAL
  400. #+END_SRC
  401. Save and exit, then reboot again.
  402. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  403. chmod +x /etc/init.d/zram
  404. update-rc.d zram defaults
  405. service zram start
  406. reboot
  407. #+END_SRC
  408. After the system has rebooted ssh back into it and become the root user, then to check that the changes were successful:
  409. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  410. dmesg | grep zram
  411. #+END_SRC
  412. Should show something like:
  413. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  414. [ 507.322337] zram: Created 1 device(s) ...
  415. [ 507.651151] Adding 505468k swap on /dev/zram0. Priority:100 extents:1 across:505468k SS
  416. #+END_SRC
  417. ** Random number generation
  418. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  419. /Near as I can tell, the answer on what has been requested is everything: deliberate weakenings of encryption algorithms, deliberate weakenings of random number generations, copies of master keys, encryption of the session key with an NSA-specific key … everything./
  420. -- Bruce Schneier, on the 2013 leaked NSA documents
  421. #+END_VERSE
  422. The security of encryption depends upon the randomness of the random source used on your system. If it isn't very random then it may be far more vulnerable to cryptanalysis, and it's known that in the past some dubious agencies have encouraged the use of flawed random number generators to assist with their prurient activities. Randomness - typically referred to as /entropy/ - is often gathered from factors such as the timing of key presses or mouse movements, but since the BBB won't have such devices plugged into it this reduces the amount of entropy available.
  423. *** On the Beaglebone Black
  424. Computers can't really generate truly random numbers by themselves, since they're deterministic and so operate in a highly predictable manner. Fortunately, the BBB has an onboard hardware random number generator, which is a physical process which behaves randomly and which can then be read into the computer and stored for later use in encryption algorithms.
  425. Information on exactly how the hardware random number generator on the Beaglebone AM335x CPU works [[http://e2e.ti.com/support/arm/sitara_arm/f/791/t/292794.aspx][seems hard to come by]], but we can later use some software to verify that it does indeed produce random numbers and hasn't been deliberately weakened.
  426. If you are using a Beaglebone and have updated the kernel then install:
  427. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  428. apt-get install rng-tools
  429. editor /etc/default/rng-tools
  430. #+END_SRC
  431. Uncomment *HRNGDEVICE=/dev/hwrng*, save and exit then restart the daemon.
  432. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  433. service rng-tools restart
  434. #+END_SRC
  435. Your BBB will now use hardware to generate random numbers.
  436. *** On other Single Board Computers
  437. If you are not using a Beaglebone (a Cubieboard for example), or if you didn't update the kernel, then you can still improve the random number generation by installing:
  438. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  439. apt-get install haveged
  440. #+END_SRC
  441. *** Verifying random number quality
  442. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  443. /Living in a surveillance state is exactly like being guilty until proven guilty./
  444. -- Mohammad Tarakiyee
  445. #+END_VERSE
  446. You can check how much randomness (entropy) is available with:
  447. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  448. cat /proc/sys/kernel/random/entropy_avail
  449. #+END_SRC
  450. Ideally it should be in the range 1000-4096. If it is persistently below 500 then there may be a problem with your system which could make it less secure.
  451. To verify that random number generation is good on the BBB run:
  452. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  453. cat /dev/hwrng | rngtest -c 1000
  454. #+END_SRC
  455. You should see something like this, with zero or a small number of failures:
  456. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  457. rngtest: starting FIPS tests...
  458. rngtest: bits received from input: 20000032
  459. rngtest: FIPS 140-2 successes: 1000
  460. rngtest: FIPS 140-2 failures: 0
  461. rngtest: FIPS 140-2(2001-10-10) Monobit: 0
  462. rngtest: FIPS 140-2(2001-10-10) Poker: 0
  463. rngtest: FIPS 140-2(2001-10-10) Runs: 0
  464. rngtest: FIPS 140-2(2001-10-10) Long run: 0
  465. rngtest: FIPS 140-2(2001-10-10) Continuous run: 0
  466. rngtest: input channel speed: (min=3.104; avg=26.015; max=18.626)Gibits/s
  467. rngtest: FIPS tests speed: (min=160.281; avg=165.696; max=168.792)Mibits/s
  468. rngtest: Program run time: 115987 microseconds
  469. #+END_SRC
  470. *** Cryptotronix Hashlet
  471. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  472. /One must acknowledge with cryptography no amount of violence will ever solve a math problem./
  473. -- Jacob Appelbaum
  474. #+END_VERSE
  475. An optional extra is the [[http://cryptotronix.com/products/hashlet/][Cryptotronix Hashlet]] which also has hardware random number generation capability via the [[./Atmel-8740-CryptoAuth-ATSHA204-Datasheet.pdf][Atmel ATSHA204]] chip.
  476. Install the hashlet [[./images/hashlet_installed.jpg][like this]] on the BBB, then install some dependencies.
  477. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  478. apt-get install git build-essential libgcrypt11-dev texinfo
  479. #+END_SRC
  480. Download the source code.
  481. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  482. cd /tmp
  483. git clone https://github.com/bashrc/hashlet.git
  484. #+END_SRC
  485. Now install the driver.
  486. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  487. cd hashlet
  488. chmod o+rw /dev/i2c*
  489. ./autogen.sh
  490. make check
  491. make install
  492. #+END_SRC
  493. To check the initial state of the device:
  494. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  495. hashlet --bus=/dev/i2c-2 state
  496. #+END_SRC
  497. It should return the message "/Factory/". This is intended to provide an indication that the hardware hasn't been tampered with by [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tailored_Access_Operations][TAO]] or other shady outfits in transit. If /i2c-2/ fails then try /i2c-1/ or /i2c-0/.
  498. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  499. hashlet --bus=/dev/i2c-2 personalize
  500. #+END_SRC
  501. Nothing should be returned by this command, but a file called ~/.hashlet will be generated which is the private key of the device. This personalization process is a one-time operation which physically alters the hardware, so it would not be trivial to reset the device back to "Factory" again. To make sure it's only accessible by the root user:
  502. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  503. chmod 400 ~/.hashlet
  504. #+END_SRC
  505. Now create a daemon which will create a random number generator device */dev/hashletrng*.
  506. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  507. editor /usr/bin/hashletd
  508. #+END_SRC
  509. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  510. #!/bin/sh
  511. PATH='/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin'
  512. I2CBUS=2
  513. BYTES=32
  514. DEVICE=/dev/hashletrng
  515. # create a device
  516. if [ ! -e ${DEVICE} ]; then
  517. chmod o+rw /dev/i2c*
  518. mknod ${DEVICE} p
  519. fi
  520. while :
  521. do
  522. hashlet --bus=/dev/i2c-${I2CBUS} --Bytes ${BYTES} random-bytes > ${DEVICE}
  523. done
  524. #+END_SRC
  525. Save and exit. Now create an init script to run it.
  526. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  527. editor /etc/init.d/hashlet
  528. #+END_SRC
  529. Add the following:
  530. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  531. #!/bin/bash
  532. # /etc/init.d/hashlet
  533. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  534. # Provides: hashlet
  535. # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog
  536. # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog
  537. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  538. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  539. # Short-Description: hashlet
  540. # Description: Creates a random number generator device
  541. ### END INIT INFO
  542. # Author: Bob Mottram <bob@robotics.uk.to>
  543. #Settings
  544. SERVICE='hashlet'
  545. LOGFILE='/dev/null'
  546. COMMAND="/usr/bin/hashletd"
  547. USERNAME='root'
  548. NICELEVEL=19
  549. HISTORY=1024
  550. INVOCATION="nice -n ${NICELEVEL} ${COMMAND}"
  551. PATH='/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin'
  552. hashlet_start() {
  553. echo "Starting $SERVICE..."
  554. su --command "screen -h ${HISTORY} -dmS ${SERVICE} ${INVOCATION}" $USERNAME
  555. }
  556. hashlet_stop() {
  557. echo "Stopping $SERVICE"
  558. su --command "screen -p 0 -S ${SERVICE} -X stuff "'^C'"" $USERNAME
  559. }
  560. #Start-Stop here
  561. case "$1" in
  562. start)
  563. hashlet_start
  564. ;;
  565. stop)
  566. hashlet_stop
  567. ;;
  568. restart)
  569. hashlet_stop
  570. sleep 10s
  571. hashlet_start
  572. ;;
  573. *)
  574. echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart}"
  575. exit 1
  576. ;;
  577. esac
  578. exit 0
  579. #+END_SRC
  580. Save and exit, then start the daemon.
  581. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  582. chmod +x /usr/bin/hashletd
  583. chmod +x /etc/init.d/hashlet
  584. update-rc.d hashlet defaults
  585. service hashlet start
  586. #+END_SRC
  587. Then to obtain some random bytes:
  588. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  589. cat /dev/hashletrng
  590. #+END_SRC
  591. The rate of entropy generation by the Hashlet seems very slow compared to */dev/hwrng*, and this is most likely because of the I2C interface. So it's probably a good idea to keep hwrng as the main random source and only use the Hashlet's random number generator for any ancillary stuff.
  592. ** Alter ssh configuration
  593. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  594. /The privacy rights of US persons in international communications are significantly diminished, if not completely eliminated, when those communications have been transmitted to or obtained from non-US persons located outside the United States./
  595. -- US Department Of Justice
  596. #+END_VERSE
  597. Altering the ssh configuration will make it a little more secure than the standard Debian settings.
  598. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  599. editor /etc/ssh/sshd_config
  600. #+END_SRC
  601. Check the following values:
  602. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  603. PermitRootLogin no
  604. X11Forwarding no
  605. ServerKeyBits 4096
  606. Protocol 2
  607. PermitEmptyPasswords no
  608. StrictModes yes
  609. TCPKeepAlive no
  610. #+END_SRC
  611. Append the following:
  612. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  613. ClientAliveInterval 60
  614. ClientAliveCountMax 3
  615. Ciphers aes256-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes128-ctr
  616. MACs hmac-sha2-512,hmac-sha2-256,hmac-ripemd160
  617. KexAlgorithms diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha256,diffie-hellman-group14-sha1,diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1
  618. #+END_SRC
  619. CTRL-x CTRL-s to save, then CTRL-x CTRL-c to exit. Now clear out any pre-existing host keys and reconfigure the ssh server.
  620. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  621. rm /etc/ssh/ssh_host_*
  622. dpkg-reconfigure openssh-server
  623. service ssh restart
  624. #+END_SRC
  625. To test the new settings log out by typing "exit" a couple of times, then log back in again with:
  626. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  627. ssh -vvv myusername@192.168.1.60
  628. #+END_SRC
  629. and check that some number of bits are set within a 4096 bit sized key:
  630. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  631. debug2: bits set: */4096
  632. #+END_SRC
  633. ** Getting onto the web
  634. Create a subdomain on [[http://freedns.afraid.org][freeDNS]]. You may need to click on "/subdomains/" a couple of times. FreeDNS is preferred because it is one of the few domain name providers which supports genuinely free (as in beer) accounts. So if your budget is tiny or non-existent you can still participate as a first class citizen of the internet. If you do have money to spend there is also a premium option.
  635. Select "/dynamic DNS/" then click "/quick cron example/"
  636. An example would look like:
  637. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  638. 4,14,24,34,44,54 * * * * root sleep 29 ; /usr/bin/timeout 200 wget -O - https://free\ dns.afraid.org/dynamic/update.php?ABCKDNRCLFHENSLKNFEGSBFLFF== >> /dev/null 2>&1 &
  639. #+END_SRC
  640. It's important to make sure that you change the *http* to *https*, since this will help to prevent a potential attacker from hijacking your site and redirecting it to a fake version for the purposes of obtaining your login details.
  641. Edit */etc/crontab* and append that to the top of the file, underneath the heading line which looks like this:
  642. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  643. # m h dom mon dow user command
  644. #+END_SRC
  645. In general the most frequently run crontab entries should be at the top. Then save and exit.
  646. Via your router's firewall settings you should now open port 22 (secure shell). This will allow you to ssh into your BBB from any location - not just your own local network.
  647. The freeDNS subdomain which you just created will hereafter just be refered to as "/your domain name/".
  648. If you have multiple freedns subdomains then you may want to rationalise that a little within */etc/crontab*. Rather than listing them all individually create a script:
  649. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  650. editor /usr/bin/dynamicdns
  651. #+END_SRC
  652. Add however many freedns subdomains you have.
  653. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  654. #!/bin/bash
  655. # subdomain name 1
  656. wget -O - https://freedns.afraid.org/dynamic/update.php?<subdomain code 1>== >> /dev/null 2>&1
  657. # subdomain name 2
  658. wget -O - https://freedns.afraid.org/dynamic/update.php?<subdomain code 2>== >> /dev/null 2>&1
  659. ...
  660. #+END_SRC
  661. Save and exit, then make the script runnable and only readable by the root user.
  662. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  663. chmod 600 /usr/bin/dynamicdns
  664. chmod +x /usr/bin/dynamicdns
  665. #+END_SRC
  666. Then within */etc/crontab*
  667. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  668. editor /etc/crontab
  669. #+END_SRC
  670. You can replace the multiple freedns entries with a single line:
  671. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  672. */10 * * * * root /usr/bin/timeout 200 /usr/bin/dynamicdns
  673. #+END_SRC
  674. Then save and exit and restart the cron daemon.
  675. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  676. service cron restart
  677. #+END_SRC
  678. If you want to know what a typical /crontab/ file might look like then see the [[Example crontab file]]
  679. ** Set the host name
  680. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  681. editor /etc/hostname
  682. #+END_SRC
  683. CTRL-x CTRL-s to save, then CTRL-x CTRL-c to exit.
  684. Also issue the command, replacing /mydomainname.com/ with your domain name.
  685. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  686. hostname mydomainname.com
  687. #+END_SRC
  688. You may also need to assign the same hostname separately via your router's web interface.
  689. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  690. editor /etc/hosts
  691. #+END_SRC
  692. Append the following, replacing /mydomainname.com/ with your domain name.
  693. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  694. 127.0.1.1 mydomainname.com
  695. #+END_SRC
  696. If you then run the command:
  697. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  698. hostname -f
  699. #+END_SRC
  700. it should return your domain name.
  701. ** Install time synchronisation
  702. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  703. /You may delay, but time will not./
  704. -- Benjamin Franklin
  705. #+END_VERSE
  706. It's convenient to have the clock on your server automatically synchronised with other servers on the internet so that you don't need to set the clock manually. The usual way of doing this is via [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_Time_Protocol][NTP]], but that method uses unencrypted signals which could potentially be interfered with in order to mess up your system. /tlsdate/ provides a slightly more secure way of setting the date and time over a SSL/TLS connection to a known good time source.
  707. First install some prerequisites.
  708. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  709. apt-get install build-essential automake git pkg-config autoconf libtool libssl-dev
  710. apt-get remove ntpdate
  711. #+END_SRC
  712. Now download and install tlsdate.
  713. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  714. mkdir ~/build
  715. cd ~/build
  716. git clone https://github.com/ioerror/tlsdate.git
  717. cd ~/build/tlsdate
  718. ./autogen.sh
  719. ./configure
  720. make
  721. make install
  722. #+END_SRC
  723. If you get errors during the /configure/ stage then you may need to reboot so that some of the installed dependencies take effect.
  724. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  725. editor /etc/crontab
  726. #+END_SRC
  727. Add the following near the top of the list of tasks.
  728. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  729. */15 * * * * root /usr/bin/timeout 20 tlsdate -l -t -H www.ptb.de -p 443 >> /var/log/tlsdate.log
  730. #+END_SRC
  731. Save and exit.
  732. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  733. service cron restart
  734. #+END_SRC
  735. This obtains the date and time from www.ptb.de every 15 minutes. Obviously if you wish to use a different source for the date and time then the cron entry can be edited accordingly.
  736. To ensure that the system always gets the correct time on initial bootup create an init script.
  737. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  738. editor /etc/init.d/tlsdate
  739. #+END_SRC
  740. Add the following:
  741. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  742. #!/bin/bash
  743. # /etc/init.d/tlsdate
  744. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  745. # Provides: tlsdate
  746. # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog
  747. # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog
  748. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  749. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  750. # Short-Description: Initially calls tlsdate with the timewarp option
  751. # Description: Initially calls tlsdate with the timewarp option
  752. ### END INIT INFO
  753. # Author: Bob Mottram <bob@robotics.uk.to>
  754. PATH='/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin'
  755. LOGFILE="/var/log/tlsdate.log"
  756. TLSDATECOMMAND="tlsdate --timewarp -l -H www.ptb.de -p 443 >> $LOGFILE"
  757. #Start-Stop here
  758. case "$1" in
  759. start)
  760. echo "tlsdate started"
  761. $TLSDATECOMMAND
  762. ;;
  763. stop)
  764. echo "tlsdate stopped"
  765. ;;
  766. restart)
  767. echo "tlsdate restarted"
  768. $TLSDATECOMMAND
  769. ;;
  770. *)
  771. echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart}"
  772. exit 1
  773. ;;
  774. esac
  775. exit 0
  776. #+END_SRC
  777. Save and exit, then start the daemon.
  778. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  779. chmod +x /etc/init.d/tlsdate
  780. update-rc.d tlsdate defaults
  781. service tlsdate start
  782. #+END_SRC
  783. ** Install fail2ban
  784. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  785. apt-get install fail2ban
  786. #+END_SRC
  787. ** Set up a firewall
  788. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  789. /The documents, from a PowerPoint presentation prepared for a 2012 NSA conference called SIGDEV, show that the unit known as the Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group, or JTRIG, boasted of using the DDOS attack – which it dubbed Rolling Thunder/
  790. -- NBC News article: /War on Anonymous: British Spies Attacked Hackers, Snowden Docs Show/
  791. #+END_VERSE
  792. A basic firewall limits the maximum rate at which connections can be made and closes any unused ports, and this helps to defend against various kinds of DDOS attack.
  793. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  794. apt-get install portsentry
  795. editor /etc/portsentry/portsentry.conf
  796. #+END_SRC
  797. Uncomment the entry for *iptables support for Linux*
  798. Set the following properties:
  799. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  800. TCP_PORTS="1,7,9,11,15,79,109,110,111,119,138,139,512,513,514,515,540,635,1080,1524,2000,2001,4000,4001,5742,6000,6001,6667,12345,12346,20034,27665,30303,32771,32772,32773,32774,31337,40421,40425,49724,54320"
  801. UDP_PORTS="1,7,9,66,67,68,69,111,137,138,161,162,474,513,517,518,635,640,641,666,700,2049,31335,27444,34555,32770,32771,32772,32773,32774,31337,54321"
  802. ADVANCED_EXCLUDE_TCP="113,139,70,80,443,587,143,6697,993,5060,5061,25,465,22,5222,5223,5269,5280,5281,8432,8433,8444"
  803. ADVANCED_EXCLUDE_UDP="520,138,137,67,70,80,443,143,6697,993, 5060,5061,25,465,22,5222,5223,5269,5280,5281,8444"
  804. SCAN_TRIGGER="2"
  805. BLOCK_UDP="2"
  806. BLOCK_TCP="2"
  807. #+END_SRC
  808. Save and exit.
  809. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  810. service portsentry restart
  811. editor /tmp/firewall.sh
  812. #+END_SRC
  813. Enter the following:
  814. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  815. #!/bin/bash
  816. # First of all delete any existing rules.
  817. # This means you're back to a known state:
  818. iptables -P INPUT ACCEPT
  819. ip6tables -P INPUT ACCEPT
  820. iptables -F
  821. ip6tables -F
  822. iptables -X
  823. ip6tables -X
  824. # Drop any IPv6 traffic
  825. ip6tables -A INPUT -p icmp -j DROP
  826. ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp -j DROP
  827. ip6tables -A INPUT -p udp -j DROP
  828. # Drop access to unused ports
  829. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 1 -j DROP
  830. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 7 -j DROP
  831. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 109:111 -j DROP
  832. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 995 -j DROP
  833. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 139 -j DROP
  834. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 6000:6001 -j DROP
  835. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 9 -j DROP
  836. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 79 -j DROP
  837. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 515 -j DROP
  838. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 4001 -j DROP
  839. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 1524 -j DROP
  840. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 1080 -j DROP
  841. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 512:514 -j DROP
  842. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 31337 -j DROP
  843. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 2000:2001 -j DROP
  844. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 12345 -j DROP
  845. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 32771:32774 -j DROP
  846. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 6665:6669 -j DROP
  847. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 4000 -j DROP
  848. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 119 -j DROP
  849. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 137 -j DROP
  850. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 3306 -j DROP
  851. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 4242 -j DROP
  852. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 9050 -j DROP
  853. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 1 -j DROP
  854. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 7 -j DROP
  855. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 109:111 -j DROP
  856. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 995 -j DROP
  857. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 139 -j DROP
  858. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 6000:6001 -j DROP
  859. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 9 -j DROP
  860. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 79 -j DROP
  861. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 515 -j DROP
  862. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 4001 -j DROP
  863. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 1524 -j DROP
  864. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 1080 -j DROP
  865. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 512:514 -j DROP
  866. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 31337 -j DROP
  867. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 2000:2001 -j DROP
  868. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 12345 -j DROP
  869. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 32771:32774 -j DROP
  870. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 6665:6669 -j DROP
  871. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 4000 -j DROP
  872. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 119 -j DROP
  873. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 137 -j DROP
  874. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 8432 -j DROP
  875. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 8433 -j DROP
  876. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 3306 -j DROP
  877. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 4242 -j DROP
  878. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --destination-port 9050 -j DROP
  879. # Make sure NEW incoming tcp connections are SYN packets
  880. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp ! --syn -m state --state NEW -j DROP
  881. # Drop packets with incoming fragments
  882. iptables -A INPUT -f -j DROP
  883. # Incoming malformed XMAS packets drop them
  884. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --tcp-flags ALL ALL -j DROP
  885. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --tcp-flags ALL FIN,PSH,URG -j DROP
  886. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --tcp-flags ALL SYN,RST,ACK,FIN,URG -j DROP
  887. # Incoming malformed NULL packets:
  888. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --tcp-flags ALL NONE -j DROP
  889. # Drop UDP to used ports
  890. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --match multiport --dports 70,80,443,143,6697,993,5060,5061,25 -j DROP
  891. iptables -A INPUT -p udp --match multiport --dports 465,587,22,5222,5223,5269,5280,5281,8444 -j DROP
  892. # Limit ssh logins
  893. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 22 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  894. # Limit web connections
  895. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 80 -m limit --limit 10/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  896. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -m limit --limit 10/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  897. # Limit number of XMPP connections
  898. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --match multiport --dports 5222:5223,5269,5280:5281 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  899. # Limit IRC connections
  900. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 6697 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  901. # Limit gopher connections
  902. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 70 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  903. # Limit IMAP connections
  904. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 143 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  905. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 993 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  906. # Limit SIP connections
  907. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 5060:5061 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  908. # Limit SMTP/SMTPS connections
  909. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 25 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  910. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 465 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  911. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 587 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  912. # Limit Bitmessage connections
  913. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 8444 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  914. # Limit Convergence notary
  915. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 8432:8433 -m limit --limit 3/minute --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  916. # Limit the number of incoming tcp connections
  917. # Interface 0 incoming syn-flood protection
  918. iptables -N syn_flood
  919. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --syn -j syn_flood
  920. iptables -A syn_flood -m limit --limit 1/s --limit-burst 3 -j RETURN
  921. iptables -A syn_flood -j DROP
  922. # Limiting the incoming icmp ping request:
  923. #iptables -A INPUT -p icmp -m limit --limit 1/s --limit-burst 1 -j ACCEPT
  924. #iptables -A INPUT -p icmp -m limit --limit 1/s --limit-burst 1 -j LOG --log-prefix PING-DROP:
  925. iptables -A INPUT -p icmp -j DROP
  926. #iptables -A OUTPUT -p icmp -j ACCEPT
  927. # Save the settings
  928. iptables-save > /etc/firewall.conf
  929. ip6tables-save > /etc/firewall6.conf
  930. printf '#!/bin/sh\n' > /etc/network/if-up.d/iptables
  931. printf 'iptables-restore < /etc/firewall.conf\n' >> /etc/network/if-up.d/iptables
  932. printf 'ip6tables-restore < /etc/firewall6.conf\n' >> /etc/network/if-up.d/iptables
  933. chmod +x /etc/network/if-up.d/iptables
  934. #+END_SRC
  935. Save and exit.
  936. Note that this will disable IP version 6. At the time of writing it is expected that the average internet user is running on IP version 4.
  937. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  938. chmod +x /tmp/firewall.sh
  939. . /tmp/firewall.sh
  940. rm /tmp/firewall.sh
  941. #+END_SRC
  942. Also disable ping. This may be inconvenient to some extent, but it seems common for malicious systems, including but not limited to the [[http://www.nbcnews.com/news/investigations/snowden-docs-british-spies-used-sex-dirty-tricks-n23091][JTRIG "EFFECTS" team]], to try to disable the machine by flooding it with pings. These days there seems to be not much difference between "cybercrime" and nefarious state-sponsored internet activities.
  943. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  944. editor /etc/sysctl.conf
  945. #+END_SRC
  946. Uncomment or change the following:
  947. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  948. net.ipv4.tcp_syncookies = 1
  949. net.ipv4.conf.all.accept_redirects = 0
  950. net.ipv6.conf.all.accept_redirects = 0
  951. net.ipv4.conf.all.send_redirects = 0
  952. net.ipv4.conf.all.accept_source_route = 0
  953. net.ipv6.conf.all.accept_source_route = 0
  954. net.ipv4.conf.default.rp_filter=1
  955. net.ipv4.conf.all.rp_filter=1
  956. net.ipv4.ip_forward=0
  957. net.ipv6.conf.all.forwarding=0
  958. #+END_SRC
  959. And append the following:
  960. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  961. # ignore pings
  962. net.ipv4.icmp_echo_ignore_all = 1
  963. net.ipv6.icmp_echo_ignore_all = 1
  964. # disable ipv6
  965. net.ipv6.conf.all.disable_ipv6 = 1
  966. net.ipv4.tcp_synack_retries = 2
  967. net.ipv4.tcp_syn_retries = 1
  968. # keepalive
  969. net.ipv4.tcp_keepalive_probes = 9
  970. net.ipv4.tcp_keepalive_intvl = 75
  971. net.ipv4.tcp_keepalive_time = 7200
  972. #+END_SRC
  973. Save and exit. It may be a good idea to reboot at this point and then log back into the BBB using ssh. You can do a safe reboot of the system by typing:
  974. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  975. reboot
  976. #+END_SRC
  977. After reboot and logging back in to the root account via /ssh/ you can verify that the firewall rules were restored correctly with:
  978. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  979. iptables -L
  980. #+END_SRC
  981. and
  982. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  983. ip6tables -L
  984. #+END_SRC
  985. ** Install Email
  986. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  987. /The government argued that, since the "inspection" of the data was to be carried out by a machine, they were exempt from the normal search-and-seizure protections of the Fourth Amendment...The prosecution also argued that my users had no expectation of privacy, even though the service I provided - encryption - is designed for users' privacy/
  988. -- Ladar Levison
  989. #+END_VERSE
  990. Email is not very secure, but its usefulness and ubiquity mean that it's likely to continue as a primary communications method for many years to come. You can encrypt the contents of email using PGP/GPG, but very few people do that and even for those that do the metadata (the From/To/CC/BCC) is always transmitted in the clear as a fundamental aspect of the protocol, allowing an attacker to easily construct detailed models of people's social network and life patterns even without knowing the content.
  991. Exim4 seems much easier to install and configure than Postfix.
  992. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  993. service postfix stop
  994. apt-get remove postfix
  995. aptitude install exim4 sasl2-bin swaks libnet-ssleay-perl procmail
  996. #+END_SRC
  997. You will be prompted to remove postfix. Say yes and yes again.
  998. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  999. dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config
  1000. #+END_SRC
  1001. Settings as follows:
  1002. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1003. internet site
  1004. System mail name: mydomainname.com
  1005. IP addresses to listen on: blank
  1006. Destinations: mydomainname.com (and any other domains that you own)
  1007. Domains to relay mail: blank
  1008. Smarthost Relay: 192.168.1.0/24 (the range of addresses on your LAN)
  1009. Dial on demand = no
  1010. Maildir format in home directory
  1011. Split configuration = no
  1012. Root and postmaster: root email
  1013. #+END_SRC
  1014. To test the installation:
  1015. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1016. telnet 192.168.1.60 25
  1017. ehlo xxx
  1018. quit
  1019. #+END_SRC
  1020. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1021. editor /etc/default/saslauthd
  1022. #+END_SRC
  1023. set START=yes then save and exit.
  1024. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1025. /etc/init.d/saslauthd start
  1026. editor /usr/bin/exim-gencert
  1027. #+END_SRC
  1028. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1029. #!/bin/sh -e
  1030. if [ -n "$EX4DEBUG" ]; then
  1031. echo "now debugging $0 $@"
  1032. set -x
  1033. fi
  1034. DIR=/etc/exim4
  1035. CERT=$DIR/exim.crt
  1036. KEY=$DIR/exim.key
  1037. # This exim binary was built with GnuTLS which does not support dhparams
  1038. # from a file. See /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz
  1039. #DH=$DIR/exim.dhparam
  1040. if ! which openssl > /dev/null ;then
  1041. echo "$0: openssl is not installed, exiting" 1>&2
  1042. exit 1
  1043. fi
  1044. # valid for ten years
  1045. DAYS=3650
  1046. if [ "$1" != "--force" ] && [ -f $CERT ] && [ -f $KEY ]; then
  1047. echo "[*] $CERT and $KEY exists!"
  1048. echo " Use \"$0 --force\" to force generation!"
  1049. exit 0
  1050. fi
  1051. if [ "$1" = "--force" ]; then
  1052. shift
  1053. fi
  1054. #SSLEAY=/tmp/exim.ssleay.$$.cnf
  1055. SSLEAY="$(tempfile -m600 -pexi)"
  1056. cat > $SSLEAY <<EOM
  1057. RANDFILE = $HOME/.rnd
  1058. [ req ]
  1059. default_bits = 4096
  1060. default_keyfile = exim.key
  1061. distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
  1062. [ req_distinguished_name ]
  1063. countryName = Country Code (2 letters)
  1064. countryName_default = GB
  1065. countryName_min = 2
  1066. countryName_max = 2
  1067. stateOrProvinceName = State or Province Name (full name)
  1068. localityName = Locality Name (eg, city)
  1069. organizationName = Organization Name (eg, company; recommended)
  1070. organizationName_max = 64
  1071. organizationalUnitName = Organizational Unit Name (eg, section)
  1072. organizationalUnitName_max = 64
  1073. commonName = Server name (eg. ssl.domain.tld; required!!!)
  1074. commonName_max = 64
  1075. emailAddress = Email Address
  1076. emailAddress_max = 40
  1077. EOM
  1078. echo "[*] Creating a self signed SSL certificate for Exim!"
  1079. echo " This may be sufficient to establish encrypted connections but for"
  1080. echo " secure identification you need to buy a real certificate!"
  1081. echo " "
  1082. echo " Please enter the hostname of your MTA at the Common Name (CN) prompt!"
  1083. echo " "
  1084. openssl req -config $SSLEAY -x509 -sha256 -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout $KEY -out $CERT -days $DAYS -nodes
  1085. #see README.Debian.gz*# openssl dhparam -check -text -5 512 -out $DH
  1086. rm -f $SSLEAY
  1087. chown root:Debian-exim $KEY $CERT $DH
  1088. chmod 640 $KEY $CERT $DH
  1089. echo "[*] Done generating self signed certificates for exim!"
  1090. echo " Refer to the documentation and example configuration files"
  1091. echo " over at /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/ for an idea on how to enable TLS"
  1092. echo " support in your mail transfer agent."
  1093. #+END_SRC
  1094. Save and exit
  1095. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1096. chmod +x /usr/bin/exim-gencert
  1097. exim-gencert --force
  1098. #+END_SRC
  1099. This will generate the certificate used for email authentication. You will be asked for various details, the most important of which is the server name, which should be your domain name.
  1100. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1101. editor /etc/exim4/exim4.conf.template
  1102. #+END_SRC
  1103. Uncomment the section which begins with *login_saslauthd_server*
  1104. Search for the line *.ifdef MAIN_HARDCODE_PRIMARY_HOSTNAME* and above it insert the line:
  1105. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1106. MAIN_HARDCODE_PRIMARY_HOSTNAME = mydomainname.com
  1107. #+END_SRC
  1108. Add the line:
  1109. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1110. MAIN_TLS_ENABLE = true
  1111. #+END_SRC
  1112. Save and exit.
  1113. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1114. editor /etc/default/exim4
  1115. change SMTPLISTENEROPTIONS to:
  1116. SMTPLISTENEROPTIONS='-oX 465:25:587 -oP /var/run/exim4/exim.pid'
  1117. #+END_SRC
  1118. save and exit
  1119. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1120. editor /etc/exim4/exim4.conf.template
  1121. under the section "main/03_exim4-config_tlsoptions"
  1122. Add the following:
  1123. tls_on_connect_ports=465
  1124. #+END_SRC
  1125. save and exit
  1126. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1127. adduser myusername sasl
  1128. addgroup Debian-exim sasl
  1129. /etc/init.d/exim4 restart
  1130. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir
  1131. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/Sent
  1132. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/Sent/tmp
  1133. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/Sent/cur
  1134. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/Sent/new
  1135. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-spam
  1136. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-spam/cur
  1137. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-spam/new
  1138. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-spam/tmp
  1139. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-ham
  1140. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-ham/cur
  1141. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-ham/new
  1142. mkdir -m 700 /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-ham/tmp
  1143. ln -s /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-spam /etc/skel/Maildir/spam
  1144. ln -s /etc/skel/Maildir/.learn-ham /etc/skel/Maildir/ham
  1145. #+END_SRC
  1146. If you're starting from scratch and don't already have a /Maildir/ directory in your home directory, then create one as follows:
  1147. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1148. export MYUSERNAME=myusername
  1149. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir
  1150. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/cur
  1151. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/tmp
  1152. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/new
  1153. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/Sent
  1154. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/Sent/cur
  1155. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/Sent/tmp
  1156. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/Sent/new
  1157. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-spam
  1158. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-spam/cur
  1159. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-spam/new
  1160. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-spam/tmp
  1161. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-ham
  1162. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-ham/cur
  1163. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-ham/new
  1164. mkdir -m 700 /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-ham/tmp
  1165. ln -s /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-spam /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/spam
  1166. ln -s /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/.learn-ham /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/ham
  1167. chown -R $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME /home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir
  1168. #+END_SRC
  1169. ** Spam filtering
  1170. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1171. aptitude install spamassassin exim4-daemon-heavy
  1172. #+END_SRC
  1173. If you encounter any problems with dependencies then select 'n' and then 'y' to whatever the suggestion for removals is. Repeat the aptitude install process until you don't get any more dependency errors.
  1174. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1175. editor /etc/default/spamassassin
  1176. #+END_SRC
  1177. Set ENABLED=1 then save and exit.
  1178. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1179. editor /etc/exim4/exim4.conf.template
  1180. #+END_SRC
  1181. uncomment or change according to your configuration
  1182. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1183. # For spam scanning, there is a similar option that defines the interface to
  1184. # SpamAssassin. You do not need to set this if you are using the default, which
  1185. # is shown in this commented example. As for virus scanning, you must also
  1186. # modify the acl_check_data access control list to enable spam scanning.
  1187. spamd_address = 127.0.0.1 783
  1188. #+END_SRC
  1189. add spam header in the /acl_check_data/ section:
  1190. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1191. ### acl/40_exim4-config_check_data
  1192. #################################
  1193. # This ACL is used after the contents of a message have been received. This
  1194. # is the ACL in which you can test a message's headers or body, and in
  1195. # particular, this is where you can invoke external virus or spam scanners.
  1196. acl_check_data:
  1197. ...
  1198. ...
  1199. ...
  1200. # See the exim docs and the exim wiki for more suitable examples.
  1201. #
  1202. # warn
  1203. # spam = Debian-exim:true
  1204. # add_header = X-Spam_score: $spam_score\n\
  1205. # X-Spam_score_int: $spam_score_int\n\
  1206. # X-Spam_bar: $spam_bar\n\
  1207. # X-Spam_report: $spam_report
  1208. # put headers in all messages (no matter if spam or not)
  1209. warn spam = nobody:true
  1210. add_header = X-Spam-Score: $spam_score ($spam_bar)
  1211. add_header = X-Spam-Report: $spam_report
  1212. # add second subject line with *SPAM* marker when message
  1213. # is over threshold
  1214. warn spam = nobody
  1215. add_header = Subject: ***SPAM (score:$spam_score)*** $h_Subject:
  1216. #+END_SRC
  1217. Save and exit.
  1218. Then restart
  1219. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1220. exit
  1221. editor ~/.procmailrc
  1222. #+END_SRC
  1223. The text should look like the following.
  1224. #+BEGIN_SRC: sh
  1225. MAILDIR=$HOME/Maildir
  1226. DEFAULT=$MAILDIR/
  1227. LOGFILE=$HOME/log/procmail.log
  1228. LOGABSTRACT=all
  1229. # get spamassassin to check emails
  1230. :0fw: .spamassassin.lock
  1231. * < 256000
  1232. | spamc
  1233. # strong spam are discarded
  1234. :0
  1235. * ^X-Spam-Level: \*\*\*\*\*\*
  1236. /dev/null
  1237. # weak spam are kept just in case - clear this out every now and then
  1238. :0
  1239. * ^X-Spam-Level: \*\*\*\*\*
  1240. .0-spam/
  1241. # otherwise, marginal spam goes here for revision
  1242. :0
  1243. * ^X-Spam-Level: \*\*
  1244. .spam/
  1245. #+END_SRC
  1246. Save and exit.
  1247. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1248. su
  1249. editor /usr/bin/filterspam
  1250. #+END_SRC
  1251. Add the following contents:
  1252. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1253. #!/bin/bash
  1254. USERNAME=$1
  1255. MAILDIR=/home/$USERNAME/Maildir/.learn-spam
  1256. if [ ! -d "$MAILDIR" ]; then
  1257. exit
  1258. fi
  1259. for f in `ls $MAILDIR/cur`
  1260. do
  1261. spamc -L spam < "$MAILDIR/cur/$f" > /dev/null
  1262. rm "$MAILDIR/cur/$f"
  1263. done
  1264. for f in `ls $MAILDIR/new`
  1265. do
  1266. spamc -L spam < "$MAILDIR/new/$f" > /dev/null
  1267. rm "$MAILDIR/new/$f"
  1268. done
  1269. #+END_SRC
  1270. Save and exit.
  1271. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1272. editor /usr/bin/filterham
  1273. #+END_SRC
  1274. Add the following contents:
  1275. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1276. #!/bin/bash
  1277. USERNAME=$1
  1278. MAILDIR=/home/$USERNAME/Maildir/.learn-ham
  1279. if [ ! -d "$MAILDIR" ]; then
  1280. exit
  1281. fi
  1282. for f in `ls $MAILDIR/cur`
  1283. do
  1284. spamc -L ham < "$MAILDIR/cur/$f" > /dev/null
  1285. rm "$MAILDIR/cur/$f"
  1286. done
  1287. for f in `ls $MAILDIR/new`
  1288. do
  1289. spamc -L ham < "$MAILDIR/new/$f" > /dev/null
  1290. rm "$MAILDIR/new/$f"
  1291. done
  1292. #+END_SRC
  1293. Save and exit.
  1294. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1295. editor /etc/crontab
  1296. #+END_SRC
  1297. Append the following, replacing *myusername* with your username.
  1298. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1299. */3 * * * * root /usr/bin/timeout 120 /usr/bin/filterspam myusername
  1300. */3 * * * * root /usr/bin/timeout 120 /usr/bin/filterham myusername
  1301. #+END_SRC
  1302. Save and exit.
  1303. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1304. chmod 655 /usr/bin/filterspam /usr/bin/filterham
  1305. service spamassassin restart
  1306. service exim4 restart
  1307. service cron restart
  1308. #+END_SRC
  1309. ** Install Dovecot
  1310. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  1311. /I dreamt last night that I was living in a surveillance state. I woke up and… I’m still in a surveillance state./
  1312. -- Conrad Kramer
  1313. #+END_VERSE
  1314. Install the required packages.
  1315. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1316. aptitude -y install dovecot-common dovecot-imapd
  1317. #+END_SRC
  1318. Edit the configuration file.
  1319. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1320. editor /etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf
  1321. #+END_SRC
  1322. Line 26: change:
  1323. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1324. listen = *
  1325. #+END_SRC
  1326. Save and exit.
  1327. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1328. editor /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-auth.conf
  1329. #+END_SRC
  1330. Line 9: uncomment and change (allow plain text auth)
  1331. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1332. disable_plaintext_auth = no
  1333. #+END_SRC
  1334. Line 99: add:
  1335. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1336. auth_mechanisms = plain login
  1337. #+END_SRC
  1338. Save and exit.
  1339. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1340. editor /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf
  1341. #+END_SRC
  1342. Line 30: uncomment and add:
  1343. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1344. mail_location = maildir:~/Maildir:LAYOUT=fs
  1345. #+END_SRC
  1346. Save and exit.
  1347. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1348. editor /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-ssl.conf
  1349. #+END_SRC
  1350. Append the following:
  1351. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1352. ssl_cipher_list = 'EDH+CAMELLIA:EDH+aRSA:EECDH+aRSA+AESGCM:EECDH+aRSA+SHA384:EECDH+aRSA+SHA256:EECDH:+CAMELLIA256:+AES256:+CAMELLIA128:+AES128:+SSLv3:!aNULL:!eNULL:!LOW:!3DES:!MD5:!EXP:!PSK:!DSS:!RC4:!SEED:!ECDSA:CAMELLIA256-SHA:AES256-SHA:CAMELLIA128-SHA:AES128-SHA'
  1353. #+END_SRC
  1354. Save and exit, then start the dovecot service.
  1355. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1356. service dovecot restart
  1357. #+END_SRC
  1358. ** Create a GPG key
  1359. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  1360. /If privacy is outlawed, only outlaws will have privacy./
  1361. -- Philip Zimmermann
  1362. #+END_VERSE
  1363. *** Initial installation
  1364. Assuming that you are logged in as root, first ensure that GPG is installed and then exit to your user account.
  1365. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1366. apt-get install gnupg
  1367. exit
  1368. #+END_SRC
  1369. Now we will add some settings:
  1370. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1371. mkdir ~/.gnupg
  1372. editor ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
  1373. #+END_SRC
  1374. The configuration should look like the following. Of particular importance are the default preferences at the end.
  1375. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1376. # Options for GnuPG
  1377. # Copyright 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,
  1378. # 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  1379. #
  1380. # This file is free software; as a special exception the author gives
  1381. # unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without
  1382. # modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
  1383. #
  1384. # This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
  1385. # WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law; without even the
  1386. # implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
  1387. #
  1388. # Unless you specify which option file to use (with the command line
  1389. # option "--options filename"), GnuPG uses the file ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
  1390. # by default.
  1391. #
  1392. # An options file can contain any long options which are available in
  1393. # GnuPG. If the first non white space character of a line is a '#',
  1394. # this line is ignored. Empty lines are also ignored.
  1395. #
  1396. # See the man page for a list of options.
  1397. # Uncomment the following option to get rid of the copyright notice
  1398. #no-greeting
  1399. # If you have more than 1 secret key in your keyring, you may want to
  1400. # uncomment the following option and set your preferred keyid.
  1401. #default-key 621CC013
  1402. # If you do not pass a recipient to gpg, it will ask for one. Using
  1403. # this option you can encrypt to a default key. Key validation will
  1404. # not be done in this case. The second form uses the default key as
  1405. # default recipient.
  1406. #default-recipient some-user-id
  1407. #default-recipient-self
  1408. # Use --encrypt-to to add the specified key as a recipient to all
  1409. # messages. This is useful, for example, when sending mail through a
  1410. # mail client that does not automatically encrypt mail to your key.
  1411. # In the example, this option allows you to read your local copy of
  1412. # encrypted mail that you've sent to others.
  1413. #encrypt-to some-key-id
  1414. # By default GnuPG creates version 4 signatures for data files as
  1415. # specified by OpenPGP. Some earlier (PGP 6, PGP 7) versions of PGP
  1416. # require the older version 3 signatures. Setting this option forces
  1417. # GnuPG to create version 3 signatures.
  1418. #force-v3-sigs
  1419. # Because some mailers change lines starting with "From " to ">From "
  1420. # it is good to handle such lines in a special way when creating
  1421. # cleartext signatures; all other PGP versions do it this way too.
  1422. #no-escape-from-lines
  1423. # If you do not use the Latin-1 (ISO-8859-1) charset, you should tell
  1424. # GnuPG which is the native character set. Please check the man page
  1425. # for supported character sets. This character set is only used for
  1426. # metadata and not for the actual message which does not undergo any
  1427. # translation. Note that future version of GnuPG will change to UTF-8
  1428. # as default character set. In most cases this option is not required
  1429. # as GnuPG is able to figure out the correct charset at runtime.
  1430. #charset utf-8
  1431. # Group names may be defined like this:
  1432. # group mynames = paige 0x12345678 joe patti
  1433. #
  1434. # Any time "mynames" is a recipient (-r or --recipient), it will be
  1435. # expanded to the names "paige", "joe", and "patti", and the key ID
  1436. # "0x12345678". Note there is only one level of expansion - you
  1437. # cannot make an group that points to another group. Note also that
  1438. # if there are spaces in the recipient name, this will appear as two
  1439. # recipients. In these cases it is better to use the key ID.
  1440. #group mynames = paige 0x12345678 joe patti
  1441. # Lock the file only once for the lifetime of a process. If you do
  1442. # not define this, the lock will be obtained and released every time
  1443. # it is needed, which is usually preferable.
  1444. #lock-once
  1445. # GnuPG can send and receive keys to and from a keyserver. These
  1446. # servers can be HKP, email, or LDAP (if GnuPG is built with LDAP
  1447. # support).
  1448. #
  1449. # Example HKP keyserver:
  1450. # hkp://keys.gnupg.net
  1451. # hkp://subkeys.pgp.net
  1452. #
  1453. # Example email keyserver:
  1454. # mailto:pgp-public-keys@keys.pgp.net
  1455. #
  1456. # Example LDAP keyservers:
  1457. # ldap://keyserver.pgp.com
  1458. #
  1459. # Regular URL syntax applies, and you can set an alternate port
  1460. # through the usual method:
  1461. # hkp://keyserver.example.net:22742
  1462. #
  1463. # Most users just set the name and type of their preferred keyserver.
  1464. # Note that most servers (with the notable exception of
  1465. # ldap://keyserver.pgp.com) synchronize changes with each other. Note
  1466. # also that a single server name may actually point to multiple
  1467. # servers via DNS round-robin. hkp://keys.gnupg.net is an example of
  1468. # such a "server", which spreads the load over a number of physical
  1469. # servers. To see the IP address of the server actually used, you may use
  1470. # the "--keyserver-options debug".
  1471. keyserver hkp://keys.gnupg.net
  1472. #keyserver mailto:pgp-public-keys@keys.nl.pgp.net
  1473. #keyserver ldap://keyserver.pgp.com
  1474. # Common options for keyserver functions:
  1475. #
  1476. # include-disabled : when searching, include keys marked as "disabled"
  1477. # on the keyserver (not all keyservers support this).
  1478. #
  1479. # no-include-revoked : when searching, do not include keys marked as
  1480. # "revoked" on the keyserver.
  1481. #
  1482. # verbose : show more information as the keys are fetched.
  1483. # Can be used more than once to increase the amount
  1484. # of information shown.
  1485. #
  1486. # use-temp-files : use temporary files instead of a pipe to talk to the
  1487. # keyserver. Some platforms (Win32 for one) always
  1488. # have this on.
  1489. #
  1490. # keep-temp-files : do not delete temporary files after using them
  1491. # (really only useful for debugging)
  1492. #
  1493. # http-proxy="proxy" : set the proxy to use for HTTP and HKP keyservers.
  1494. # This overrides the "http_proxy" environment variable,
  1495. # if any.
  1496. #
  1497. # auto-key-retrieve : automatically fetch keys as needed from the keyserver
  1498. # when verifying signatures or when importing keys that
  1499. # have been revoked by a revocation key that is not
  1500. # present on the keyring.
  1501. #
  1502. # no-include-attributes : do not include attribute IDs (aka "photo IDs")
  1503. # when sending keys to the keyserver.
  1504. keyserver-options auto-key-retrieve
  1505. # Display photo user IDs in key listings
  1506. # list-options show-photos
  1507. # Display photo user IDs when a signature from a key with a photo is
  1508. # verified
  1509. # verify-options show-photos
  1510. # Use this program to display photo user IDs
  1511. #
  1512. # %i is expanded to a temporary file that contains the photo.
  1513. # %I is the same as %i, but the file isn't deleted afterwards by GnuPG.
  1514. # %k is expanded to the key ID of the key.
  1515. # %K is expanded to the long OpenPGP key ID of the key.
  1516. # %t is expanded to the extension of the image (e.g. "jpg").
  1517. # %T is expanded to the MIME type of the image (e.g. "image/jpeg").
  1518. # %f is expanded to the fingerprint of the key.
  1519. # %% is %, of course.
  1520. #
  1521. # If %i or %I are not present, then the photo is supplied to the
  1522. # viewer on standard input. If your platform supports it, standard
  1523. # input is the best way to do this as it avoids the time and effort in
  1524. # generating and then cleaning up a secure temp file.
  1525. #
  1526. # If no photo-viewer is provided, GnuPG will look for xloadimage, eog,
  1527. # or display (ImageMagick). On Mac OS X and Windows, the default is
  1528. # to use your regular JPEG image viewer.
  1529. #
  1530. # Some other viewers:
  1531. # photo-viewer "qiv %i"
  1532. # photo-viewer "ee %i"
  1533. #
  1534. # This one saves a copy of the photo ID in your home directory:
  1535. # photo-viewer "cat > ~/photoid-for-key-%k.%t"
  1536. #
  1537. # Use your MIME handler to view photos:
  1538. # photo-viewer "metamail -q -d -b -c %T -s 'KeyID 0x%k' -f GnuPG"
  1539. # Passphrase agent
  1540. #
  1541. # We support the old experimental passphrase agent protocol as well as
  1542. # the new Assuan based one (currently available in the "newpg" package
  1543. # at ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/alpha/aegypten/). To make use of the agent,
  1544. # you have to run an agent as daemon and use the option
  1545. #
  1546. # use-agent
  1547. #
  1548. # which tries to use the agent but will fallback to the regular mode
  1549. # if there is a problem connecting to the agent. The normal way to
  1550. # locate the agent is by looking at the environment variable
  1551. # GPG_AGENT_INFO which should have been set during gpg-agent startup.
  1552. # In certain situations the use of this variable is not possible, thus
  1553. # the option
  1554. #
  1555. # --gpg-agent-info=<path>:<pid>:1
  1556. #
  1557. # may be used to override it.
  1558. # Automatic key location
  1559. #
  1560. # GnuPG can automatically locate and retrieve keys as needed using the
  1561. # auto-key-locate option. This happens when encrypting to an email
  1562. # address (in the "user@example.com" form), and there are no
  1563. # user@example.com keys on the local keyring. This option takes the
  1564. # following arguments, in the order they are to be tried:
  1565. #
  1566. # cert = locate a key using DNS CERT, as specified in RFC-4398.
  1567. # GnuPG can handle both the PGP (key) and IPGP (URL + fingerprint)
  1568. # CERT methods.
  1569. #
  1570. # pka = locate a key using DNS PKA.
  1571. #
  1572. # ldap = locate a key using the PGP Universal method of checking
  1573. # "ldap://keys.(thedomain)". For example, encrypting to
  1574. # user@example.com will check ldap://keys.example.com.
  1575. #
  1576. # keyserver = locate a key using whatever keyserver is defined using
  1577. # the keyserver option.
  1578. #
  1579. # You may also list arbitrary keyservers here by URL.
  1580. #
  1581. # Try CERT, then PKA, then LDAP, then hkp://subkeys.net:
  1582. #auto-key-locate cert pka ldap hkp://subkeys.pgp.net
  1583. # default preferences
  1584. personal-digest-preferences SHA256
  1585. cert-digest-algo SHA256
  1586. default-preference-list SHA512 SHA384 SHA256 SHA224 AES256 AES192 AES CAST5 ZLIB BZIP2 ZIP Uncompressed
  1587. #+END_SRC
  1588. Save and exit.
  1589. *** If you have an existing key
  1590. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1591. gpg --import ~/public_key.txt
  1592. gpg --allow-secret-key-import --import ~/private_key.txt
  1593. shred -zu ~/private_key.txt
  1594. #+END_SRC
  1595. Now check the digest preferences, replacing /keyID/ with your GPG key ID. This applies especially if you have a key which was generated some time ago.
  1596. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1597. export MYGPGKEYID=keyID
  1598. gpg --edit-key $MYGPGKEYID
  1599. setpref SHA512 SHA384 SHA256 SHA224 AES256 AES192 AES CAST5 ZLIB BZIP2 ZIP Uncompressed
  1600. save
  1601. gpg --send-keys $MYGPGKEYID
  1602. #+END_SRC
  1603. *** To create a new key
  1604. Generate a key with the following command:
  1605. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1606. gpg --gen-key
  1607. #+END_SRC
  1608. You can find your GPG key ID by entering:
  1609. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1610. gpg --list-keys
  1611. #+END_SRC
  1612. The key ID is the second part of the string of numbers and letters. So for example in:
  1613. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1614. pub 4096R/EA982E38 2012-05-20
  1615. #+END_SRC
  1616. the key ID is EA982E38. Now send your public key to a server so that others can find it.
  1617. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1618. gpg --send-keys $MYGPGKEYID
  1619. #+END_SRC
  1620. *** root settings
  1621. If you later create an encrypted mailing list then the root user will also need to have good GPG settings so that it can generate key pairs for the list. The easiest way to ensure this is to do the following, replacing /myusername/ with your username:
  1622. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1623. su
  1624. cp -r /home/myusername/.gnupg ~/
  1625. chown -R root:root ~/.gnupg
  1626. #+END_SRC
  1627. ** Protect processes
  1628. Because the BBB has limited RAM some processes may occasionally be automatically killed if physical memory availability is getting too low. The way in which processes are chosen to be sacrificed is not particularly intelligent, and so can result in vital systems being stopped. To try to prevent that from ever happening the following script can be used, which should ensure that at a minimum ssh, email and mysql keep running.
  1629. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1630. editor /usr/bin/protectprocesses
  1631. #+END_SRC
  1632. Add the following:
  1633. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1634. #!/bin/bash
  1635. declare -a protect=('/usr/sbin/sshd' '/usr/sbin/mysqld --basedir=/usr' '/bin/sh /usr/bin/mysqld_safe' '/usr/sbin/exim4')
  1636. for p in "${protect[@]}"
  1637. do
  1638. OOM_PROC_ID=$(ps aux | grep '$p' | grep -v grep | head -n 1 | awk -F ' ' '{print $2}')
  1639. if [ ! -z "$OOM_PROC_ID" ]; then
  1640. echo -1000 >/proc/$OOM_PROC_ID/oom_score_adj
  1641. echo -17 >/proc/$OOM_PROC_ID/oom_adj
  1642. fi
  1643. done
  1644. #+END_SRC
  1645. Save and exit, then edit the cron jobs:
  1646. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1647. editor /etc/crontab
  1648. #+END_SRC
  1649. And add the line:
  1650. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1651. */1 * * * * root /usr/bin/timeout 30 /usr/bin/protectprocesses
  1652. #+END_SRC
  1653. Then save and exit and restart cron.
  1654. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1655. chmod +x /usr/bin/protectprocesses
  1656. service cron restart
  1657. #+END_SRC
  1658. Here cron is used so that if we stop one of the relevant processes and then restart it then its oom priority will be reassigned again
  1659. .
  1660. ** Setting up a web site
  1661. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  1662. /It's important to have the geek community as a whole think about its responsibility and what it can do. We need various alternative voices pushing back on conventional government sometimes./
  1663. -- Tim Berners-Lee
  1664. #+END_VERSE
  1665. Edit the apache configuration so that it doesn't run out of memory if there are a lot of connections.
  1666. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1667. su
  1668. editor /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
  1669. #+END_SRC
  1670. Search for MaxClients and replace the value with 6. As an example the settings should look something like this:
  1671. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1672. Timeout 30
  1673. KeepAlive On
  1674. MaxKeepAliveRequests 5
  1675. KeepAliveTimeout 10
  1676. <IfModule mpm_prefork_module>
  1677. StartServers 1
  1678. MinSpareServers 1
  1679. MaxSpareServers 3
  1680. MaxClients 10
  1681. MaxRequestsPerChild 3000
  1682. </IfModule>
  1683. <IfModule mpm_worker_module>
  1684. StartServers 1
  1685. MinSpareThreads 5
  1686. MaxSpareThreads 15
  1687. ThreadLimit 25
  1688. ThreadsPerChild 5
  1689. MaxClients 25
  1690. MaxRequestsPerChild 200
  1691. </IfModule>
  1692. <IfModule mpm_event_module>
  1693. StartServers 1
  1694. MinSpareThreads 5
  1695. MaxSpareThreads 15
  1696. ThreadLimit 25
  1697. ThreadsPerChild 5
  1698. MaxClients 25
  1699. MaxRequestsPerChild 200
  1700. </IfModule>
  1701. #+END_SRC
  1702. Also append the following:
  1703. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1704. ServerSignature Off
  1705. ServerTokens Prod
  1706. #+END_SRC
  1707. Then save and exit. Install some extra security.
  1708. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1709. apt-get install libapache2-modsecurity
  1710. apt-get install libapache2-mod-evasive
  1711. #+END_SRC
  1712. In the examples below replace /mydomainname.com/ with your own domain name.
  1713. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1714. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  1715. mkdir /var/www/$HOSTNAME
  1716. mkdir /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  1717. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/$HOSTNAME
  1718. #+END_SRC
  1719. The Apache configuration for the site should look something like the following. Replace /mydonainname.com/ with the site domain name.
  1720. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1721. <VirtualHost *:80>
  1722. ServerAdmin myusername@mydomainname.com
  1723. ServerName mydomainname.com
  1724. DocumentRoot /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs
  1725. <Directory />
  1726. Options FollowSymLinks
  1727. AllowOverride All
  1728. </Directory>
  1729. <Directory /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/>
  1730. Options All
  1731. AllowOverride All
  1732. Order allow,deny
  1733. allow from all
  1734. LimitRequestBody 512000
  1735. </Directory>
  1736. # Don't serve .php~ or .php# files created by emacs
  1737. <Files ~ "(^#.*#|~|\.sw[op])$">
  1738. Order allow,deny
  1739. Deny from all
  1740. </Files>
  1741. <IfModule headers_module>
  1742. Header set X-Content-Type-Options nosniff
  1743. Header set Cache-Control "max-age=0, no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate, private"
  1744. Header set Pragma no-cache
  1745. </IfModule>
  1746. <Files .htaccess>
  1747. deny from all
  1748. </Files>
  1749. ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /usr/lib/cgi-bin/
  1750. <Directory "/usr/lib/cgi-bin">
  1751. AllowOverride All
  1752. Options +ExecCGI -MultiViews +SymLinksIfOwnerMatch
  1753. Order allow,deny
  1754. Allow from all
  1755. LimitRequestBody 512000
  1756. </Directory>
  1757. ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log
  1758. # Possible values include: debug, info, notice, warn, error, crit,
  1759. # alert, emerg.
  1760. LogLevel error
  1761. CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined
  1762. </VirtualHost>
  1763. <IfModule mod_ssl.c>
  1764. <VirtualHost *:443>
  1765. ServerAdmin myusername@mydomainname.com
  1766. ServerName mydomainname.com
  1767. DocumentRoot /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs
  1768. <Directory />
  1769. Options FollowSymLinks
  1770. AllowOverride All
  1771. </Directory>
  1772. <Directory /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/>
  1773. Options All
  1774. AllowOverride All
  1775. Order allow,deny
  1776. allow from all
  1777. LimitRequestBody 512000
  1778. </Directory>
  1779. # Don't serve .php~ or .php# files created by emacs
  1780. <Files ~ "(^#.*#|~|\.sw[op])$">
  1781. Order allow,deny
  1782. Deny from all
  1783. </Files>
  1784. <IfModule headers_module>
  1785. Header set X-Content-Type-Options nosniff
  1786. Header set Cache-Control "max-age=0, no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate, private"
  1787. Header set Pragma no-cache
  1788. </IfModule>
  1789. <Files .htaccess>
  1790. deny from all
  1791. </Files>
  1792. ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /usr/lib/cgi-bin/
  1793. <Directory "/usr/lib/cgi-bin">
  1794. AllowOverride All
  1795. Options +ExecCGI -MultiViews +SymLinksIfOwnerMatch
  1796. Order allow,deny
  1797. Allow from all
  1798. LimitRequestBody 512000
  1799. </Directory>
  1800. ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log
  1801. # Possible values include: debug, info, notice, warn, error, crit,
  1802. # alert, emerg.
  1803. LogLevel error
  1804. CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/ssl_access.log combined
  1805. # SSL Engine Switch:
  1806. # Enable/Disable SSL for this virtual host.
  1807. SSLEngine on
  1808. # A self-signed certificate
  1809. SSLCertificateFile /etc/ssl/certs/mydomainname.com.crt
  1810. SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/ssl/private/mydomainname.com.key
  1811. # Options based on bettercrypto.org
  1812. SSLProtocol All -SSLv2 -SSLv3
  1813. SSLHonorCipherOrder On
  1814. SSLCompression off
  1815. SSLCipherSuite EDH+CAMELLIA:EDH+aRSA:EECDH+aRSA+AESGCM:EECDH+aRSA+SHA384:EECDH+aRSA+SHA256:EECDH:+CAMELLIA256:+AES256:+CAMELLIA128:+AES128:+SSLv3:!aNULL:!eNULL:!LOW:!3DES:!MD5:!EXP:!PSK:!SRP:!DSS:!RC4:!SEED:!ECDSA:CAMELLIA256-SHA:AES256-SHA:CAMELLIA128-SHA:AES128-SHA
  1816. # Add six earth month HSTS header for all users ...
  1817. Header add Strict-Transport-Security "max-age=15768000"
  1818. # If you want to protect all subdomains , use the following header
  1819. # ALL subdomains HAVE TO support https if you use this !
  1820. # Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=15768000 ; includeSubDomains
  1821. # SSL Engine Options:
  1822. # Set various options for the SSL engine.
  1823. # o FakeBasicAuth:
  1824. # Translate the client X.509 into a Basic Authorisation. This means that
  1825. # the standard Auth/DBMAuth methods can be used for access control. The
  1826. # user name is the `one line' version of the client's X.509 certificate.
  1827. # Note that no password is obtained from the user. Every entry in the user
  1828. # file needs this password: `xxj31ZMTZzkVA'.
  1829. # o ExportCertData:
  1830. # This exports two additional environment variables: SSL_CLIENT_CERT and
  1831. # SSL_SERVER_CERT. These contain the PEM-encoded certificates of the
  1832. # server (always existing) and the client (only existing when client
  1833. # authentication is used). This can be used to import the certificates
  1834. # into CGI scripts.
  1835. # o StdEnvVars:
  1836. # This exports the standard SSL/TLS related `SSL_*' environment variables.
  1837. # Per default this exportation is switched off for performance reasons,
  1838. # because the extraction step is an expensive operation and is usually
  1839. # useless for serving static content. So one usually enables the
  1840. # exportation for CGI and SSI requests only.
  1841. # o StrictRequire:
  1842. # This denies access when "SSLRequireSSL" or "SSLRequire" applied even
  1843. # under a "Satisfy any" situation, i.e. when it applies access is denied
  1844. # and no other module can change it.
  1845. # o OptRenegotiate:
  1846. # This enables optimized SSL connection renegotiation handling when SSL
  1847. # directives are used in per-directory context.
  1848. #SSLOptions +FakeBasicAuth +ExportCertData +StrictRequire
  1849. <FilesMatch "\.(cgi|shtml|phtml|php)$">
  1850. SSLOptions +StdEnvVars
  1851. </FilesMatch>
  1852. <Directory /usr/lib/cgi-bin>
  1853. SSLOptions +StdEnvVars
  1854. </Directory>
  1855. # SSL Protocol Adjustments:
  1856. # The safe and default but still SSL/TLS standard compliant shutdown
  1857. # approach is that mod_ssl sends the close notify alert but doesn't wait for
  1858. # the close notify alert from client. When you need a different shutdown
  1859. # approach you can use one of the following variables:
  1860. # o ssl-unclean-shutdown:
  1861. # This forces an unclean shutdown when the connection is closed, i.e. no
  1862. # SSL close notify alert is send or allowed to received. This violates
  1863. # the SSL/TLS standard but is needed for some brain-dead browsers. Use
  1864. # this when you receive I/O errors because of the standard approach where
  1865. # mod_ssl sends the close notify alert.
  1866. # o ssl-accurate-shutdown:
  1867. # This forces an accurate shutdown when the connection is closed, i.e. a
  1868. # SSL close notify alert is send and mod_ssl waits for the close notify
  1869. # alert of the client. This is 100% SSL/TLS standard compliant, but in
  1870. # practice often causes hanging connections with brain-dead browsers. Use
  1871. # this only for browsers where you know that their SSL implementation
  1872. # works correctly.
  1873. # Notice: Most problems of broken clients are also related to the HTTP
  1874. # keep-alive facility, so you usually additionally want to disable
  1875. # keep-alive for those clients, too. Use variable "nokeepalive" for this.
  1876. # Similarly, one has to force some clients to use HTTP/1.0 to workaround
  1877. # their broken HTTP/1.1 implementation. Use variables "downgrade-1.0" and
  1878. # "force-response-1.0" for this.
  1879. BrowserMatch "MSIE [2-6]" \
  1880. nokeepalive ssl-unclean-shutdown \
  1881. downgrade-1.0 force-response-1.0
  1882. # MSIE 7 and newer should be able to use keepalive
  1883. BrowserMatch "MSIE [17-9]" ssl-unclean-shutdown
  1884. </VirtualHost>
  1885. </IfModule>
  1886. #+END_SRC
  1887. Then to enable the site:
  1888. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1889. a2ensite
  1890. a2dissite default
  1891. a2dissite default-ssl
  1892. a2enmod rewrite
  1893. a2enmod headers
  1894. #+END_SRC
  1895. Ensure that "NameVirtualHost *:443" is added to /etc/apache2/ports.conf. It should look something like the following:
  1896. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1897. NameVirtualHost *:80
  1898. Listen 80
  1899. <IfModule mod_ssl.c>
  1900. NameVirtualHost *:443
  1901. Listen 443
  1902. </IfModule>
  1903. <IfModule mod_gnutls.c>
  1904. NameVirtualHost *:443
  1905. Listen 443
  1906. </IfModule>
  1907. #+END_SRC
  1908. Create a self-signed certificate. The passphrase isn't important and will be removed, so make it easy (such as "password").
  1909. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1910. editor /usr/bin/makecert
  1911. #+END_SRC
  1912. Enter the following:
  1913. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1914. #!/bin/bash
  1915. HOSTNAME=$1
  1916. openssl genrsa -des3 -out $HOSTNAME.key 1024
  1917. openssl req -new -x509 -nodes -sha1 -days 3650 -key $HOSTNAME.key -out $HOSTNAME.crt
  1918. openssl rsa -in $HOSTNAME.key -out $HOSTNAME.new.key
  1919. cp $HOSTNAME.new.key $HOSTNAME.key
  1920. rm $HOSTNAME.new.key
  1921. cp $HOSTNAME.key /etc/ssl/private
  1922. chmod 400 /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.key
  1923. cp $HOSTNAME.crt /etc/ssl/certs
  1924. shred -zu $HOSTNAME.key $HOSTNAME.crt
  1925. a2enmod ssl
  1926. service apache2 restart
  1927. #+END_SRC
  1928. Save and exit.
  1929. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1930. chmod +x /usr/bin/makecert
  1931. makecert mydomainname.com
  1932. #+END_SRC
  1933. Enter some trivial password for the key file, such as "password". The password will be removed as part of the /makecert/ script which you just created. Note that leaving a password on the key file would mean that after a power cycle the Apache server will not be able to boot properly (it would wait indefinitely for a password to be manually entered) and would look as if it had crashed.
  1934. If all has gone well then there should be no warnings or errors after you run the service restart command. After that you should enable ports 80 (HTTP) and 443 (HTTPS) on your internet router/firewall, such that they are redirected to the BBB.
  1935. Also limit the amount of memory which any php scripts can use.
  1936. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1937. editor /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini
  1938. #+END_SRC
  1939. Set the following:
  1940. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1941. memory_limit = 32M
  1942. #+END_SRC
  1943. Save and exit. Also edit */etc/php5/cli/php.ini* and set /memory_limit/ to the same value. This should prevent any rogue scripts from crashing the system.
  1944. ** Accessing your Email
  1945. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  1946. /The emails showed that Google...was among several other military/defense contractors vying for a piece of DAC’s $10.9-million surveillance contracting action./
  1947. -- Article on the "Google-Military-Surveillance Complex" by Yasha Levine
  1948. #+END_VERSE
  1949. *** Mutt email client
  1950. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1951. apt-get install mutt-patched lynx abook
  1952. exit
  1953. mkdir ~/.mutt
  1954. echo "text/html; lynx -dump -width=78 -nolist %s | sed ‘s/^ //’; copiousoutput; needsterminal; nametemplate=%s.html" > ~/.mutt/mailcap
  1955. su
  1956. editor /etc/Muttrc
  1957. #+END_SRC
  1958. Append the following:
  1959. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  1960. set mbox_type=Maildir
  1961. set folder="~/Maildir"
  1962. set mask="!^\\.[^.]"
  1963. set mbox="~/Maildir"
  1964. set record="+Sent"
  1965. set postponed="+Drafts"
  1966. set trash="+Trash"
  1967. set spoolfile="~/Maildir"
  1968. auto_view text/x-vcard text/html text/enriched
  1969. set editor="emacs"
  1970. set header_cache="+.cache"
  1971. macro index S "<tag-prefix><save-message>=.learn-spam<enter>" "move to learn-spam"
  1972. macro pager S "<save-message>=.learn-spam<enter>" "move to learn-spam"
  1973. macro index H "<tag-prefix><copy-message>=.learn-ham<enter>" "copy to learn-ham"
  1974. macro pager H "<copy-message>=.learn-ham<enter>" "copy to learn-ham"
  1975. # set up the sidebar
  1976. set sidebar_width=12
  1977. set sidebar_visible=yes
  1978. set sidebar_delim='|'
  1979. set sidebar_sort=yes
  1980. set rfc2047_parameters
  1981. # Show inbox and sent items
  1982. mailboxes = =Sent
  1983. # Alter these colours as needed for maximum bling
  1984. color sidebar_new yellow default
  1985. color normal white default
  1986. color hdrdefault brightcyan default
  1987. color signature green default
  1988. color attachment brightyellow default
  1989. color quoted green default
  1990. color quoted1 white default
  1991. color tilde blue default
  1992. # ctrl-n, ctrl-p to select next, prev folder
  1993. # ctrl-o to open selected folder
  1994. bind index \Cp sidebar-prev
  1995. bind index \Cn sidebar-next
  1996. bind index \Co sidebar-open
  1997. bind pager \Cp sidebar-prev
  1998. bind pager \Cn sidebar-next
  1999. bind pager \Co sidebar-open
  2000. # ctrl-b toggles sidebar visibility
  2001. macro index,pager \Cb '<enter-command>toggle sidebar_visible<enter><redraw-screen>' "toggle sidebar"
  2002. # esc-m Mark new messages as read
  2003. macro index <esc>m "T~N<enter>;WNT~O<enter>;WO\CT~T<enter>" "mark all messages read"
  2004. # Collapsing threads
  2005. macro index [ "<collapse-thread>" "collapse/uncollapse thread"
  2006. macro index ] "<collapse-all>" "collapse/uncollapse all threads"
  2007. # threads containing new messages
  2008. uncolor index "~(~N)"
  2009. color index brightblue default "~(~N)"
  2010. # new messages themselves
  2011. uncolor index "~N"
  2012. color index brightyellow default "~N"
  2013. # GPG/PGP integration
  2014. # this set the number of seconds to keep in memory the passphrase used to encrypt/sign
  2015. set pgp_timeout=60
  2016. # automatically sign and encrypt
  2017. set pgp_autosign # autosign all outgoing mails
  2018. set pgp_replyencrypt # autocrypt replies to crypted
  2019. set pgp_replysign # autosign replies to signed
  2020. set pgp_auto_decode=yes # decode attachments
  2021. set alias_file=~/.mutt-alias
  2022. source ~/.mutt-alias
  2023. set query_command= "abook --mutt-query '%s'"
  2024. macro index,pager A "<pipe-message>abook --add-email-quiet<return>" "add the sender address to abook"
  2025. #+END_SRC
  2026. Save and exit.
  2027. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2028. editor /etc/mail/spamassassin/local.cf
  2029. #+END_SRC
  2030. Uncomment *use_bayes*, *bayes_auto_learn*
  2031. Save and exit, then run:
  2032. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2033. service spamassassin restart
  2034. exit
  2035. cp /etc/Muttrc ~/.muttrc
  2036. touch ~/.mutt-alias
  2037. #+END_SRC
  2038. Finally you can then type *mutt* to get access to your email. Hence as a fallback, or if you prefer as the primary way of accessing email, you can ssh into the BBB and use the mutt command line email client. Ssh clients are available for all operating systems, and also you should be reasonably protected from passive surveillance between wherever you are and the BBB (although not between the BBB and the wider internet), which can be useful if you are for example using an Android tablet from a cafe or railway station.
  2039. To use the address book system open an email and then to add the sender to the address list press the A key. It will ask you for an alias which may be used the next time you want to send a mail. Alternatively you may just edit the *~/.mutt-alias* file directly to add email addresses.
  2040. Some useful keys to know are:
  2041. | ESC / | Search for text within message contents |
  2042. | "/" | Search for text within headers |
  2043. | * | Move to the last message |
  2044. | TAB | Move to the next unread message |
  2045. | d | Delete a message |
  2046. | u | Undelete a mail which is pending deletion |
  2047. | $ | Delete all messages selected and check for new messages |
  2048. | a | Add to the address book |
  2049. | m | Send a new mail |
  2050. | ESC-m | Mark all messages as having been read |
  2051. | S | Mark a message as spam |
  2052. | H | Mark a message as ham |
  2053. | CTRL-b | Toggle side bar on/off |
  2054. | CTRL-n | Next mailbox (on side bar) |
  2055. | CTRL-p | Previous mailbox (on side bar) |
  2056. | CTRL-o | Open mailbox (on side bar) |
  2057. | ] | Expand or collapse all threads |
  2058. | [ | Expand of collapse the current thread |
  2059. | CTRL-k | Import a PGP/GPG public key |
  2060. One of the most common things which you might wish to do is to send an email. To do this first press /m/ to create a new message. Enter the address to send to and the subject, then after a few seconds the Emacs editor will appear with a blank document. Type your email then press /CTRL-x CTRL-s/ to save it and /CTRL-x CTRL-c/ to exit. You will then see a summary of the email to be sent out. Press /y/ to send it and then enter your GPG key passphrase (the one you gave when creating a PGP/GPG key). The purpose of that is to add a signature which is a strong proof that the email was written by you and not by someone else.
  2061. *** K9 Android client
  2062. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  2063. /The surveillance state is robust. It is robust politically, legally, and technically./
  2064. -- Bruce Schneier
  2065. #+END_VERSE
  2066. **** Incoming server settings
  2067. * Select settings/account settings
  2068. * Select Fetching mail/incoming server
  2069. * Enter your username and password
  2070. * IMAP server should be your domain name
  2071. * Security: SSL/TLS (always)
  2072. * Authentication: Plain
  2073. * Port: 993
  2074. **** Outgoing (SMTP) server settings
  2075. * Select settings/account settings
  2076. * Select Sending mail/outgoing server
  2077. * Set SMTP server to your domain name
  2078. * Set Security to SSL/TLS (always)
  2079. * Set port to 465
  2080. * Set authentication to PLAIN
  2081. * Enter your username and password
  2082. * Accept the SSL certificate
  2083. **** Folders
  2084. To view any new folders which you may have created using the /mailinglistrule/ script from your inbox press the *K9 icon* at the top left to access folders, then press the *menu button* and select *refresh folder list*.
  2085. If your folder still doesn't show up then press the *menu button*, select *show folders* and select *all folders*.
  2086. *** Webmail
  2087. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  2088. /Most of the information extracted is "content", such as recordings of phone calls or the substance of email messages./
  2089. -- From a 2013 Guardian article on GCHQ/NSA bulk internet data interception.
  2090. #+END_VERSE
  2091. For maximum speed and efficiency the recommended email client is Mutt, accessed via ssh, but non-technical people who aren't using an Android app are unlikely to want to use email in that manner. So it's a good idea to also have a webmail system installed, both for accessibility and as a fallback should ssh not be available due to port blocking.
  2092. If you're not already logged in as root:
  2093. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2094. su
  2095. #+END_SRC
  2096. Install dependencies.
  2097. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2098. apt-get install mysql-server libapache2-mod-authz-unixgroup
  2099. #+END_SRC
  2100. Create a mysql database, specifying a password which should be a long random string generated with a password manager such as KeepassX.
  2101. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2102. mysql -u root -p
  2103. create database roundcubemail;
  2104. CREATE USER 'roundcube'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'roundcubepassword';
  2105. GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON roundcubemail.* TO 'roundcube'@'localhost';
  2106. quit
  2107. #+END_SRC
  2108. Download roundcube.
  2109. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2110. cd /tmp
  2111. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/roundcubemail.tar.gz
  2112. #+END_SRC
  2113. Verify it.
  2114. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2115. sha256sum roundcubemail.tar.gz
  2116. e8a311b22a8e1f70abb72ed9551cc9233cf6c5221f1eebf1ae64974117e3148b roundcubemail.tar.gz
  2117. #+END_SRC
  2118. Extract the files.
  2119. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2120. tar -xzvf roundcubemail.tar.gz
  2121. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  2122. cp -r roundcubemail-* /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/mail
  2123. chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/mail/temp
  2124. chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/mail/logs
  2125. rm /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/mail/.htaccess
  2126. #+END_SRC
  2127. Edit your web site configuration.
  2128. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2129. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/$HOSTNAME
  2130. #+END_SRC
  2131. Within the 80 VirtualHost section add the following:
  2132. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2133. <Directory /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/mail>
  2134. deny from all
  2135. </Directory>
  2136. #+END_SRC
  2137. Within the 443 VirtualHost section add the following:
  2138. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2139. <Directory /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/mail>
  2140. Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
  2141. AllowOverride All
  2142. Order allow,deny
  2143. allow from all
  2144. </Directory>
  2145. #+END_SRC
  2146. Save and exit, then restart Apache.
  2147. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2148. service apache2 restart
  2149. #+END_SRC
  2150. Now with a browser visit https://mydomainname.com/mail/installer. Scroll down and click "next". Give your webmail site a product name.
  2151. The *spellcheck_engine* option being limited to Google is slightly concerning in terms of privacy and security, but seems not to be implemented.
  2152. Change the *database password* to the password you gave when creating the MySql database above.
  2153. Set *smtp_port* to 465.
  2154. Click *create config*
  2155. Click download to download the file.
  2156. The config file which you downloaded should contain the following:
  2157. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2158. $config['default_host'] = 'localhost';
  2159. $config['smtp_port'] = 465;
  2160. $config['username_domain'] = '';
  2161. #+END_SRC
  2162. In a terminal on your local machine (not logged into the BBB):
  2163. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2164. cd ~/Downloads
  2165. scp config.inc.php myusername@mydomainname.com:/home/myusername
  2166. #+END_SRC
  2167. Then in a terminal ssh'd into the BBB:
  2168. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2169. mv /home/myusername/config.inc.php /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/mail/config
  2170. chmod 755 /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/mail/config/config.inc.php
  2171. #+END_SRC
  2172. Click *continue*.
  2173. Click *initialize database*.
  2174. Under *Test SMTP config* you can use a [[mailinator.com]] address to check that mail can be sent.
  2175. Now we can delete the installer.
  2176. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2177. rm -rf /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/mail/installer
  2178. #+END_SRC
  2179. Now with a browser navigate to https://mydomainname.com/mail and log in.
  2180. You'll notice that you may not be able to see any mailing list folders which you may have created earlier using the /mailinglistrule/ script. To make folders visible click on the cog-like settings icon at the bottom left of the screen then select *manage folders*. You will then be able to select which folders you wish to become visible. Make sure that the *Sent*, *spam* and *ham* folders are selected.
  2181. Click on the *Mail* icon to go back to your main mail screen then click on the *Settings* icon at the top right of the screen and select *special folders*. Set *Junk* to *spam* then click the save button. Also select *identities* and make sure that your email address is correct.
  2182. *** Thunderbird
  2183. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  2184. /Towards the end of 2012, we heard from the National Technical Assistance Centre (NTAC), a division of GCHQ and a liaison with the Home Office, [that] they wanted the keys to decrypt the customer data./
  2185. -- Brian Spector, on the shutting down of the PrivateSky encrypted email service
  2186. #+END_VERSE
  2187. Another common way in which you may want to access email is via Thunderbird. This may be especially useful if you're trying to convert former Windows users who may previously have been using some version of Outlook.
  2188. The following instructions should be carried out on the client machines (laptop, etc), not on the BBB itself.
  2189. **** Initial setup
  2190. Install *Thunderbird* and *Enigmail*. How you do this just depends upon your distro and software manager or "app store".
  2191. Open Thinderbird
  2192. Select "*Skip this and use existing email*"
  2193. Enter your name, email address (myusername@mydomainname.com) and the password for your user (the one from [[Add a user]]).
  2194. You'll get a message saying "/Thunderbird failed to find the settings/"
  2195. The settings should be as follows, substituting /mydomainname.com/ for your domain name and /myusername/ for the username given previously in [[Add a user]].
  2196. * Incoming: IMAP, mydomainname.com, 993, SSL/TLS, Normal Password
  2197. * Outgoing: SMTP, mydomainname.com, 465, SSL/TLS, Normal Password
  2198. * Username: myusername
  2199. Click *Done*.
  2200. Click *Get Certificate* and make sure "*permanently store this exception*" is selected", then click *Store Security Exception*.
  2201. From OpenPGP setup select "*Yes, I would like the wizard to get me started*". If the wizard doesn't start automatically then "setup wizard" can be selected from OpenPGP on the menu bar.
  2202. Select "*Yes, I want to sign all of my email*"
  2203. Select "*No, I will create per-recipient rules*"
  2204. Select "*yes*" to change default settings.
  2205. **** If you have existing GPG key
  2206. Export your GPG public and private keys.
  2207. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2208. gpg --output ~/public_key.txt --armor --export KEY_ID
  2209. gpg --output ~/private_key.txt --armor --export-secret-key KEY_ID
  2210. #+END_SRC
  2211. Select "*I have existing public and private keys*".
  2212. Select your public and private GPG exported key files.
  2213. Select the account which you want to use and click *Next*, *Next* and *Finish*.
  2214. Remove your exported key files.
  2215. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2216. shred -zu ~/public_key.txt
  2217. shred -zu ~/private_key.txt
  2218. #+END_SRC
  2219. **** If you don't have any existing GPG or PGP key
  2220. Select "*I want to create a new key pair*"
  2221. Enter a passphrase and click *Next* a couple of times.
  2222. Click *Generate Certificate* to generate a revocation certificate.
  2223. Enter the passphrase which you gave previously.
  2224. Click *Finish*
  2225. From the menu select *OpenPGP* and then *Key Management*. Make sure that *Display all keys* is selected and then select your key. Select *Keyserver* on the menu and then *Upload Public Keys*. This will upload your public key to a key server so that others can find it.
  2226. Select *File* from the menu then *Export keys to file*. Click on *Export Secret keys* and select a location to save them to. It's a good idea to save them to a USB stick which can then be removed from the computer and carried around on a keyring together with your physical keys. If you need to set up GPG or Thunderbird/Enigmail on others then this file will be used to import your keys.
  2227. **** Using for the first time
  2228. Click on the Thunderbird menu, which looks like three horizontal bars on the right hand side.
  2229. Hover over *preferences* and then *Account settings*.
  2230. Select *OpenPGP Security* and make sure that *use PGP/MIME by default* is ticked. This will enable you to sign/encrypt attachments, HTML bodies and UTF-8 without any problems.
  2231. Select *Synchronization & Storage*.
  2232. Make sure that *Keep messages for this account on this computer* is unticked, then click *Ok*.
  2233. Click on *Inbox*. Depending upon how much email you have it may take a while to import the subject lines.
  2234. Note that when sending an email for the first time you will also need to accept the SSL certificate.
  2235. Get into the habit of using email encryption and encourage others to do so. Remember that you may not think that your emails are very interesting but the Surveillance State is highly interested in them and will be actively trying to data mine your private life looking for "suspicious" patterns, regardless of whether you are guilty of any crime or not.
  2236. **** Making folders visible
  2237. By default you won't be able to see any folders which you may have created earlier using the /mailinglistrule/ script. To make folders visible select:
  2238. *Menu*, hover over *Preferences*, select *Account Settings*, select *Server Settings* then click on the *Advanced* button.
  2239. Make sure that "*show only subscribed folders*" is not checked. Then click the *ok* buttons. Folders will be re-scanned, which may take some time depending upon how much email you have, but your folders will then appear.
  2240. ** Create Email folders and rules
  2241. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  2242. /Yes, the NSA set fire to the Internet but it’s the business models of Google, Facebook, etc, that provide the firewood. Trusting the companies supplying the firewood to be your fire fighters is naïve at best./
  2243. -- Aral Balkan
  2244. #+END_VERSE
  2245. *** Rules for mailing lists
  2246. A common situation with email is that you may be subscribed to various mailing lists and want incoming email from those to be automatically grouped into a separate folder for each list.
  2247. We can make a script to make adding mailing list rules easy:
  2248. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2249. editor /usr/bin/mailinglistrule
  2250. #+END_SRC
  2251. Add the following:
  2252. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2253. #!/bin/bash
  2254. MYUSERNAME=$1
  2255. MAILINGLIST=$2
  2256. SUBJECTTAG=$3
  2257. MUTTRC=/home/$MYUSERNAME/.muttrc
  2258. PM=/home/$MYUSERNAME/.procmailrc
  2259. LISTDIR=/home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/$MAILINGLIST
  2260. if [ ! -d "$LISTDIR" ]; then
  2261. mkdir -m 700 $LISTDIR
  2262. mkdir -m 700 $LISTDIR/tmp
  2263. mkdir -m 700 $LISTDIR/new
  2264. mkdir -m 700 $LISTDIR/cur
  2265. fi
  2266. chown -R $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME $LISTDIR
  2267. echo "" >> $PM
  2268. echo ":0" >> $PM
  2269. echo " * ^Subject:.*()\[$SUBJECTTAG\]" >> $PM
  2270. echo "$LISTDIR/new" >> $PM
  2271. chown $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME $PM
  2272. if [ ! -f "$MUTTRC" ]; then
  2273. cp /etc/Muttrc $MUTTRC
  2274. chown $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME $MUTTRC
  2275. fi
  2276. PROCMAILLOG=/home/$MYUSERNAME/log
  2277. if [ ! -d $PROCMAILLOG ]; then
  2278. mkdir $PROCMAILLOG
  2279. chown -R $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME $PROCMAILLOG
  2280. fi
  2281. #+END_SRC
  2282. Save and exit, then make the script executable.
  2283. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2284. chmod +x /usr/bin/mailinglistrule
  2285. #+END_SRC
  2286. Now we can add a new mailing list rule with the following, where /myusername/ is your username, /mailinglistname/ is the name of the mailing list (with no spaces) and /subjecttag/ is the tag which usually appears within square brackets in the subject line of emails from the list.
  2287. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2288. mailinglistrule [myusername] [mailinglistname] [subjecttag]
  2289. #+END_SRC
  2290. Repeat this command for as many mailing lists as you need. Then edit your local Mutt configuration.
  2291. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2292. editor /home/myusername/.muttrc
  2293. #+END_SRC
  2294. Search for the *mailboxes* variable and add entries for the mailing lists you just created. For example:
  2295. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2296. mailboxes = =Sent =mailinglistname
  2297. #+END_SRC
  2298. Then save and exit.
  2299. *** Rules for specific email addresses
  2300. You can also make a script which will allow you to move mail from specific email addresses to a folder.
  2301. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2302. editor /usr/bin/emailrule
  2303. #+END_SRC
  2304. Add the following:
  2305. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2306. #!/bin/bash
  2307. MYUSERNAME=$1
  2308. EMAILADDRESS=$2
  2309. MAILINGLIST=$3
  2310. MUTTRC=/home/$MYUSERNAME/.muttrc
  2311. PM=/home/$MYUSERNAME/.procmailrc
  2312. LISTDIR=/home/$MYUSERNAME/Maildir/$MAILINGLIST
  2313. if [ ! -d "$LISTDIR" ]; then
  2314. mkdir -m 700 $LISTDIR
  2315. mkdir -m 700 $LISTDIR/tmp
  2316. mkdir -m 700 $LISTDIR/new
  2317. mkdir -m 700 $LISTDIR/cur
  2318. fi
  2319. chown -R $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME $LISTDIR
  2320. echo "" >> $PM
  2321. echo ":0" >> $PM
  2322. echo " * ^From: $EMAILADDRESS" >> $PM
  2323. echo "$LISTDIR/new" >> $PM
  2324. chown $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME $PM
  2325. if [ ! -f "$MUTTRC" ]; then
  2326. cp /etc/Muttrc $MUTTRC
  2327. chown $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME $MUTTRC
  2328. fi
  2329. PROCMAILLOG=/home/$MYUSERNAME/log
  2330. if [ ! -d $PROCMAILLOG ]; then
  2331. mkdir $PROCMAILLOG
  2332. chown -R $MYUSERNAME:$MYUSERNAME $PROCMAILLOG
  2333. fi
  2334. #+END_SRC
  2335. Save and exit, then make the script executable.
  2336. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2337. chmod +x /usr/bin/emailrule
  2338. #+END_SRC
  2339. Then to add a particular email address to a folder run the command:
  2340. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2341. emailrule [myusername] [emailaddress] [foldername]
  2342. #+END_SRC
  2343. If you want any mail from the given email address to be deleted then set the /foldername/ to /Trash/.
  2344. To ensure that the folder appears within Mutt.
  2345. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2346. editor /home/myusername/.muttrc
  2347. #+END_SRC
  2348. Search for the *mailboxes* variable and add entries for the mailing lists you just created. For example:
  2349. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2350. mailboxes = =Sent =foldername
  2351. #+END_SRC
  2352. Then save and exit.
  2353. ** Install a Blog
  2354. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  2355. /When society gives censors wide and vague powers they never confine themselves to deserving targets. They are not snipers, but machine-gunners. Allow them to fire at will, and they will hit anything that moves./
  2356. -- Nick Cohen
  2357. #+END_VERSE
  2358. Wordpress is the most popular blogging platform, but in practice I found it to be high maintenance with frequent security updates and breakages. More practical for a home server is Flatpress. Flatpress doesn't use a MySql database, just text files, and so is easy to relocate or reinstall.
  2359. See the [[Setting up a web site]] section of this document for details of how to configure the web server for your blog's domain.
  2360. Download flatpress.
  2361. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2362. cd /tmp
  2363. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/flatpress.tar.gz
  2364. #+END_SRC
  2365. Verify the download:
  2366. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2367. sha256sum flatpress.tar.gz
  2368. 6312a49aab5aabd6371518dcaf081f489dff04d001bc34b4fe3f2a81170bbd4e flatpress.tar.gz
  2369. #+END_SRC
  2370. Extract and install it.
  2371. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2372. tar -xzvf flatpress.tar.gz
  2373. cd flatpress-*
  2374. cp -r * /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  2375. chmod -R 755 /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/fp-content
  2376. chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/fp-content
  2377. cd ..
  2378. rm -rf flatpress-*
  2379. rm -f flatpress.tar.gz
  2380. #+END_SRC
  2381. Now visit your blog and follow the setup instructions, which are quite minimal. Various themes and addons are available from the Flatpress web site, http://www.flatpress.org
  2382. ** Install an IRC server
  2383. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  2384. /Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties./
  2385. -- John Milton
  2386. #+END_VERSE
  2387. *** Base install
  2388. IRC is not an especially secure system. For instance, even with the best encryption it's easily possible to imagine IRC-specific cribs which could be used by cryptanalytic systems. However, we'll try to implement it in a manner which will at least give the surveillance aparatus something to ponder over.
  2389. First install some dependencies.
  2390. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2391. apt-get update
  2392. apt-get install build-essential openssl libssl-dev debhelper dpatch docbook-to-man flex bison libpcre3-dev screen
  2393. #+END_SRC
  2394. Then get the source code for ircd-hybrid.
  2395. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2396. cd /tmp
  2397. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/ircd-hybrid-8.1.17.tgz
  2398. #+END_SRC
  2399. verify it.
  2400. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2401. sha256sum ircd-hybrid-8.1.17.tgz
  2402. 440c9d86ba6bc930efef9cdaaec547b425c35cad3f08bed8df69e55788c1268a
  2403. #+END_SRC
  2404. Install it.
  2405. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2406. tar -xzvf ircd-hybrid-8.1.17.tgz
  2407. cd ircd-hybrid-*
  2408. ./configure --prefix=/usr/local/ircd --enable-openssl
  2409. make
  2410. make install
  2411. #+END_SRC
  2412. Customise the configuration to your system, giving it a name and description. In this example 192.168.1.60 is the static IP address on the BBB on the local network, so change that if necessary.
  2413. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2414. chown -R irc:irc /usr/local/ircd
  2415. cp /usr/local/ircd/etc/reference.conf /usr/local/ircd/etc/ircd.conf
  2416. editor /usr/local/ircd/etc/ircd.conf
  2417. #+END_SRC
  2418. Set *name* to the domain name of your server, and set a description.
  2419. Set a *network_name* and *network_desc*. The network name should not contain any spaces.
  2420. Set max_clients to 20, or however many you expect that you'll typically need.
  2421. Within the admin section set your *name* and *email*.
  2422. Within the *listen* section set host to your fixed IP address (in the earlier
  2423. sections it was 192.168.1.60).
  2424. Within the *auth* section set user = "*@192.168.1.60" - or whatever the fixed IP address of the BBB is on your network - and password to the desired password for the IRC server. If you don't wish to use a password then remove need_password from the flags.
  2425. Within the *connect* section set *host* and *vhost* to your fixed IP address (in the earlier
  2426. sections it was 192.168.1.60) and *name* to your domain name. Also set the *send/accept passwords* to your IRC login password.
  2427. Save and exit, then restart the IRC server. Open port 6697 on your internet router and forward it to the BBB. Note that although ports 6665 to 6669 are active within the configuration file in practice we will only use the encrypted port.
  2428. Ensure that the configuration is only readable by the root user.
  2429. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2430. chmod 600 /usr/local/ircd/etc/ircd.conf
  2431. #+END_SRC
  2432. Now create an init script.
  2433. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2434. adduser --disabled-login irc
  2435. editor /etc/init.d/ircd-hybrid
  2436. #+END_SRC
  2437. Add the following:
  2438. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2439. #!/bin/bash
  2440. # /etc/init.d/ircd-hybrid
  2441. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  2442. # Provides: ircd-hybrid
  2443. # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog
  2444. # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog
  2445. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  2446. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  2447. # Short-Description: starts irc server
  2448. # Description: starts irc server
  2449. ### END INIT INFO
  2450. # Author: Bob Mottram <bob@robotics.uk.to>
  2451. #Settings
  2452. SERVICE='ircd-hybrid'
  2453. COMMAND="ircd"
  2454. USERNAME='irc'
  2455. NICELEVEL=19 # from 0-19 the bigger the number, the less the impact on system resources
  2456. HISTORY=1024
  2457. INVOCATION="nice -n ${NICELEVEL} ${COMMAND}"
  2458. PATH='/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/bin/core_perl:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin'
  2459. irc_start() {
  2460. echo "Starting $SERVICE..."
  2461. cd /usr/local/ircd
  2462. su --command "screen -h ${HISTORY} -dmS ${SERVICE} ${INVOCATION}" $USERNAME
  2463. }
  2464. irc_stop() {
  2465. echo "Stopping $SERVICE"
  2466. su --command "screen -p 0 -S ${SERVICE} -X stuff "'^C'"" $USERNAME
  2467. }
  2468. #Start-Stop here
  2469. case "$1" in
  2470. start)
  2471. irc_start
  2472. ;;
  2473. stop)
  2474. irc_stop
  2475. ;;
  2476. restart)
  2477. irc_stop
  2478. sleep 10s
  2479. irc_start
  2480. ;;
  2481. *)
  2482. echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart}"
  2483. exit 1
  2484. ;;
  2485. esac
  2486. exit 0
  2487. #+END_SRC
  2488. Save and exit, then start the daemon.
  2489. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2490. chmod +x /etc/init.d/ircd-hybrid
  2491. update-rc.d ircd-hybrid defaults
  2492. service ircd-hybrid start
  2493. #+END_SRC
  2494. *** Channel management
  2495. To to install channel management tools.
  2496. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2497. cd /tmp
  2498. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/hybserv_1.9.4-1_armhf.deb
  2499. #+END_SRC
  2500. Verify it.
  2501. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2502. sha256sum hybserv_1.9.4-1_armhf.deb
  2503. 41bf4eb6e24c87610a80bc14db1103a57484835510eea7e4ba9709c523318615 hybserv_1.9.4-1_armhf.deb
  2504. #+END_SRC
  2505. Install it.
  2506. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2507. dpkg -i hybserv_1.9.4-1_armhf.deb
  2508. #+END_SRC
  2509. Make a md5 version of the password for the IRC server operator.
  2510. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2511. /usr/bin/mkpasswd <myoperatorpassword>
  2512. #+END_SRC
  2513. Edit the ircd-hybrid configuration.
  2514. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2515. editor /etc/ircd-hybrid/ircd.conf
  2516. #+END_SRC
  2517. Enter the md5 password which you previously created within the /operator/ section. Also change /user/ to:
  2518. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2519. user = "*@*";
  2520. #+END_SRC
  2521. Then save and exit.
  2522. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2523. editor /etc/hybserv/hybserv.conf
  2524. #+END_SRC
  2525. Change #MD5 PASSWORD HERE# to the md5 operator password created earlier, mydomainname.com to your domain name and mysendacceptpassword to the send/accept password specified within /ircd.conf/.
  2526. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2527. A:mynickname <myemailaddress>
  2528. N:irc.mydomainname.com:Hybrid services
  2529. O:*@*:#MD5 PASSWORD HERE#:root:segj (comment out other Q: lines)
  2530. S:mysendacceptpassword:192.168.1.60:6697 (remove the other two services)
  2531. #+END_SRC
  2532. Also remove the line *#NOT-EDITED#*, then save and exit.
  2533. Now we need to restart the ircd and hybrid server to make things work:
  2534. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2535. service ircd-hybrid restart
  2536. service hybserv start
  2537. #+END_SRC
  2538. *** Usage with Irssi
  2539. On another computer (not the BBB).
  2540. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2541. sudo apt-get install irssi irssi-plugin-otr irssi-plugin-xmpp
  2542. irssi
  2543. #+END_SRC
  2544. Connect to the IRC and identify yourself as an operator. Here /mynetwork/ should be the same as *network_name* specified earlier within /ircd.conf/. The network name is something equivalent to "freenode".
  2545. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2546. /network add -nick mynick mynetwork
  2547. /channel add -auto #mychannel mynetwork channelpassword
  2548. /server add -auto -network mynetwork -ssl mydonainname.com 6697 mysendacceptpassword
  2549. /connect mydomainname.com
  2550. /join #mychannel
  2551. /msg -servername chanserv REGISTER #mychannel channelpassword
  2552. /msg -servername chanserv set #mychannel mlock +k channelpassword
  2553. /set paste_join_multiline OFF
  2554. #+END_SRC
  2555. If you edit the irssi config file:
  2556. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2557. editor ~/.irssi/config
  2558. #+END_SRC
  2559. It should look something like this:
  2560. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2561. {
  2562. address = "mydomainname.com";
  2563. chatnet = "mynetwork";
  2564. port = "6697";
  2565. password = "mysendacceptpassword";
  2566. use_ssl = "yes";
  2567. ssl_verify = "no";
  2568. autoconnect = "yes";
  2569. },
  2570. #+END_SRC
  2571. If you're not using a self-signed certificate (self-signed is the default) then you can set *ssl_verify* to "yes".
  2572. By default irssi will use UTC time. An example of setting to some other time zone is as follows:
  2573. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2574. echo "load perl" >> ~/.irssi/startup
  2575. echo "script exec $ENV{'TZ'}='Europe/London';" >> ~/.irssi/startup
  2576. #+END_SRC
  2577. Also enable /Off The Record/ (OTR) messaging.
  2578. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2579. echo "load otr" >> ~/.irssi/startup
  2580. #+END_SRC
  2581. By default Irssi does not look especially attractive. To improve it's looks:
  2582. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2583. cd ~/.irssi
  2584. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/irssi/xchat.theme
  2585. mkdir ~/.irssi/scripts
  2586. mkdir ~/.irssi/scripts/autorun
  2587. cd ~/.irssi/scripts/autorun
  2588. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/irssi/xchatnickcolor.pl
  2589. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/irssi/adv_windowlist.pl
  2590. #+END_SRC
  2591. Verify the files:
  2592. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2593. sha256sum ~/.irssi/xchat.theme
  2594. 7a84130ad55aabd0b043a03b013628438e6c7f82a58e15267633bc7eb443e60b
  2595. sha256sum ~/.irssi/scripts/autorun/xchatnickcolor.pl
  2596. 8293e867a22d42ce5a28cd755237509b6f3587fd2b21d7d20af4a832081610ca
  2597. sha256sum ~/.irssi/scripts/autorun/adv_windowlist.pl
  2598. e4dd8f6d384bf4f2d0ab5ccf06df06e4a69d2647b08d37c8fc6cfd9326688395
  2599. #+END_SRC
  2600. Then run Irssi and enter the commands:
  2601. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2602. /set theme xchat
  2603. /statusbar window remove act
  2604. /set awl
  2605. /set awl_block -14
  2606. /set awl_display_key $Q%K|$N%n $H$C$S
  2607. /set awl_display_key_active $Q%K|$N%n $H%U$C%n$S
  2608. /set awl_display_nokey [$N]$H$C$S
  2609. /run autorun/adv_windowlist.pl
  2610. /set awl_viewer off
  2611. /save
  2612. #+END_SRC
  2613. *** Using irssi with Off The Record messaging (OTR)
  2614. Once you're running irssi then you can enable OTR with:
  2615. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2616. /statusbar window add otr
  2617. /otr genkey mynick@network (for example mynick@irc.freenode.net)
  2618. #+END_SRC
  2619. Then to see your OTR fingerprint:
  2620. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2621. /otr info
  2622. #+END_SRC
  2623. And to trust or distrust someone else's fingerprint.
  2624. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2625. /otr trust [fingerprint]
  2626. /otr distrust [fingerprint]
  2627. #+END_SRC
  2628. *** Usage with XChat
  2629. Within the network list click, *Add* and enter your domain name then click *Edit*.
  2630. Select the entry within the servers box, then enter *mydomainname.com/6697* and press *Enter*.
  2631. Uncheck *use global user information*.
  2632. Enter first and second nicknames and check *auto connect to this network on startup*.
  2633. Check *use SSL* and *accept invalid SSL certificate*.
  2634. Enter some favourite channels and within *server password* enter /mysendacceptpassword/ which you defined earlier when setting up the server.
  2635. Click *close* and then *connect*.
  2636. *** Install Irssi as a daemon
  2637. It may be useful to run a persistent Irssi session on the BBB. This will enable you to log in and see any entries which occurred previously so that you don't find yourself in an argument without knowledge of what was said in the last few minutes or hours. This feature only works for a single user on the BBB - typically the administrator.
  2638. First install some prerequisites.
  2639. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2640. apt-get install irssi irssi-plugin-otr irssi-plugin-xmpp screen
  2641. #+END_SRC
  2642. Create an initialisation script.
  2643. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2644. editor /etc/init.d/irssid
  2645. #+END_SRC
  2646. Add the following:
  2647. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2648. #!/bin/bash
  2649. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  2650. # Provides: irssid
  2651. # Required-Start: $network
  2652. # Required-Stop: $network
  2653. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  2654. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  2655. # Short-Description: Start irssi daemon within screen session at boot time
  2656. # Description: This init script will start an irssi session under screen using the settings provided in /etc/irssid.conf
  2657. ### END INIT INFO
  2658. # Include the LSB library functions
  2659. . /lib/lsb/init-functions
  2660. # Setup static variables
  2661. configFile='/etc/irssid.conf'
  2662. daemonExec='/usr/bin/screen'
  2663. daemonArgs='-D -m'
  2664. daemonName="$(basename "$daemonExec")"
  2665. pidFile='/var/run/irssid.pid'
  2666. #
  2667. # Checks if the environment is capable of running the script (such as
  2668. # availability of programs etc).
  2669. #
  2670. # Return: 0 if the environmnt is properly setup for execution of init script, 1
  2671. # if not all conditions have been met.
  2672. #
  2673. function checkEnvironment() {
  2674. # Verify that the necessary binaries are available for execution.
  2675. local binaries=(irssi screen)
  2676. for bin in "${binaries[@]}"; do
  2677. if ! which "$bin" > /dev/null; then
  2678. log_failure_msg "Binary '$bin' is not available. Please install \
  2679. package containing it."
  2680. exit 5
  2681. fi
  2682. done
  2683. }
  2684. #
  2685. # Checks if the configuration files are available and properly setup.
  2686. #
  2687. # Return: 0 if irssid if properly configured, 1 otherwise.
  2688. #
  2689. function checkConfig() {
  2690. # Make sure the configuration file has been created
  2691. if ! [[ -f $configFile ]]; then
  2692. log_failure_msg "Please populate the configuration file '$configFile' \
  2693. before running."
  2694. exit 6
  2695. fi
  2696. # Make sure the required options have been set
  2697. local reqOptions=(user group session)
  2698. for option in "${reqOptions[@]}"; do
  2699. if ! grep -q -e "^[[:blank:]]*$option=" "$configFile"; then
  2700. log_failure_msg "Mandatory option '$option' was not specified in \
  2701. '$configFile'"
  2702. exit 6
  2703. fi
  2704. done
  2705. }
  2706. #
  2707. # Loads the configuration file and performs any additional configuration steps.
  2708. #
  2709. function configure() {
  2710. . "$configFile"
  2711. daemonArgs="$daemonArgs -S $session irssi"
  2712. [[ -n $args ]] && daemonArgs="$daemonArgs $args"
  2713. daemonCommand="$daemonExec $daemonArgs"
  2714. }
  2715. #
  2716. # Starts the daemon.
  2717. #
  2718. # Return: LSB-compliant code.
  2719. #
  2720. function start() {
  2721. start-stop-daemon --start -v -b -x /bin/su -p /tmp/irssi.screen.session -m --chdir /home/$user -- - $user -c "screen -D -m -S irssi -- irssi" 1>>/log.irssi
  2722. }
  2723. #
  2724. # Stops the daemon.
  2725. #
  2726. # Return: LSB-compliant code.
  2727. #
  2728. function stop() {
  2729. start-stop-daemon --stop -x /bin/su -p /tmp/irssi.screen.session -q
  2730. }
  2731. checkEnvironment
  2732. checkConfig
  2733. configure
  2734. case "$1" in
  2735. start)
  2736. log_daemon_msg "Starting daemon" "irssid"
  2737. start && log_end_msg 0 || log_end_msg $?
  2738. ;;
  2739. stop)
  2740. log_daemon_msg "Stopping daemon" "irssid"
  2741. stop && log_end_msg 0 || log_end_msg $?
  2742. ;;
  2743. restart)
  2744. log_daemon_msg "Restarting daemon" "irssid"
  2745. stop
  2746. start && log_end_msg 0 || log_end_msg $?
  2747. ;;
  2748. force-reload)
  2749. log_daemon_msg "Restarting daemon" "irssid"
  2750. stop
  2751. start && log_end_msg 0 || log_end_msg $?
  2752. ;;
  2753. status)
  2754. status_of_proc -p "$pidFile" "$daemonExec" screen && exit 0 || exit $?
  2755. ;;
  2756. *)
  2757. echo "irssid (start|stop|restart|force-reload|status|help)"
  2758. ;;
  2759. esac
  2760. #+END_SRC
  2761. Save and exit.
  2762. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2763. chmod +x /etc/init.d/irssid
  2764. #+END_SRC
  2765. Create a configuration file, replacing /myusername/ with your username.
  2766. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2767. editor /etc/irssid.conf
  2768. #+END_SRC
  2769. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2770. #
  2771. # Configuration file for irssid init script
  2772. #
  2773. # Mandatory options:
  2774. #
  2775. # user - Specify user for running irssi.
  2776. # group - Specify group for running irssi.
  2777. # session - Specify screen session name to be used for irssi.
  2778. #
  2779. # Non-mandatory options:
  2780. #
  2781. # args - Pass additional arguments to irssi.
  2782. #
  2783. user='myusername'
  2784. group='irssi'
  2785. session='irssi'
  2786. args='--config /home/myusername/.irssi/config'
  2787. #+END_SRC
  2788. Save and exit. Then add your user to the irssi group and start the daemon.
  2789. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2790. groupadd irssi
  2791. usermod -aG irssi myusername
  2792. update-rc.d irssid defaults
  2793. chown -R myusername:irssi /home/myusername/.irssi
  2794. service irssid start
  2795. #+END_SRC
  2796. Create a script to make running IRC on the server easier.
  2797. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2798. editor /usr/bin/irc
  2799. #+END_SRC
  2800. Add the following:
  2801. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2802. #!/bin/bash
  2803. screen -r irssi
  2804. #+END_SRC
  2805. Save and exit.
  2806. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2807. chmod +x /usr/bin/irc
  2808. chown myusername:myusername /usr/bin/irc
  2809. #+END_SRC
  2810. Then to subsequently access irssi log into the BBB using ssh and type:
  2811. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2812. irc
  2813. #+END_SRC
  2814. To set UK time within Irssi:
  2815. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2816. /script exec $ENV{'TZ'}='Europe/London';
  2817. /save
  2818. #+END_SRC
  2819. ** Install a Jabber/XMPP server
  2820. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  2821. /Well heck, it isn’t that hard to write an instant messaging system./
  2822. --Jeremie Miller
  2823. #+END_VERSE
  2824. *** The Server
  2825. Generate a SSL certificate.
  2826. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2827. openssl genrsa -out /etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key 4096
  2828. openssl req -new -x509 -key /etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key -out /etc/ssl/certs/xmpp.crt -days 3650
  2829. #+END_SRC
  2830. Change permissions.
  2831. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2832. chmod 600 /etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key
  2833. chmod 600 /etc/ssl/certs/xmpp.crt
  2834. #+END_SRC
  2835. Install Prosody.
  2836. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2837. apt-get install prosody
  2838. chown prosody:prosody /etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key
  2839. chown prosody:prosody /etc/ssl/certs/xmpp.crt
  2840. cp -a /etc/prosody/conf.avail/example.com.cfg.lua /etc/prosody/conf.avail/xmpp.cfg.lua
  2841. editor /etc/prosody/conf.avail/xmpp.cfg.lua
  2842. #+END_SRC
  2843. Change the *VirtualHost* name to your domain name and remove the line below it.
  2844. Set the ssl section to:
  2845. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2846. ssl = {
  2847. key = "/etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key";
  2848. certificate = "/etc/ssl/certs/xmpp.crt";
  2849. }
  2850. #+END_SRC
  2851. And also append the following:
  2852. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2853. modules_enabled = {
  2854. "bosh"; -- Enable mod_bosh
  2855. "tls"; -- Enable mod_tls
  2856. }
  2857. c2s_require_encryption = true
  2858. s2s_require_encryption = true
  2859. #+END_SRC
  2860. Save and exit. Create a symbolic link.
  2861. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2862. ln -sf /etc/prosody/conf.avail/xmpp.cfg.lua /etc/prosody/conf.d/xmpp.cfg.lua
  2863. #+END_SRC
  2864. Add a user. You will be prompted to specify a password. You can repeat the process for as many users as needed. This will also be your Jabber ID (JID).
  2865. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2866. prosodyctl adduser myusername@mydomainname.com
  2867. #+END_SRC
  2868. Restart the server
  2869. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2870. service prosody restart
  2871. #+END_SRC
  2872. On your internet router/firewall open ports 5222, 5223, 5269, 5280 and 5281 and forward them to the BBB.
  2873. It's possible to test that your XMPP server is working at https://xmpp.net. It may take several minutes and you'll get a low score because of the self-signed certificate, but it will at least verify that your server is capable of communicating.
  2874. *** Managing users
  2875. To add a user:
  2876. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2877. prosodyctl adduser myusername@mydomainname.com
  2878. #+END_SRC
  2879. To change a user password:
  2880. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2881. prosodyctl passwd myusername@mydomainname.com
  2882. #+END_SRC
  2883. To remove a user:
  2884. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2885. prosodyctl deluser myusername@mydomainname.com
  2886. #+END_SRC
  2887. Report the status of the XMPP server:
  2888. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2889. prosodyctl status
  2890. #+END_SRC
  2891. *** Using with Jitsi
  2892. Jitsi is the recommended communications client for desktop or laptop systems, since it includes the /off the record/ (OTR) feature which provides some additional security beyond the usual SSL certificates.
  2893. Jitsi can be downloaded from https://jitsi.org/
  2894. On your desktop/laptop open Jitsi and select *Options* from the *Tools* menu.
  2895. Click *Add* to add a new user, then enter the Jabber ID which you previously specified with /prosodyctl/ when setting up the XMPP server. Close and then you should notice that your status is "Online" (or if not then you should be able to set it to online).
  2896. From the *File* menu you can add contacts, then select the chat icon to begin a chat. Click on the lock icon on the right hand side and this will initiate an authentication procedure in which you can specify a question and answer to verify the identity of the person you're communicating with. Once authentication is complete then you'll be chating using OTR, which provides an additional layer of security.
  2897. When opening Jitsi initially you will get a certificate warning for your domain name (assuming that you're using a self-signed certificate). If this happens then select *View Certificate* and enable the checkbox to trust the certificate, then select *Continue Anyway*. Once you've done this then the certificate warning will not appear again unless you reinstall Jitsi or use a different computer.
  2898. You can also [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgx7VSrDGjk][see this video]] as an example of using OTR.
  2899. *** Using with Ubuntu
  2900. The default XMPP client in Ubuntu is Empathy. Using Empathy isn't as secure as using Jitsi, since it doesn't include the /off the record/ feature, but since it's the default it's what many users will have easy access to.
  2901. Open *System Settings* and select *Online Accounts*, *Add account* and then *Jabber*.
  2902. Enter your username (myusername@mydomainname.com) and password.
  2903. Click on *Advanced* and make sure that *Encryption required* and *Ignore SSL certificate errors* are checked. Ignoring the certificate errors will allow you to use the self-signed certificate created earlier. Then click *Done* and set your Jabber account and Empathy to *On*.
  2904. *** Using with Android
  2905. There are a few XMPP clients available on Android. Ideally choose ones which support off-the-record messaging. Here are some examples.
  2906. **** Xabber
  2907. Install [[https://f-droid.org/][F-Droid]]
  2908. Search for and install Xabber.
  2909. Add an account and enter your Jabber/XMPP ID and password.
  2910. From the menu select *Settings* then *Security* then *OTR mode*. Set the mode to *Required*.
  2911. Make sure that *Check server certificate* is not checked.
  2912. Go back to the initial screen and then using the menu you can add contacts and begin chatting. Both parties will need to go through the off-the-record question and answer verification before the chat can begin, but that only needs to be done once for each person you're chatting with.
  2913. **** Gibberbot
  2914. Install [[https://f-droid.org/][F-Droid]]
  2915. Search for and install Gibberbot, otherwise known as ChatSecure.
  2916. From the menu open *Accounts*
  2917. Select *Add account*
  2918. Change the server port from 0 to 5222
  2919. Done
  2920. Accept unknown certificate? Select *Always*
  2921. Go back to the initial screen and then using the menu you can add contacts and begin chatting.
  2922. ** Social Networking
  2923. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  2924. /Facebook is not your friend, it is a surveillance engine./
  2925. -- Richard Stallman, Free Software Foundation
  2926. #+END_VERSE
  2927. *** Friendica
  2928. **** Installation
  2929. See [[Setting up a web site]] for details of how to update the Apache configuration for your Friendica site. You should have a separate domain name specifically to run Friendica on. It can't be installed in a subdirectory on a domain used for something else.
  2930. Edit your Apache configuration and disable the port 80 (HTTP) version of the site. We only want to log into Friendica via HTTPS, so to prevent anyone from accidentally logging in insecurely:
  2931. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2932. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/myfriendicadomainname.com
  2933. #+END_SRC
  2934. Replace the section which begins with *<VirtualHost *:80>* with the following, replacing /myusername@mydomainname.com/ with your email address and /myfriendicadomainname.com/ with your Friendica domain name:
  2935. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2936. <VirtualHost *:80>
  2937. ServerAdmin myusername@mydomainname.com
  2938. ServerName myfriendicadomainname.com
  2939. RewriteEngine On
  2940. RewriteCond %{HTTPS} off
  2941. RewriteRule (.*) https://%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI}
  2942. </VirtualHost>
  2943. #+END_SRC
  2944. Save and exit, then restart the apache server.
  2945. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2946. service apache2 restart
  2947. #+END_SRC
  2948. Now install some dependencies.
  2949. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2950. apt-get install mysql-server php5-common php5-cli php5-curl php5-gd php5-mysql php5-mcrypt php5-fpm php5-cgi php-apc
  2951. #+END_SRC
  2952. Enter an admin password for MySQL.
  2953. Reduce the memory use of mysql by using the "small" configuration.
  2954. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2955. cp /usr/share/doc/mysql-server-5.5/examples/my-small.cnf /etc/mysql/my.cnf
  2956. #+END_SRC
  2957. Create a mysql database, replacing /myfriendicapassword/ with a password used to administer the friendica database.
  2958. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2959. mysql -u root -p
  2960. create database friendica;
  2961. CREATE USER 'friendicaadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'myfriendicapassword';
  2962. GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON friendica.* TO 'friendicaadmin'@'localhost';
  2963. quit
  2964. #+END_SRC
  2965. You may need to fix Git SSL problems.
  2966. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2967. git config --global http.sslVerify true
  2968. apt-get install ca-certificates
  2969. cd ~/
  2970. editor .gitconfig
  2971. #+END_SRC
  2972. The .gitconfig file should look something like this:
  2973. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2974. [user]
  2975. name = yourname
  2976. email = myusername@mydomainname.com
  2977. [http]
  2978. sslVerify = true
  2979. sslCAinfo = /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
  2980. #+END_SRC
  2981. Get the source code.
  2982. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  2983. export HOSTNAME=myfriendicadomainname.com
  2984. cd /var/www/$HOSTNAME
  2985. rm -rf htdocs
  2986. git clone https://github.com/friendica/friendica.git htdocs
  2987. chmod -R 755 htdocs
  2988. chown -R www-data:www-data htdocs
  2989. chown -R www-data:www-data htdocs/view/smarty3
  2990. git clone https://github.com/friendica/friendica-addons.git htdocs/addon
  2991. #+END_SRC
  2992. Now visit the URL of your site and you should be taken through the rest of the installation procedure.
  2993. | Database Server Name | localhost |
  2994. | Database login name | friendicaadmin |
  2995. | Database Login Password | myfriendicapassword |
  2996. | Database Name | friendica |
  2997. When installation is complete if you already have an exported account which you wish to import then visit https://myfriendicadomain.com/uimport, rather than registering a new user. If you get an error when trying to import an account then try increasing the value of LimitRequestBody within your apache configuration and restart the apache2 service.
  2998. If you have trouble with "allow override" ensure that "AllowOverride" is set to "all" in your Apache settings for the site (within /etc/apache2/sites-available) and then restart the apache2 service.
  2999. Install the poller.
  3000. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3001. editor /etc/crontab
  3002. #+END_SRC
  3003. and append the following, changing /myfriendicadomainname.com/ to whatever your Friendica domain is.
  3004. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3005. */10 * * * * root cd /var/www/myfriendicadomainname.com/htdocs; /usr/bin/timeout 120 /usr/bin/php include/poller.php
  3006. #+END_SRC
  3007. Save and exit, then restart cron.
  3008. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3009. service cron restart
  3010. #+END_SRC
  3011. You can improve the speed of Friendica database searches by adding the following indexes:
  3012. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3013. mysql -u root -p
  3014. use friendica;
  3015. CREATE INDEX `uri_received` ON item(`uri`, `received`);
  3016. CREATE INDEX `received_uri` ON item(`received`, `uri`);
  3017. CREATE INDEX `contact-id_created` ON item(`contact-id`, created);
  3018. CREATE INDEX `uid_network_received` ON item(`uid`, `network`, `received`);
  3019. CREATE INDEX `uid_parent` ON item(`uid`, `parent`);
  3020. CREATE INDEX `uid_received` ON item(`uid`, `received`);
  3021. CREATE INDEX `uid_network_commented` ON item(`uid`, `network`, `commented`);
  3022. CREATE INDEX `uid_title` ON item(uid, `title`);
  3023. CREATE INDEX `created_contact-id` ON item(`created`, `contact-id`);
  3024. quit
  3025. #+END_SRC
  3026. Make sure that Friendica doesn't use too much memory.
  3027. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3028. editor /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/.htaccess
  3029. #+END_SRC
  3030. Append the following:
  3031. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3032. php_value memory_limit 32M
  3033. #+END_SRC
  3034. The save ane exit.
  3035. **** Backups
  3036. Make sure that the database gets backed up. By using cron if anything goes wrong then you should be able to recover the database either from the previous day or the previous week.
  3037. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3038. editor /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3039. #+END_SRC
  3040. Enter the following
  3041. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3042. #!/bin/sh
  3043. # stop the web server to avoid any changes to the databases during backup
  3044. service apache2 stop
  3045. MYSQL_PASSWORD=<mysql root password>
  3046. umask 0077
  3047. # Backup the database
  3048. mysqldump --password=$MYSQL_PASSWORD friendica > /var/backups/friendica_daily.sql
  3049. # Make the backup readable only by root
  3050. chmod 600 /var/backups/friendica_daily.sql
  3051. # Backup the database
  3052. #mysqldump --password=$MYSQL_PASSWORD redmatrix > /var/backups/redmatrix_daily.sql
  3053. # Make the backup readable only by root
  3054. #chmod 600 /var/backups/redmatrix_daily.sql
  3055. # restart the web server
  3056. service apache2 start
  3057. #+END_SRC
  3058. Save and exit.
  3059. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3060. chmod 600 /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3061. chmod +x /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3062. editor /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3063. #+END_SRC
  3064. Enter the following
  3065. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3066. #!/bin/sh
  3067. umask 0077
  3068. # Friendica
  3069. cp -f /var/backups/friendica_weekly.sql /var/backups/friendica_2weekly.sql
  3070. cp -f /var/backups/friendica_daily.sql /var/backups/friendica_weekly.sql
  3071. # Red Matrix
  3072. #cp -f /var/backups/redmatrix_weekly.sql /var/backups/redmatrix_2weekly.sql
  3073. #cp -f /var/backups/redmatrix_daily.sql /var/backups/redmatrix_weekly.sql
  3074. #+END_SRC
  3075. Save and exit.
  3076. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3077. chmod 600 /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3078. chmod +x /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3079. editor /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3080. #+END_SRC
  3081. Enter the following
  3082. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3083. #!/bin/sh
  3084. # Friendica
  3085. cp -f /var/backups/friendica_monthly.sql /var/backups/friendica_2monthly.sql
  3086. cp -f /var/backups/friendica_weekly.sql /var/backups/friendica_monthly.sql
  3087. # Red Matrix
  3088. #cp -f /var/backups/redmatrix_monthly.sql /var/backups/redmatrix_2monthly.sql
  3089. #cp -f /var/backups/redmatrix_weekly.sql /var/backups/redmatrix_monthly.sql
  3090. #+END_SRC
  3091. Save and exit.
  3092. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3093. chmod 600 /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3094. chmod +x /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3095. #+END_SRC
  3096. **** Recommended configuration
  3097. ***** Admin
  3098. To get to the admin settings you will need to be logged in with the admin email address which you specified at the beginning of the installation procedure. Depending upon the theme which you're using "/admin/" will be available either as an icon or on a drop down menu.
  3099. Under the *plugins* section the main one which you may wish to enable is the NSFW plugin. With that enabled if a post contans the #NSFW tag then it will appear minimised by default and you will need to click a button to open it.
  3100. Under the *themes* section select a few themes, including mobile themes which are suitable for phones or tablets.
  3101. Under the *site* section give your Friendica node a name other than "/my friend network/", you can change the icon and banner text and set the default mobile theme typically to /frost-mobile/. If you don't want your node to host a lot of accounts for people you don't know then you may want to set the register policy to "/requires approval/". For security it's probably a good idea only to host accounts for people who you actually know, rather than random strangers. Also be aware that the Beaglebone does not have a great deal of computational power or bandwidth and will not function well if there are hundreds of users using your node. If you're not federating with Diaspora or other sites then you may wish to select "/only allow Friendica contacts/". That improves the security of the system, since communication between Friendica nodes is always encrypted separately and in addition to the usual SSL encryption layer - which makes life interesting for the Surveillance State and at least keeps those cryptanalysts employed.
  3102. If you also wish to publish your public posts to a Diaspora node then within the *site* settings select *enable Diaspora support*.
  3103. It's probably a good idea to enable "/private posts by default for new users/" and also "/don't include post content in email notifications/". Since traditional email isn't a secure system and is easily vulnerable to attack by systems such as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XKeyscore][Xkeyscore]].
  3104. ***** Settings
  3105. Each user has their own customisable settings, typically available either via an icon or by an entry on a drop down menu.
  3106. Under *additional features* enable "/richtext editor/", "/post preview/", "/group filter/", "/network filter/", "/edit sent posts/" and "/dislike posts/".
  3107. Under *display settings* select your desktop and mobile themes.
  3108. Once you have connected to enough friends it's also a good idea to use the "/export personal data/" option from here. This will save a file to your local system, which you can import into another friendica node if necessary.
  3109. **** To access from an Android device
  3110. ***** App
  3111. Open a browser on your device and go to https://f-droid.org/ then download and install the F-Droid apk. If you then open F-Droid you can search for and install the Friendica app.
  3112. If you are using a self-signed certificate then at the login screen scroll down to the bottom, select the SSL settings then scroll down and disable SSL certificate checks. You will then be able to log in using https, which at least gives you some protection via the encryption.
  3113. More information about the Friendica app can be found on http://friendica-for-android.wiki-lab.net/
  3114. ***** Mobile Theme
  3115. Another way to access Friendica from a mobile device is to just use the web browser. If you have selected a mobile theme within your settings then when viewing from an Android system the mobile theme will be displayed.
  3116. *** Movim
  3117. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  3118. /The way we communicate with others and with ourselves ultimately determines the quality of our lives/
  3119. -- Anthony Robbins
  3120. #+END_VERSE
  3121. Movim is another social networking system based around the XMPP protocol.
  3122. You will need to have previously [[Install a Jabber/XMPP server][installed the Jabber/XMPP server]].
  3123. Edit your Apache configuration and disable the port 80 (HTTP) version of the site. We only want to log into Movim via HTTPS, so to prevent anyone from accidentally logging in insecurely:
  3124. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3125. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/mydomainname.com
  3126. #+END_SRC
  3127. Within the section which begins with *<VirtualHost *:80>* add the following:
  3128. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3129. <Directory /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/movim>
  3130. deny from all
  3131. </Directory>
  3132. #+END_SRC
  3133. Within the section which begins with *<VirtualHost *:443>* add the following:
  3134. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3135. <Directory /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/movim>
  3136. Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
  3137. AllowOverride All
  3138. Order allow,deny
  3139. allow from all
  3140. </Directory>
  3141. #+END_SRC
  3142. Save and exit, then restart the apache server.
  3143. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3144. service apache2 restart
  3145. #+END_SRC
  3146. Download the source.
  3147. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3148. cd /tmp
  3149. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/movim.tar.gz
  3150. #+END_SRC
  3151. Verify it.
  3152. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3153. sha256sum movim.tar.gz
  3154. 2740ddbedf6cefcc2934759374376643b6cdea4fb7f944ec25098a6868cb499e movim.tar.gz
  3155. #+END_SRC
  3156. Install it.
  3157. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3158. tar -xzvf movim.tar.gz
  3159. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  3160. cp -r movim-* /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/movim
  3161. chmod 755 /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/movim
  3162. chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/movim
  3163. #+END_SRC
  3164. Install some MySql prerequisites.
  3165. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3166. apt-get install mysql-server php5-common php5-cli php5-curl php5-gd php5-mysql php5-mcrypt
  3167. #+END_SRC
  3168. If necessary, enter an admin password for MySQL.
  3169. Reduce the memory use of mysql by using the "small" configuration.
  3170. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3171. cp /usr/share/doc/mysql-server-5.5/examples/my-small.cnf /etc/mysql/my.cnf
  3172. #+END_SRC
  3173. Create a mysql database.
  3174. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3175. mysql -u root -p
  3176. create database movim;
  3177. CREATE USER 'movimadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'movimadminpassword';
  3178. GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON movim.* TO 'movimadmin'@'localhost';
  3179. quit
  3180. #+END_SRC
  3181. With a web browser navigate to:
  3182. https://mydomainname.com/movim/admin
  3183. Enter /admin/ as the username and /password/ as the password.
  3184. Click on /General Settings/ and alter the administrator username to /movimadmin/ and password to some long random string (using a password manager such as KeepassX).
  3185. Change the /Environment/ from /Development/ to /Production/.
  3186. The /BOSH URL/ should be http://localhost:5280/http-bind (TODO: should this be https://localhost:5281/http-bind and if so do certificate warnings need to be disabled?)
  3187. Click /Submit/ followed by /Resend/.
  3188. Click on /Database Settings/ and alter the MySql movim database username to /movimadmin/ and password to the password you specified in the previous step.
  3189. Click /Submit/ followed by /Resend/. If you get a lot of orange warnings about database fields being created then hit /Submit/ again until you see "Movim database is up to date".
  3190. If everything on all three tabs looks green then you are ready to go. Click on the Movim logo at the top left and then log in with your Jabber ID (JID).
  3191. *** Red Matrix
  3192. **** Introduction
  3193. Red Matrix is the current version of the Friendica social networking system. It's more general than Friendica in that it's designed as a generic communication system based around a protocol called "zot". At the time of writing in early 2014 Red Matrix remains at an alpha stage of development and so it's not advised that you install it unless you're willing to put up with bugs and frustrations. In the large majority of cases it's better to stick with Friendica for now.
  3194. **** Prerequisites
  3195. The main problem with Red Matrix is that in order to install it you will need to have purchased a domain name (i.e. not a FreeDNS subdomain) and a SSL certificate for it.
  3196. You could join some other Red Matrix server, but this suffers from "/The Levison Problem/" in which some goons show up with a gagging order demanding coppies of the SSL private key. In that scenario unless the owner of the server is exceptionally brave users may never be informed that the site has been compromised or that there is interception hardware attached to the server. Joining another server defeats the object of being digitally self-sufficient and raises legal question marks about the ownership of data which you might upload to a server which doesn't belong to you.
  3197. **** Installation
  3198. See [[Setting up a web site]] for details of how to update the Apache configuration for your Red Matrix site. You should have a separate domain name specifically to run Red Matrix on. It can't be installed in a subdirectory on a domain used for something else.
  3199. Edit your Apache configuration and disable the port 80 (HTTP) version of the site. We only want to log into Red Matrix via HTTPS, so to prevent anyone from accidentally logging in insecurely:
  3200. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3201. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/mydomainname.com
  3202. #+END_SRC
  3203. Replace the section which begins with *<VirtualHost *:80>* with the following:
  3204. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3205. <VirtualHost *:80>
  3206. ServerAdmin myusername@mydomainname.com
  3207. ServerName myredmatrixdomainname.com
  3208. RewriteEngine On
  3209. RewriteCond %{HTTPS} off
  3210. RewriteRule (.*) https://%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI}
  3211. </VirtualHost>
  3212. #+END_SRC
  3213. Save and exit, then restart the apache server.
  3214. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3215. service apache2 restart
  3216. #+END_SRC
  3217. Now install some dependencies.
  3218. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3219. apt-get install mysql-server php5-common php5-cli php5-curl php5-gd php5-mysql php5-mcrypt
  3220. #+END_SRC
  3221. Enter an admin password for MySQL.
  3222. Reduce the memory use of mysql by using the "small" configuration.
  3223. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3224. cp /usr/share/doc/mysql-server-5.5/examples/my-small.cnf /etc/mysql/my.cnf
  3225. #+END_SRC
  3226. Create a mysql database.
  3227. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3228. mysql -u root -p
  3229. create database redmatrix;
  3230. CREATE USER 'redmatrixadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
  3231. GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON redmatrix.* TO 'redmatrixadmin'@'localhost';
  3232. quit
  3233. #+END_SRC
  3234. You may need to fix Git SSL problems.
  3235. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3236. git config --global http.sslVerify true
  3237. apt-get install ca-certificates
  3238. cd ~/
  3239. editor .gitconfig
  3240. #+END_SRC
  3241. The .gitconfig file should look something like this:
  3242. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3243. [http]
  3244. sslVerify = true
  3245. sslCAinfo = /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
  3246. [user]
  3247. email = myusername@mydomainname.com
  3248. name = yourname
  3249. #+END_SRC
  3250. Get the source code.
  3251. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3252. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  3253. mkdir /var/www/$HOSTNAME
  3254. cd /var/www/$HOSTNAME
  3255. rm -rf htdocs
  3256. git clone https://github.com/friendica/red.git htdocs
  3257. chmod -R 755 htdocs
  3258. chown -R www-data:www-data htdocs
  3259. mkdir htdocs/view/tpl/smarty3
  3260. chmod 777 htdocs/view/tpl
  3261. chmod 777 htdocs/view/tpl/smarty3
  3262. git clone https://github.com/friendica/red-addons.git htdocs/addon
  3263. #+END_SRC
  3264. Now visit the URL of your site and you should be taken through the rest of the installation procedure. Note that this may take a few minutes so don't be concerned if it looks as if it has crashed - just leave it running. If you have trouble with "allow override" ensure that "AllowOverride" is set to "all" in your Apache settings for the site (within /etc/apache2/sites-available) and then restart the apache2 service.
  3265. Install the poller.
  3266. #+BEGIN_SRC
  3267. editor /etc/crontab
  3268. #+END_SRC
  3269. and append the following, changing mydomainname.com to whatever your domain is.
  3270. #+BEGIN_SRC
  3271. 12,22,32,42,52 * * * * root cd /var/www/apespace.org/htdocs; /usr/bin/timeout 240 /usr/bin/php include/poller.php
  3272. #+END_SRC
  3273. Save and exit, then restart cron.
  3274. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3275. service cron restart
  3276. #+END_SRC
  3277. **** Backups
  3278. Make sure that the database gets backed up. By using cron if anything goes wrong then you should be able to recover the database either from the previous day or the previous week.
  3279. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3280. editor /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3281. #+END_SRC
  3282. If you already have a backup script created for Friendica then just uncomment the lines for Red Matrix. The backup script should look something like the following:
  3283. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3284. #!/bin/sh
  3285. # stop the web server to avoid any changes to the databases during backup
  3286. service apache2 stop
  3287. MYSQL_PASSWORD=elNYCk3hKE5jCjifUUL6ymP7
  3288. umask 0077
  3289. # Backup the database
  3290. mysqldump --password=$MYSQL_PASSWORD friendica > /var/backups/friendica_daily.sql
  3291. # Make the backup readable only by root
  3292. chmod 600 /var/backups/friendica_daily.sql
  3293. # Backup the database
  3294. mysqldump --password=$MYSQL_PASSWORD redmatrix > /var/backups/redmatrix_daily.sql
  3295. # Make the backup readable only by root
  3296. chmod 600 /var/backups/redmatrix_daily.sql
  3297. # restart the web server
  3298. service apache2 start
  3299. #+END_SRC
  3300. Save and exit.
  3301. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3302. chmod 600 /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3303. chmod +x /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3304. editor /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3305. #+END_SRC
  3306. If you already have a backup script created for Friendica then just uncomment the lines for Red Matrix. The backup script should look something like the following:
  3307. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3308. #!/bin/sh
  3309. umask 0077
  3310. # Friendica
  3311. cp -f /var/backups/friendica_weekly.sql /var/backups/friendica_2weekly.sql
  3312. cp -f /var/backups/friendica_daily.sql /var/backups/friendica_weekly.sql
  3313. # Red Matrix
  3314. cp -f /var/backups/redmatrix_weekly.sql /var/backups/redmatrix_2weekly.sql
  3315. cp -f /var/backups/redmatrix_daily.sql /var/backups/redmatrix_weekly.sql
  3316. #+END_SRC
  3317. Save and exit.
  3318. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3319. chmod 600 /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3320. chmod +x /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3321. editor /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3322. #+END_SRC
  3323. If you already have a backup script created for Friendica then just uncomment the lines for Red Matrix. The backup script should look something like the following:
  3324. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3325. #!/bin/sh
  3326. # Friendica
  3327. cp -f /var/backups/friendica_monthly.sql /var/backups/friendica_2monthly.sql
  3328. cp -f /var/backups/friendica_weekly.sql /var/backups/friendica_monthly.sql
  3329. # Red Matrix
  3330. cp -f /var/backups/redmatrix_monthly.sql /var/backups/redmatrix_2monthly.sql
  3331. cp -f /var/backups/redmatrix_weekly.sql /var/backups/redmatrix_monthly.sql
  3332. #+END_SRC
  3333. Save and exit.
  3334. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3335. chmod 600 /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3336. chmod +x /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3337. #+END_SRC
  3338. **** To access from an Android device
  3339. ***** App
  3340. Open a browser on your device and go to https://f-droid.org/ then download and install the F-Droid apk. If you then open F-Droid you can search for and install the Friendica app.
  3341. If you are using a self-signed certificate then at the login screen scroll down to the bottom, select the SSL settings then scroll down and disable SSL certificate checks. You will then be able to log in using https, which at least gives you some protection via the encryption.
  3342. More information about the Friendica app can be found on http://friendica-for-android.wiki-lab.net/
  3343. *** pump.io
  3344. :PROPERTIES:
  3345. :ORDERED: t
  3346. :END:
  3347. pump.io is the successor to StatusNet (which later became [[GNU Social]]) and is a communications system which can do things other than just microblogging. It takes fewer system resources to run and so is better suited to low power servers such as the BBB, but is more complicated to install. pump.io doesn't work well with self-signed SSL certificates so this may be something which you can only use if you have your own domain and an "authority" issued certificate. Using a self-signed certificate you can only use pump.io as a /data silo/ which won't federate with other servers.
  3348. For a pump.io site you will need a separate domain/subdomain, so see [[Setting up a web site]] for details of how to create an Apache configuration for your site. If you're using freedns then you will need to create a new subdomain.
  3349. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3350. apt-get update
  3351. apt-get install build-essential openssl libssl-dev redis-server imagemagick graphicsmagick git-core screen
  3352. #+END_SRC
  3353. Download nodejs
  3354. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3355. cd /tmp
  3356. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/node_0.10.28-1_armhf.deb
  3357. #+END_SRC
  3358. Verify it.
  3359. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3360. sha256sum node_0.10.28-1_armhf.deb
  3361. 42000a475d3397f295fe76998e79af999eebb8324ac9bb4981e931fabd9297aa
  3362. #+END_SRC
  3363. Install it.
  3364. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3365. dpkg -i node_0.10.28-1_armhf.deb
  3366. #+END_SRC
  3367. Install pump.io
  3368. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3369. cd /opt
  3370. git clone https://github.com/e14n/pump.io.git
  3371. cd /opt/pump.io
  3372. npm install
  3373. npm install databank-redis
  3374. #+END_SRC
  3375. Now edit the configuration file.
  3376. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3377. editor /etc/pump.io.json
  3378. #+END_SRC
  3379. Add the following, replacing /mypumpiodomainname.com/ with your domain name.
  3380. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3381. {
  3382. "driver": "redis",
  3383. "params": {"host":"localhost","port":6379},
  3384. "secret": "A long random string",
  3385. "noweb": false,
  3386. "site": "Name of my pump.io site",
  3387. "owner": "My name or organisation",
  3388. "ownerURL": "https://mypumpiodomainname.com/",
  3389. "port": 7270,
  3390. "urlPort": 443,
  3391. "hostname": "mypumpiodomainname.com",
  3392. "address": "localhost",
  3393. "nologger": true,
  3394. "serverUser": "pumpio",
  3395. "rejectUnauthorized": false,
  3396. "key": "/var/local/pump.io/keys/mypumpiodomainname.com.key",
  3397. "cert": "/var/local/pump.io/keys/mypumpiodomainname.com.crt",
  3398. "uploaddir": "/var/local/pump.io/uploads",
  3399. "debugClient": false,
  3400. "firehose": "ofirehose.example",
  3401. "logfile": "/var/local/pump.io/pump.log",
  3402. "disableRegistration": false
  3403. }
  3404. #+END_SRC
  3405. Save and exit.
  3406. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3407. export HOSTNAME=mypumpiodomainname.com
  3408. mkdir /var/local/pump.io
  3409. mkdir /var/local/pump.io/uploads
  3410. mkdir /var/local/pump.io/keys
  3411. cp /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.key /var/local/pump.io/keys
  3412. cp /etc/ssl/certs/$HOSTNAME.crt /var/local/pump.io/keys
  3413. useradd -s /bin/bash -d /var/local/pump.io pumpio
  3414. chown -R pumpio:pumpio /var/local/pump.io
  3415. chmod 400 /var/local/pump.io/keys/*
  3416. chmod -R 777 /opt
  3417. #+END_SRC
  3418. Patch the version of Apache.
  3419. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3420. mkdir /tmp/apache2
  3421. cd /tmp/apache2
  3422. apt-get build-dep apache2
  3423. apt-get install autoconf
  3424. apt-get source apache2
  3425. cd apache2-*
  3426. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/apache-2.2-wstunnel.patch
  3427. sha256sum apache-2.2-wstunnel.patch
  3428. cfc4866da2688a8eb76e0300cf16b52539ef4e525053a3851d4b6bba9a77e439
  3429. patch -p1 -i apache-2.2-wstunnel.patch
  3430. autoconf
  3431. ./configure --enable-so --enable-proxy=shared --enable-proxy-wstunnel=shared
  3432. make
  3433. make install
  3434. cp modules/proxy/.libs/mod_proxy_wstunnel.so /usr/lib/apache2/modules/
  3435. cd /etc/apache2/mods-enabled
  3436. ln -s /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_proxy_wstunnel.so ../mods-available/proxy_wstunnel.load
  3437. #+END_SRC
  3438. Within the section of your Apache site configuration:
  3439. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3440. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/mypumpiodomainname.com
  3441. #+END_SRC
  3442. The initial section which begins with *<VirtualHost *:80>* should be replaced by the following, replacing /mypumpiodomainname.com/ with your pump.io domain name and /myusername@mydomainname.com/ with your email address.
  3443. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3444. <VirtualHost *:80>
  3445. ServerAdmin myusername@mydomainname.com
  3446. ServerName mypumpiodomainname.com
  3447. RewriteEngine On
  3448. RewriteCond %{HTTPS} off
  3449. RewriteRule (.*) https://%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI}
  3450. </VirtualHost>
  3451. #+END_SRC
  3452. Add the following in the section which begins with *<VirtualHost *:443>*.
  3453. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3454. ProxyVia On
  3455. ProxyPreserveHost On
  3456. SSLProxyEngine On
  3457. ProxyPass / https://localhost:7270/
  3458. ProxyPassReverse / https://localhost:7270/
  3459. #+END_SRC
  3460. Save and exit.
  3461. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3462. a2enmod ssl
  3463. a2enmod cache
  3464. a2enmod disk_cache
  3465. a2enmod expires
  3466. a2enmod proxy
  3467. a2enmod proxy_connect
  3468. a2enmod proxy_http
  3469. apachectl configtest
  3470. service apache2 restart
  3471. npm install forever -g
  3472. #+END_SRC
  3473. Now create the daemon.
  3474. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3475. editor /etc/init.d/pumpio
  3476. #+END_SRC
  3477. Add the following text:
  3478. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3479. #!/bin/bash
  3480. # /etc/init.d/pumpio
  3481. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  3482. # Provides: pump.io
  3483. # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog
  3484. # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog
  3485. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  3486. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  3487. # Short-Description: starts pump.io as a background daemon
  3488. # Description: Starts pump.io on boot
  3489. ### END INIT INFO
  3490. # Author: Bob Mottram <bob@robotics.uk.to>
  3491. #Settings
  3492. SERVICE='pumpio'
  3493. COMMAND="forever /opt/pump.io/bin/pump > /var/local/pump.io/daemon.log"
  3494. USERNAME='pumpio'
  3495. NICELEVEL=19 # from 0-19 the bigger the number, the less the impact on system OAresources
  3496. HISTORY=1024
  3497. INVOCATION="nice -n ${NICELEVEL} ${COMMAND}"
  3498. PATH='/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/var/local/pump.io'
  3499. pumpio_start() {
  3500. echo "Starting $SERVICE..."
  3501. su --command "screen -h ${HISTORY} -dmS ${SERVICE} ${INVOCATION}" $USERNAME
  3502. }
  3503. pumpio_stop() {
  3504. echo "Stopping $SERVICE"
  3505. su --command "screen -p 0 -S ${SERVICE} -X stuff "'^C'"" $USERNAME
  3506. }
  3507. #Start-Stop here
  3508. case "$1" in
  3509. start)
  3510. pumpio_start
  3511. ;;
  3512. stop)
  3513. pumpio_stop
  3514. ;;
  3515. restart)
  3516. pumpio_stop
  3517. sleep 10s
  3518. pumpio_start
  3519. ;;
  3520. *)
  3521. echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart}"
  3522. exit 1
  3523. ;;
  3524. esac
  3525. exit 0
  3526. #+END_SRC
  3527. Save and exit. Then enable the daemon and run it.
  3528. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3529. chmod +x /etc/init.d/pumpio
  3530. update-rc.d pumpio defaults
  3531. service pumpio start
  3532. #+END_SRC
  3533. Now visit your pump.io site by navigating to:
  3534. https://mypumpiodomainname.com
  3535. and add a new user. If you wish this to be a single user node not open to the general public (including spammers and sockpuppets) then edit */etc/pump.io.json* and set *disableRegistration* to *true*. After making that change restart with the command *service pumpio restart*.
  3536. Once you've set up your user account it's recommended that you don't use the web based user interface and instead use a native client such as [[http://jancoding.wordpress.com/dianara/][Dianara]] or Pumpa. On Ubuntu you can install these via the Software Center. On mobile devices you can install AndStatus via F-Droid.
  3537. A list of pump.io sites can be found at http://pumpstatus.jpope.org. At the time of writing there isn't any public directory and so finding people to follow is really a question of navigating through lists of /following/ or /followers/ (rather like the web before search engines were invented).
  3538. Ensure that data data gets backed up with:
  3539. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3540. printf "\n\n# Redis backup" >> /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3541. printf "\ntar -czvf /var/backups/redis_daily.tar.gz /var/lib/redis/dump.rdb" >> /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3542. printf "\n\n# Redis backup" >> /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3543. printf "\ncp -f /var/backups/redis_weekly.tar.gz /var/backups/redis_weekly2.tar.gz" >> /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3544. printf "\ncp -f /var/backups/redis_daily.tar.gz /var/backups/redis_weekly.tar.gz" >> /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3545. printf "\n\n# Redis backup" >> /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3546. printf "\ncp -f /var/backups/redis_monthly.tar.gz /var/backups/redis_monthly2.tar.gz" >> /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3547. printf "\ncp -f /var/backups/redis_weekly.tar.gz /var/backups/redis_monthly.tar.gz" >> /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3548. printf "\n\n# Pump.io backup" >> /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3549. printf "\ntar -czvf /var/backups/pumpio_daily.tar.gz /var/local/pump.io --exclude /var/local/pump.io/.forever" >> /etc/cron.daily/backup
  3550. printf "\n\n# Pump.io backup" >> /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3551. printf "\ncp -f /var/backups/pumpio_weekly.tar.gz /var/backups/pumpio_weekly2.tar.gz" >> /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3552. printf "\ncp -f /var/backups/pumpio_daily.tar.gz /var/backups/pumpio_weekly.tar.gz" >> /etc/cron.weekly/backup
  3553. printf "\n\n# Pump.io backup" >> /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3554. printf "\ncp -f /var/backups/pumpio_monthly.tar.gz /var/backups/pumpio_monthly2.tar.gz" >> /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3555. printf "\ncp -f /var/backups/pumpio_weekly.tar.gz /var/backups/pumpio_monthly.tar.gz" >> /etc/cron.monthly/backup
  3556. #+END_SRC
  3557. At the time of writing creating backups of the pump.io database is critically important, because regenerating the database or moving to a different databank type causes you to be /permanently banned/ from the pump.io network unless you change your domain name (which may not always be an available option).
  3558. ** Install Gopher
  3559. *** Server setup
  3560. Gopher is an old internet protocol which originated a few years before the web and is purely text based. It can be quite fun to build a gopher site and browse the gopherverse. One thing to keep in mind is that there is no security with gopher, so any text transmitted is trivially interceptable by systems such as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XKeyscore][Xkeyscore]] or deep packet inspection.
  3561. To set up a gopher server:
  3562. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3563. apt-get install build-essential
  3564. cd /tmp
  3565. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/geomyidae-current.tgz
  3566. #+END_SRC
  3567. Verify the download:
  3568. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3569. sha256sum geomyidae-current.tgz
  3570. 162f55ab059ab0a9be8e840497795293bbd51c34b1f4564dcdf3f0ddd5c0db31 geomyidae-current.tgz
  3571. #+END_SRC
  3572. Then extract and install it.
  3573. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3574. tar -xzvf geomyidae-current.tgz
  3575. cd geomyidae-*
  3576. make
  3577. make install
  3578. mkdir -p /var/gopher
  3579. #+END_SRC
  3580. Your content should be placed within /var/gopher with the index page being named index.gph. The Gopher format is very simple - simpler than HTML - so creating pages is not much more difficult than editing a text file.
  3581. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3582. editor /etc/init.d/gopher
  3583. #+END_SRC
  3584. Enter the following:
  3585. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3586. #! /bin/sh
  3587. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  3588. # Provides: gopher
  3589. # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog
  3590. # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog
  3591. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  3592. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  3593. # Short-Description: Gopher daemon
  3594. # Description: Gopher daemon
  3595. ### END INIT INFO
  3596. # Do NOT "set -e"
  3597. # PATH should only include /usr/* if it runs after the mountnfs.sh script
  3598. PATH=/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin
  3599. DESC="Gopher daemon"
  3600. NAME=geomyidae
  3601. DAEMON=/usr/bin/$NAME
  3602. DAEMON_ARGS="-l /var/log/geomyidae.log -b /var/gopher -p 70"
  3603. PIDFILE=/var/run/$NAME.pid
  3604. SCRIPTNAME=/etc/init.d/$NAME
  3605. # Exit if the package is not installed
  3606. [ -x "$DAEMON" ] || exit 0
  3607. # Read configuration variable file if it is present
  3608. [ -r /etc/default/$NAME ] && . /etc/default/$NAME
  3609. # Load the VERBOSE setting and other rcS variables
  3610. . /lib/init/vars.sh
  3611. # Define LSB log_* functions.
  3612. # Depend on lsb-base (>= 3.2-14) to ensure that this file is present
  3613. # and status_of_proc is working.
  3614. . /lib/lsb/init-functions
  3615. #
  3616. # Function that starts the daemon/service
  3617. #
  3618. do_start()
  3619. {
  3620. # Return
  3621. # 0 if daemon has been started
  3622. # 1 if daemon was already running
  3623. # 2 if daemon could not be started
  3624. start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile $PIDFILE --exec $DAEMON --test > /dev/null \
  3625. || return 1
  3626. start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile $PIDFILE --exec $DAEMON -- \
  3627. $DAEMON_ARGS \
  3628. || return 2
  3629. # Add code here, if necessary, that waits for the process to be ready
  3630. # to handle requests from services started subsequently which depend
  3631. # on this one. As a last resort, sleep for some time.
  3632. }
  3633. #
  3634. # Function that stops the daemon/service
  3635. #
  3636. do_stop()
  3637. {
  3638. # Return
  3639. # 0 if daemon has been stopped
  3640. # 1 if daemon was already stopped
  3641. # 2 if daemon could not be stopped
  3642. # other if a failure occurred
  3643. start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --retry=TERM/30/KILL/5 --pidfile $PIDFILE --name $NAME
  3644. RETVAL="$?"
  3645. [ "$RETVAL" = 2 ] && return 2
  3646. # Wait for children to finish too if this is a daemon that forks
  3647. # and if the daemon is only ever run from this initscript.
  3648. # If the above conditions are not satisfied then add some other code
  3649. # that waits for the process to drop all resources that could be
  3650. # needed by services started subsequently. A last resort is to
  3651. # sleep for some time.
  3652. start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --oknodo --retry=0/30/KILL/5 --exec $DAEMON
  3653. [ "$?" = 2 ] && return 2
  3654. # Many daemons don't delete their pidfiles when they exit.
  3655. rm -f $PIDFILE
  3656. return "$RETVAL"
  3657. }
  3658. #
  3659. # Function that sends a SIGHUP to the daemon/service
  3660. #
  3661. do_reload() {
  3662. #
  3663. # If the daemon can reload its configuration without
  3664. # restarting (for example, when it is sent a SIGHUP),
  3665. # then implement that here.
  3666. #
  3667. start-stop-daemon --stop --signal 1 --quiet --pidfile $PIDFILE --name $NAME
  3668. return 0
  3669. }
  3670. case "$1" in
  3671. start)
  3672. [ "$VERBOSE" != no ] && log_daemon_msg "Starting $DESC" "$NAME"
  3673. do_start
  3674. case "$?" in
  3675. 0|1) [ "$VERBOSE" != no ] && log_end_msg 0 ;;
  3676. 2) [ "$VERBOSE" != no ] && log_end_msg 1 ;;
  3677. esac
  3678. ;;
  3679. stop)
  3680. [ "$VERBOSE" != no ] && log_daemon_msg "Stopping $DESC" "$NAME"
  3681. do_stop
  3682. case "$?" in
  3683. 0|1) [ "$VERBOSE" != no ] && log_end_msg 0 ;;
  3684. 2) [ "$VERBOSE" != no ] && log_end_msg 1 ;;
  3685. esac
  3686. ;;
  3687. status)
  3688. status_of_proc "$DAEMON" "$NAME" && exit 0 || exit $?
  3689. ;;
  3690. #reload|force-reload)
  3691. #
  3692. # If do_reload() is not implemented then leave this commented out
  3693. # and leave 'force-reload' as an alias for 'restart'.
  3694. #
  3695. #log_daemon_msg "Reloading $DESC" "$NAME"
  3696. #do_reload
  3697. #log_end_msg $?
  3698. #;;
  3699. restart|force-reload)
  3700. #
  3701. # If the "reload" option is implemented then remove the
  3702. # 'force-reload' alias
  3703. #
  3704. log_daemon_msg "Restarting $DESC" "$NAME"
  3705. do_stop
  3706. case "$?" in
  3707. 0|1)
  3708. do_start
  3709. case "$?" in
  3710. 0) log_end_msg 0 ;;
  3711. 1) log_end_msg 1 ;; # Old process is still running
  3712. *) log_end_msg 1 ;; # Failed to start
  3713. esac
  3714. ;;
  3715. *)
  3716. # Failed to stop
  3717. log_end_msg 1
  3718. ;;
  3719. esac
  3720. ;;
  3721. *)
  3722. #echo "Usage: $SCRIPTNAME {start|stop|restart|reload|force-reload}" >&2
  3723. echo "Usage: $SCRIPTNAME {start|stop|status|restart|force-reload}" >&2
  3724. exit 3
  3725. ;;
  3726. esac
  3727. :
  3728. #+END_SRC
  3729. Save and exit. Then start the gopher service.
  3730. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3731. chmod +x /etc/init.d/gopher
  3732. update-rc.d gopher defaults
  3733. service gopher start
  3734. #+END_SRC
  3735. On your internet router change the firewall settings to route port 70 to the BBB, then provided that you have a gopher plugin installed within your browser then you should be able to navigate to your gopher site with:
  3736. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3737. gopher://mydomainname.com
  3738. #+END_SRC
  3739. There is a browser addon for Gopher called "overbite". Installing that should enable you to view your site.
  3740. *** A phlogging script
  3741. A phlog is the gopher equivalent of a blog on the web. You can create a script which makes phlogging easy.
  3742. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3743. editor /usr/bin/mkphlog
  3744. #+END_SRC
  3745. Add the following:
  3746. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3747. #!/bin/sh
  3748. # mkphlog - a utility to ease the creation of phlogs.
  3749. # Organizes phlog posts in separate directories.
  3750. # Created by octotep; anyone can distribute, modify, and
  3751. # share this file however they please.
  3752. #
  3753. # Version 0.3
  3754. #
  3755. # Modified by Bob Mottram
  3756. #
  3757. # Please note, all date strings are in the form of mm/dd/yy(yy)
  3758. # The base of the entire gopher site.
  3759. gopherRoot="/var/gopher"
  3760. # The name of the phlog directory (contained in $gopherHome)
  3761. phlogDirName="phlog"
  3762. # Default editor, unless the user has one specified in env
  3763. editor=${EDITOR:-emacs}
  3764. # Default timezone, unless the user has one specified in env
  3765. TZ=${TZ:-UTC}
  3766. # Tells the script how many lines the title of the main page spans.
  3767. # Used to insert the newest post at the top.
  3768. # Titles created by mkphlog are 3 lines.
  3769. # Isn't used if $addTitleToMain is false
  3770. titleLineCount=3
  3771. entryDate=`date +%Y-%m-%d`
  3772. # Creates the phlog directory if it dosen't already exist.
  3773. CreatePhlogDir() {
  3774. mkdir $phlogDirName
  3775. chmod 755 $phlogDirName
  3776. cd $phlogDirName
  3777. echo "Phlog directory created."
  3778. }
  3779. # Updates the main phlog listing
  3780. UpdatePhlogListing() {
  3781. # Just in case the user didn't specify a title
  3782. if [ "$postTitleAns" = "" ] ; then
  3783. echo -n "Do you want to create a blank post? (y/n) "
  3784. read blankPostAns
  3785. case $blankPostAns in
  3786. y* | Y* ) $postTitleAns="New Post" ;;
  3787. n* | N* ) echo "Goodbye, then." ; exit 1 ;;
  3788. * ) exit 1 ;;
  3789. esac
  3790. fi
  3791. cd $gopherRoot/$phlogDirName/
  3792. title2=$(echo "${postTitleAns}" | tr " " _)
  3793. postfilename="${entryDate}_${title2}.txt"
  3794. touch ${postfilename}
  3795. echo $postTitleAns >> ${postfilename}
  3796. date "+%A %b %e %l:%M:%S %Y" >> ${postfilename}
  3797. echo "------------------------------" >> ${postfilename}
  3798. echo >> ${postfilename}
  3799. }
  3800. if [ -d $gopherRoot ] ; then
  3801. cd $gopherRoot
  3802. else
  3803. echo "You don't have a gopherspace set-up. Please run the gopher server setup instructions."
  3804. exit 1
  3805. fi
  3806. if [ -d $phlogDirName ] ; then
  3807. cd $phlogDirName
  3808. else
  3809. echo -n "Do you want to create a phlog directory? (y/n) "
  3810. read phlogDirAns
  3811. case $phlogDirAns in
  3812. y* | Y* ) CreatePhlogDir ;;
  3813. n* | N* ) exit 1 ;;
  3814. * ) exit 1 ;;
  3815. esac
  3816. fi
  3817. echo -n "Would you like to create a phlog entry for today? (y/n) "
  3818. read phlogAns
  3819. case $phlogAns in
  3820. y* | Y* ) echo "Creating today's phlog entry..." ;;
  3821. n* | N* ) exit 0 ;;
  3822. * ) exit 1 ;;
  3823. esac
  3824. # Make sure there isn't a post for that day, lest we overwrite it.
  3825. if [ ! -d $entryDate ]; then
  3826. echo -n "Title: "
  3827. read postTitleAns
  3828. title2=$(echo "${postTitleAns}" | tr " " _)
  3829. postfilename="${entryDate}_${title2}.txt"
  3830. touch ${postfilename}
  3831. chmod 644 ${postfilename}
  3832. UpdatePhlogListing
  3833. echo -n "Would you like to edit the post with $editor? (y/n) "
  3834. read editorAns
  3835. case $editorAns in
  3836. y* | Y* ) $editor $gopherRoot/$phlogDirName/${postfilename} ;;
  3837. n* | N* ) exit 0 ;;
  3838. * ) exit 0 ;;
  3839. esac
  3840. rm $gopherRoot/$phlogDirName/${postfilename}~
  3841. else
  3842. echo "There is already a post for today."
  3843. echo -n "Would you like to edit the post with $editor? (y/n) "
  3844. read editorAns
  3845. case $editorAns in
  3846. y* | Y* ) $editor $gopherRoot/$phlogDirName/$entryDate*.txt ;;
  3847. n* | N* ) exit 0 ;;
  3848. * ) exit 1 ;;
  3849. esac
  3850. rm $gopherRoot/$phlogDirName/${postfilename}.txt~
  3851. fi
  3852. exit 0
  3853. #+END_SRC
  3854. Save and exit.
  3855. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3856. chmod +x /usr/bin/mkphlog
  3857. #+END_SRC
  3858. Now entering the command /mkphlog/ will allow you to create a phlog entry.
  3859. ** Install Owncloud
  3860. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  3861. /It's not water vapour/
  3862. -- Larry Ellison
  3863. #+END_VERSE
  3864. Owncloud will allow you to upload and download files, share photos, collaboratively edit documents, have a calendar and more. You should be warned that Owncloud runs quite slowly via an ordinary web browser, but it can be a convenient way to access and share your data from any location in a reasonably secure manner.
  3865. *** Server Installation
  3866. Install some dependencies:
  3867. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3868. apt-get install apache2 php5 php5-gd php-xml-parser php5-intl
  3869. apt-get install php5-sqlite php5-mysql smbclient curl libcurl3 php5-curl
  3870. #+END_SRC
  3871. It's very important that /mod_php5/ and not /mod_php5filter/ be installed. If you have /mod_php5filter/ installed then Owncloud will always fail to install.
  3872. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3873. a2dismod php5filter
  3874. apt-get install libapache2-mod-php5
  3875. #+END_SRC
  3876. Ensure that the size of files which may be uploaded or downloaded is large enough.
  3877. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3878. editor /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini
  3879. #+END_SRC
  3880. Set the following:
  3881. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3882. upload_max_filesize = 512M
  3883. post_max_size = 512M
  3884. #+END_SRC
  3885. Save and exit, then edit your Apache configuration.
  3886. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3887. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  3888. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/$HOSTNAME
  3889. #+END_SRC
  3890. And add the following, to the 443 VirtualHost section. Really we only will want to be using Owncloud with HTTPS to ensure some level of security and avoidance of dragnet surveillance.
  3891. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3892. <Directory /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/owncloud>
  3893. Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
  3894. AllowOverride All
  3895. Order allow,deny
  3896. allow from all
  3897. </Directory>
  3898. #+END_SRC
  3899. To ensure that nobody logs in insecurely add the following to the 80 VirtualHost section.
  3900. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3901. <Directory /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/owncloud>
  3902. deny from all
  3903. </Directory>
  3904. #+END_SRC
  3905. Save and exit, then restart apache.
  3906. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3907. service apache2 restart
  3908. #+END_SRC
  3909. Download owncloud.
  3910. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3911. cd /tmp
  3912. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/owncloud.tar.bz2
  3913. #+END_SRC
  3914. Verify the download:
  3915. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3916. sha256sum owncloud.tar.bz2
  3917. 92b53fdfa7c4165b83dd2f8447f63928454a5815d08ff2d6165dd1a8969ecbe1 owncloud.tar.bz2
  3918. #+END_SRC
  3919. Extract the archive. This may take a couple of minutes, so don't be alarmed that the system has crashed.
  3920. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3921. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  3922. tar -xjf owncloud.tar.bz2
  3923. #+END_SRC
  3924. Move the extracted files to your site and set file permissions.
  3925. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3926. cp -r owncloud /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  3927. chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/owncloud/apps
  3928. chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/owncloud/config
  3929. chown www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/owncloud
  3930. #+END_SRC
  3931. Edit the htaccess file for Owncloud.
  3932. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3933. editor /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/owncloud/.htaccess
  3934. #+END_SRC
  3935. Set the following.
  3936. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3937. php_value upload_max_filesize 512M
  3938. php_value post_max_size 512M
  3939. php_value memory_limit 32M
  3940. #+END_SRC
  3941. Save and exit.
  3942. With a web browser visit your domain (mydomainname.com/owncloud) and enter an administrator username and password.
  3943. *** Owncloud on Android
  3944. First install [[https://f-droid.org/][F-Droid]] and then search for the current Owncloud app. Once it's installed you'll then be able to log into the BBB with the URL https://mydomainname.com/opencloud, supplying your username and password.
  3945. ** Install a Wiki
  3946. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  3947. /I believe that technology can liberate, but you need to be a master rather than a user. You need to pull technology apart and master it rather than letting it control you./
  3948. -- Tom Barbalet
  3949. #+END_VERSE
  3950. Dokuwiki is based upon flat files, and so is easy to move from one server to another without a lot of database complications.
  3951. Download the wiki.
  3952. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3953. cd /tmp
  3954. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/dokuwiki.tgz
  3955. #+END_SRC
  3956. Verify it.
  3957. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3958. sha256sum dokuwiki.tgz
  3959. 6b126f90979463d9ddaa74acc6f96aa230cfdc789946f241c3646086d9574be8 dokuwiki.tgz
  3960. #+END_SRC
  3961. Then extract and install it.
  3962. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3963. export HOSTNAME=mywikidomainname.com
  3964. tar -xzvf dokuwiki.tgz
  3965. mv /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs_old
  3966. mv dokuwiki /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  3967. #+END_SRC
  3968. Edit the Apache configuration for your wiki site.
  3969. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3970. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/$HOSTNAME
  3971. #+END_SRC
  3972. The settings should look something like the following. Replace /mywikidomainname.com/ with your wiki domain name.
  3973. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  3974. <VirtualHost *:80>
  3975. ServerAdmin myusername@mywikidomainname.com
  3976. ServerName mydomainname.com
  3977. DocumentRoot /var/www/mywikidomainname.com/htdocs
  3978. <Directory /var/www/mywikidomainname.com/htdocs>
  3979. order deny,allow
  3980. allow from all
  3981. </Directory>
  3982. <LocationMatch "/(data|conf|bin|inc)/">
  3983. order allow,deny
  3984. deny from all
  3985. satisfy all
  3986. </LocationMatch>
  3987. <Directory />
  3988. Options FollowSymLinks
  3989. AllowOverride All
  3990. </Directory>
  3991. ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /usr/lib/cgi-bin/
  3992. <Directory "/usr/lib/cgi-bin">
  3993. AllowOverride All
  3994. Options +ExecCGI -MultiViews +SymLinksIfOwnerMatch
  3995. Order allow,deny
  3996. Allow from all
  3997. </Directory>
  3998. ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log
  3999. # Possible values include: debug, info, notice, warn, error, crit,
  4000. # alert, emerg.
  4001. LogLevel error
  4002. CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined
  4003. </VirtualHost>
  4004. <IfModule mod_ssl.c>
  4005. <VirtualHost *:443>
  4006. ServerAdmin myusername@mywikidomainname.com
  4007. ServerName mywikidomainname.com
  4008. DocumentRoot /var/www/mywikidomainname.com/htdocs
  4009. <Directory /var/www/mywikidomainname.com/htdocs>
  4010. order deny,allow
  4011. allow from all
  4012. </Directory>
  4013. <LocationMatch "/(data|conf|bin|inc)/">
  4014. order allow,deny
  4015. deny from all
  4016. satisfy all
  4017. </LocationMatch>
  4018. <Directory />
  4019. Options FollowSymLinks
  4020. AllowOverride All
  4021. </Directory>
  4022. ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /usr/lib/cgi-bin/
  4023. <Directory "/usr/lib/cgi-bin">
  4024. AllowOverride All
  4025. Options +ExecCGI -MultiViews +SymLinksIfOwnerMatch
  4026. Order allow,deny
  4027. Allow from all
  4028. </Directory>
  4029. ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log
  4030. # Possible values include: debug, info, notice, warn, error, crit,
  4031. # alert, emerg.
  4032. LogLevel error
  4033. CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/ssl_access.log combined
  4034. # SSL Engine Switch:
  4035. # Enable/Disable SSL for this virtual host.
  4036. SSLEngine on
  4037. # A self-signed certificate
  4038. SSLCertificateFile /etc/ssl/certs/mydomainname.com.crt
  4039. SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/ssl/private/mydomainname.com.key
  4040. # Options based on bettercrypto.org
  4041. SSLProtocol All -SSLv2 -SSLv3
  4042. SSLHonorCipherOrder On
  4043. SSLCompression off
  4044. SSLCipherSuite EDH+CAMELLIA:EDH+aRSA:EECDH+aRSA+AESGCM:EECDH+aRSA+SHA384:EECDH+aRSA+SHA256:EECDH:+CAMELLIA256:+AES256:+CAMELLIA128:+AES128:+SSLv3:!aNULL:!eNULL:!LOW:!3DES:!MD5:!EXP:!PSK:!SRP:!DSS:!RC4:!SEED:!ECDSA:CAMELLIA256-SHA:AES256-SHA:CAMELLIA128-SHA:AES128-SHA
  4045. # SSL Engine Options:
  4046. # Set various options for the SSL engine.
  4047. # o FakeBasicAuth:
  4048. # Translate the client X.509 into a Basic Authorisation. This means that
  4049. # the standard Auth/DBMAuth methods can be used for access control. The
  4050. # user name is the `one line' version of the client's X.509 certificate.
  4051. # Note that no password is obtained from the user. Every entry in the user
  4052. # file needs this password: `xxj31ZMTZzkVA'.
  4053. # o ExportCertData:
  4054. # This exports two additional environment variables: SSL_CLIENT_CERT and
  4055. # SSL_SERVER_CERT. These contain the PEM-encoded certificates of the
  4056. # server (always existing) and the client (only existing when client
  4057. # authentication is used). This can be used to import the certificates
  4058. # into CGI scripts.
  4059. # o StdEnvVars:
  4060. # This exports the standard SSL/TLS related `SSL_*' environment variables.
  4061. # Per default this exportation is switched off for performance reasons,
  4062. # because the extraction step is an expensive operation and is usually
  4063. # useless for serving static content. So one usually enables the
  4064. # exportation for CGI and SSI requests only.
  4065. # o StrictRequire:
  4066. # This denies access when "SSLRequireSSL" or "SSLRequire" applied even
  4067. # under a "Satisfy any" situation, i.e. when it applies access is denied
  4068. # and no other module can change it.
  4069. # o OptRenegotiate:
  4070. # This enables optimized SSL connection renegotiation handling when SSL
  4071. # directives are used in per-directory context.
  4072. #SSLOptions +FakeBasicAuth +ExportCertData +StrictRequire
  4073. <FilesMatch "\.(cgi|shtml|phtml|php)$">
  4074. SSLOptions +StdEnvVars
  4075. </FilesMatch>
  4076. <Directory /usr/lib/cgi-bin>
  4077. SSLOptions +StdEnvVars
  4078. </Directory>
  4079. # SSL Protocol Adjustments:
  4080. # The safe and default but still SSL/TLS standard compliant shutdown
  4081. # approach is that mod_ssl sends the close notify alert but doesn't wait for
  4082. # the close notify alert from client. When you need a different shutdown
  4083. # approach you can use one of the following variables:
  4084. # o ssl-unclean-shutdown:
  4085. # This forces an unclean shutdown when the connection is closed, i.e. no
  4086. # SSL close notify alert is send or allowed to received. This violates
  4087. # the SSL/TLS standard but is needed for some brain-dead browsers. Use
  4088. # this when you receive I/O errors because of the standard approach where
  4089. # mod_ssl sends the close notify alert.
  4090. # o ssl-accurate-shutdown:
  4091. # This forces an accurate shutdown when the connection is closed, i.e. a
  4092. # SSL close notify alert is send and mod_ssl waits for the close notify
  4093. # alert of the client. This is 100% SSL/TLS standard compliant, but in
  4094. # practice often causes hanging connections with brain-dead browsers. Use
  4095. # this only for browsers where you know that their SSL implementation
  4096. # works correctly.
  4097. # Notice: Most problems of broken clients are also related to the HTTP
  4098. # keep-alive facility, so you usually additionally want to disable
  4099. # keep-alive for those clients, too. Use variable "nokeepalive" for this.
  4100. # Similarly, one has to force some clients to use HTTP/1.0 to workaround
  4101. # their broken HTTP/1.1 implementation. Use variables "downgrade-1.0" and
  4102. # "force-response-1.0" for this.
  4103. BrowserMatch "MSIE [2-6]" \
  4104. nokeepalive ssl-unclean-shutdown \
  4105. downgrade-1.0 force-response-1.0
  4106. # MSIE 7 and newer should be able to use keepalive
  4107. BrowserMatch "MSIE [17-9]" ssl-unclean-shutdown
  4108. </VirtualHost>
  4109. </IfModule>
  4110. #+END_SRC
  4111. Enable your site with:
  4112. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4113. a2ensite
  4114. #+END_SRC
  4115. then select the domain name and reload.
  4116. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4117. service apache2 reload
  4118. #+END_SRC
  4119. and alter permissions:
  4120. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4121. chmod -R 755 /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  4122. chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  4123. #+END_SRC
  4124. Open a browser and visit http://$HOSTNAME/install.php, then fill out the details. Once everything has been accepted without errors:
  4125. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4126. rm /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/install.php
  4127. #+END_SRC
  4128. Add a few extra mime types:
  4129. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4130. editor /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/conf/mime.conf
  4131. #+END_SRC
  4132. Append the following:
  4133. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4134. ogv video/ogg
  4135. mp4 video/mp4
  4136. webm video/webm
  4137. #+END_SRC
  4138. Save and exit.
  4139. If you need to be able to upload large files to the wiki then edit */etc/php5/apache2/php.ini* and set *upload_max_filesize* accordingly. If the directory */etc/php5/apache2* doesn't exist then you will need to install the package *libapache2-mod-php5*.
  4140. Now you can visit your wiki and begin editing.
  4141. ** Install Bitmessage
  4142. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  4143. /The weakness of mass surveillance is that it can very easily be made much more expensive through changes in technical standards: pervasive, end-to-end encryption can quickly make indiscriminate surveillance impossible on a cost-effective basis/
  4144. -- Edward J. Snowden, testimony to the EU parliament
  4145. #+END_VERSE
  4146. *** A new kind of Email
  4147. [[https://bitmessage.org][Bitmessage]] is a new type of messaging system intended to fulfill the same role as email, but without the security problems. In particular, Bitmessage attempts to not just encrypt the content but also the metadata. It's message broadcasting system makes it exceedingly difficult for an attacker to know which computer a message is destined for. The only way you know whether a message has been sent to you is whether you are able to decrypt it from the passing stream of messages.
  4148. Although similar to Bitcoin in some regards, such as "/proof of work/", Bitmessage has no block chain and messages are only buffered for approximately three days after which they are deleted from any given node.
  4149. Installing Bitmessage as a daemon will increase the size of the network, and therefore the level of security for all users.
  4150. *** The Daemon
  4151. Install from the current source code.
  4152. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4153. apt-get install python screen
  4154. cd /tmp
  4155. git clone https://github.com/Bitmessage/PyBitmessage.git
  4156. cd PyBitmessage
  4157. make install
  4158. #+END_SRC
  4159. Now create the daemon.
  4160. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4161. editor /etc/init.d/pybitmessage
  4162. #+END_SRC
  4163. Add the following text:
  4164. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4165. #!/bin/bash
  4166. # /etc/init.d/bitmessage
  4167. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  4168. # Provides: pybitmessage
  4169. # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog
  4170. # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog
  4171. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  4172. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  4173. # Short-Description: starts bitmessage as a background daemon, suitable for servers
  4174. # Description: This file should be used to construct scripts to be
  4175. # placed in /etc/init.d.
  4176. ### END INIT INFO
  4177. # Author: Super-Nathan <BM-Gu2k3Wy2hpTMYBxSoM2937SPcuU6xzEj>
  4178. #Settings
  4179. SERVICE='pybitmessage'
  4180. LOGFILE='/dev/null' # this disables logging
  4181. # LOGFILE='/var/log/bitmessage.log' # comment out the above line and un-comment this line to save a log
  4182. COMMAND="python bitmessagemain.py > $LOGFILE"
  4183. USERNAME='bitmsg'
  4184. NICELEVEL=19 # from 0-19 the bigger the number, the less the impact on system resources
  4185. HISTORY=1024
  4186. PBM_LOCATION="/usr/local/share/pybitmessage"
  4187. INVOCATION="nice -n ${NICELEVEL} ${COMMAND}"
  4188. PATH='/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/bin/core_perl:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/local/share/pybitmessage'
  4189. bm_start() {
  4190. echo "Starting $SERVICE..."
  4191. cd ${PBM_LOCATION}
  4192. su --command "screen -h ${HISTORY} -dmS ${SERVICE} ${INVOCATION}" $USERNAME
  4193. }
  4194. bm_stop() {
  4195. echo "Stopping $SERVICE"
  4196. su --command "screen -p 0 -S ${SERVICE} -X stuff "'^C'"" $USERNAME
  4197. }
  4198. #Start-Stop here
  4199. case "$1" in
  4200. start)
  4201. bm_start
  4202. ;;
  4203. stop)
  4204. bm_stop
  4205. ;;
  4206. restart)
  4207. bm_stop
  4208. sleep 60s
  4209. bm_start
  4210. ;;
  4211. *)
  4212. echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart}"
  4213. exit 1
  4214. ;;
  4215. esac
  4216. exit 0
  4217. #+END_SRC
  4218. Save and exit.
  4219. Add a user which will be specifically for Bitmessage. Since bitmessage is still a relatively young and experimental project, this adds further compartmentalisation such that if there are any bugs within PyBitmessage then an attacker can't neccessarily gain control of root or any other user account. Here we create a user called /bitmsg/ and give it a long random password.
  4220. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4221. adduser bitmsg
  4222. #+END_SRC
  4223. Create a /keys.dat/ file which is used to configure Bitmessage.
  4224. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4225. mkdir /home/bitmsg/.config
  4226. mkdir /home/bitmsg/.config/PyBitmessage
  4227. editor /home/bitmsg/.config/PyBitmessage/keys.dat
  4228. #+END_SRC
  4229. Add the following:
  4230. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4231. [bitmessagesettings]
  4232. settingsversion = 8
  4233. port = 8444
  4234. timeformat = %%a, %%d %%b %%Y %%I:%%M %%p
  4235. blackwhitelist = black
  4236. startonlogon = False
  4237. minimizetotray = False
  4238. showtraynotifications = True
  4239. startintray = False
  4240. socksproxytype = none
  4241. sockshostname = localhost
  4242. socksport = 9050
  4243. socksauthentication = False
  4244. sockslisten = False
  4245. socksusername =
  4246. sockspassword =
  4247. keysencrypted = false
  4248. messagesencrypted = false
  4249. defaultnoncetrialsperbyte = 640
  4250. defaultpayloadlengthextrabytes = 14000
  4251. minimizeonclose = false
  4252. maxacceptablenoncetrialsperbyte = 0
  4253. maxacceptablepayloadlengthextrabytes = 0
  4254. userlocale = system
  4255. useidenticons = True
  4256. identiconsuffix = re9E9UtSEaWD
  4257. replybelow = False
  4258. stopresendingafterxdays = 4
  4259. stopresendingafterxmonths =
  4260. namecoinrpctype = namecoind
  4261. namecoinrpchost = localhost
  4262. namecoinrpcuser =
  4263. namecoinrpcpassword =
  4264. namecoinrpcport = 8336
  4265. sendoutgoingconnections = True
  4266. willinglysendtomobile = False
  4267. daemon = true
  4268. #+END_SRC
  4269. Save and exit. Then enable the daemon and run it.
  4270. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4271. rm -f /tmp/-usr-local-share-pybitmessage-*.lock
  4272. chown -R bitmsg:bitmsg /home/bitmsg
  4273. chmod +x /etc/init.d/pybitmessage
  4274. update-rc.d pybitmessage defaults
  4275. service pybitmessage start
  4276. #+END_SRC
  4277. Now open port 8444 on your internet router or firewall and direct it to the BBB.
  4278. *** Using Bitmessage
  4279. Although in principle it would be possible to send Bitmessages directly from the BBB, in practice the /proof of work/ requirement would mean that it would take an infeasibly long time to send messages, and the computational workload would likely greatly impair the performance of other services also running on the system. So to send and receive Bitmessages it's better to just install the client on a laptop or desktop machine.
  4280. The easiest way to install the client is either to download it from [[https://bitmessage.org][bitmessage.org]] or to get the latest build from Github as follows:
  4281. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4282. cd /tmp
  4283. git clone https://github.com/Bitmessage/PyBitmessage.git
  4284. cd PyBitmessage
  4285. make install
  4286. pybitmessage
  4287. #+END_SRC
  4288. ** Overcome restrictive environments
  4289. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  4290. /Censorship reflects a society's lack of confidence in itself. It is a hallmark of an authoritarian regime./
  4291. -- Potter Stewart
  4292. #+END_VERSE
  4293. In some environments, such as behind corporate firewalls or under regimes hostile towards the idea of open access to knowledge and information you may find that you're not able to use tools such as /ssh/ to get access to the BBB. In the worst case all ports other than 80 and 443 may be blocked.
  4294. In that scenario you can use a tool called [[http://code.google.com/p/shellinabox/][shellinabox]] to log into your BBB via your web site rather than via a terminal. This means that you can administrate your system from any device which has a web browser and keyboard.
  4295. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4296. apt-get install shellinabox libapache2-mod-proxy-html
  4297. #+END_SRC
  4298. Update your Apache configuration.
  4299. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4300. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  4301. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/$HOSTNAME
  4302. #+END_SRC
  4303. Within the section which begins with *<VirtualHost *:443>* add the following, replacing /mydomainname.com/ with your domain name and /myusername/ with your username.
  4304. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4305. <Location /shell>
  4306. ProxyPass http://localhost:4200/
  4307. Order allow,deny
  4308. Allow from all
  4309. AuthName "Authentication for shellinabox"
  4310. AuthUserFile /home/mydomainname.com/public_html/.htpasswd
  4311. AuthGroupFile /home/mydomainname.com/public_html/.htgroup
  4312. AuthType Basic
  4313. Require group shellinabox
  4314. Require user myusername
  4315. </Location>
  4316. #+END_SRC
  4317. Save and exit, then create a login password. It's recommended that the password be a long random string and that you then access it using a password manager such as KeepassX.
  4318. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4319. mkdir /home/$HOSTNAME
  4320. mkdir /home/$HOSTNAME/public_html
  4321. htpasswd -c /home/$HOSTNAME/public_html/.htpasswd myusername
  4322. #+END_SRC
  4323. Create a user group.
  4324. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4325. editor /home/$HOSTNAME/public_html/.htgroup
  4326. #+END_SRC
  4327. Add the following:
  4328. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4329. shellinabox: myusername
  4330. #+END_SRC
  4331. Save and exit, then restart Apache.
  4332. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4333. a2enmod proxy_http
  4334. service apache2 restart
  4335. #+END_SRC
  4336. Now with a web browser navigate to https://mydomainname.com/shell and log in.
  4337. If you're in a very locked down environment where access to web sites is severely restricted then as a last resort you may be able to use a command line browser, such as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynx_%28web_browser%29][lynx]] from within /shellinabox/.
  4338. ** Set up a mailing list
  4339. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  4340. /All over the world there are many people who are united in creating software, content, and culture that is freely available for others to share, enjoy and enrich their lives. Together we believe that freedom is good. We believe it helps people do good things, make better choices, and lead safer and more secure lives. Together we are a community united by this belief./
  4341. -- Jono Bacon
  4342. #+END_VERSE
  4343. *** Public mailing list
  4344. Email mailing lists are old skool but still remain as a common and easy way of communicating on the internet. If you're running a public organisation such as an open source project or community group then you may want to set one up.
  4345. **** Installation
  4346. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4347. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  4348. apt-get install mailman
  4349. newlist mailman
  4350. #+END_SRC
  4351. Enter an email address for the list administrator and a password.
  4352. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4353. editor /etc/mailman/mm_cfg.py
  4354. #+END_SRC
  4355. Set *MTA=None* and change *http:* to *https:*, then save and exit.
  4356. Add some settings.
  4357. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4358. editor /etc/exim4/conf.d/main/04_mailman_options
  4359. #+END_SRC
  4360. Add the following, replacing /mydomainname.com/ with your domain name.
  4361. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4362. # Mailman macro definitions
  4363. # Home dir for the Mailman installation
  4364. MM_HOME=/var/lib/mailman
  4365. # User and group for Mailman
  4366. MM_UID=list
  4367. MM_GID=list
  4368. #
  4369. # Domains that your lists are in - colon separated list
  4370. # you may wish to add these into local_domains as well
  4371. domainlist mm_domains=mydomainname.com
  4372. # The path of the Mailman mail wrapper script
  4373. MM_WRAP=MM_HOME/mail/mailman
  4374. #
  4375. # The path of the list config file (used as a required file when
  4376. # verifying list addresses)
  4377. MM_LISTCHK=MM_HOME/lists/${lc::$local_part}/config.pck
  4378. #+END_SRC
  4379. Save and exit.
  4380. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4381. editor /etc/exim4/conf.d/main/000_localmacros
  4382. #+END_SRC
  4383. Append the following:
  4384. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4385. SYSTEM_ALIASES_PIPE_TRANSPORT = address_pipe
  4386. SYSTEM_ALIASES_USER = list
  4387. SYSTEM_ALIASES_GROUP = list
  4388. #+END_SRC
  4389. Save and exit.
  4390. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4391. editor /etc/exim4/conf.d/acl/30_exim4-config_check_rcpt
  4392. #+END_SRC
  4393. Append the following, before the final /accept/:
  4394. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4395. # Do callback verification unless Mailman incoming bounce
  4396. deny !local_parts = *-bounces : *-bounces+*
  4397. !verify = sender/callout=30s,defer_ok
  4398. #+END_SRC
  4399. Save and exit.
  4400. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4401. editor
  4402. /etc/exim4/conf.d/router/450_exim4-config_mailman_aliases
  4403. #+END_SRC
  4404. Add the following:
  4405. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4406. mailman:
  4407. driver = accept
  4408. domains = +mm_domains
  4409. require_files = MM_LISTCHK
  4410. local_part_suffix_optional
  4411. local_part_suffix = -admin : \
  4412. -bounces : -bounces+* : \
  4413. -confirm : -confirm+* : \
  4414. -join : -leave : \
  4415. -owner : -request : \
  4416. -subscribe : -unsubscribe
  4417. transport = mailman_transport
  4418. #+END_SRC
  4419. Save and exit.
  4420. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4421. editor /etc/exim4/conf.d/transport/40_exim4-config_mailman_pipe
  4422. #+END_SRC
  4423. Add the following:
  4424. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4425. mailman_transport:
  4426. driver = pipe
  4427. command = MM_WRAP \
  4428. '${if def:local_part_suffix \
  4429. {${sg{$local_part_suffix}{-(\\w+)(\\+.*)?}{\$1}}} \
  4430. {post}}' \
  4431. $local_part
  4432. current_directory = MM_HOME
  4433. home_directory = MM_HOME
  4434. user = MM_UID
  4435. group = MM_GID
  4436. #+END_SRC
  4437. Save and exit.
  4438. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4439. chown root:list /var/lib/mailman/mail/mailman
  4440. update-exim4.conf.template -r
  4441. update-exim4.conf
  4442. service exim4 restart
  4443. editor /etc/apache2/conf.d/mailman
  4444. #+END_SRC
  4445. Add the following:
  4446. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4447. Alias /pipermail /var/lib/mailman/archives/public
  4448. Alias /images/mailman /usr/share/images/mailman
  4449. <directory /var/lib/mailman/archives/public>
  4450. DirectoryIndex index.html
  4451. </directory>
  4452. #+END_SRC
  4453. Save and exit.
  4454. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4455. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/$HOSTNAME
  4456. #+END_SRC
  4457. Add the following to the 443 section.
  4458. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4459. <Location /mailman>
  4460. Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
  4461. Order allow,deny
  4462. Allow from all
  4463. RedirectMatch ^/$ /cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo
  4464. </Location>
  4465. #+END_SRC
  4466. Save and exit.
  4467. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4468. service apache2 restart
  4469. #+END_SRC
  4470. Now add your mailing list. The list name should not include any spaces.
  4471. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4472. newlist mymailinglistname
  4473. #+END_SRC
  4474. With a browser visit https://$HOSTNAME/cgi-bin/mailman/admin/mymailinglistname to configure the mailing list.
  4475. Under *General Options* add an email address for a moderator (could be the same as the administrator) and click *Submit your changes*.
  4476. Under *Privacy Options* set steps required for subscription to *Confirm and approve* and click *Submit your changes*.
  4477. Also change these settings for the account within https://$HOSTNAME/cgi-bin/mailman/admin/mailman
  4478. Then to test that the mailing list works:
  4479. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4480. exim -d+route -bt mymailinglistname@$HOSTNAME
  4481. #+END_SRC
  4482. If everything is working then this shouldn't show any problems.
  4483. **** Using the mailing list
  4484. Direct subscribers towards:
  4485. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4486. https://mydomainname.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mymailinglistname
  4487. #+END_SRC
  4488. To administrate the list visit:
  4489. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4490. https://mydomainname.com/cgi-bin/mailman/admin/mymailinglistname
  4491. #+END_SRC
  4492. To add another mailing list:
  4493. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4494. newlist mymailinglistname
  4495. #+END_SRC
  4496. To delete a mailing list:
  4497. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4498. rmlist -a mymailinglistname
  4499. #+END_SRC
  4500. *** Private (encrypted) mailing list
  4501. In addition to conventional public email lists it's also possible to set up a private mailing list which is only readable by members. A private email list uses [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Privacy_Guard][GPG]] and a public/private key pair for the server which can then be used to send emails to the list in an encrypted form. The email addresses and public GPG keys of members may be added to the list so that any new messages can be distributed to them in a secure manner.
  4502. Private mailing lists are likely to be able to keep the contents of the discussion out of the clutches of warrantless mass surveillance but, as with all conventional email, it won't prevent such systems from generating social graphs of who is communicating with the list since the /from/ and /to/ attributes are always transmitted in the clear.
  4503. **** Installation
  4504. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4505. apt-get install schleuder
  4506. #+END_SRC
  4507. Edit the configuration:
  4508. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4509. editor /etc/schleuder/schleuder.conf
  4510. #+END_SRC
  4511. Set the following parameters, replacing /mydomainname.com/ with your domain name:
  4512. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4513. smtp_port: 465
  4514. superadminaddr: root@mydomainname.com
  4515. #+END_SRC
  4516. Save and exit.
  4517. Get your GPG public key, replacing /myGPGkeyID/ with your GPG key ID:
  4518. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4519. export MYKEYID=myGPGkeyID
  4520. gpg --search-keys $MYKEYID
  4521. gpg --output /tmp/mypublickey.txt --armor --export $MYKEYID
  4522. #+END_SRC
  4523. Then to create a mailing list, replacing /mydomainname.com/ with your domain name, /myusername/ with your username and /mailinglistname/ with the name of the mailing list. /mailinglistname/ should be all one word, with no spaces.
  4524. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4525. export MAILINGLISTNAME=mailinglistname
  4526. export MYUSERNAME=myusername
  4527. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  4528. export EMAILADDRESS=$MYUSERNAME@$HOSTNAME
  4529. schleuder-newlist $MAILINGLISTNAME@$HOSTNAME -realname "mailing list name" -adminaddress $EMAILADDRESS -initmember $EMAILADDRESS -initmemberkey /tmp/mypublickey.txt -nointeractive
  4530. #+END_SRC
  4531. Now add a mailing list rule:
  4532. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4533. emailrule $MYUSERNAME $MAILINGLISTNAME@$HOSTNAME $MAILINGLISTNAME
  4534. #+END_SRC
  4535. Edit your Mutt configuration.
  4536. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4537. editor /home/$MYUSERNAME/.muttrc
  4538. #+END_SRC
  4539. Search for the /mailboxes/ parameter and add "=mailinglistname". For example:
  4540. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4541. mailboxes = =Sent =Drafts =mailinglistname
  4542. #+END_SRC
  4543. Save and exit.
  4544. Update Exim routing.
  4545. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4546. editor /etc/exim4/conf.d/router/550_exim4-config_schleuder
  4547. #+END_SRC
  4548. Add the following:
  4549. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4550. schleuder:
  4551. debug_print = "R: schleuder for $local_part@$domain"
  4552. driver = accept
  4553. local_part_suffix_optional
  4554. local_part_suffix = +* : -bounce : -sendkey
  4555. domains = +local_domains
  4556. user = schleuder
  4557. group = schleuder
  4558. require_files = schleuder:+/var/lib/schleuder/$domain/${local_part}
  4559. transport = schleuder_transport
  4560. #+END_SRC
  4561. Save and exit.
  4562. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4563. editor /etc/exim4/conf.d/transport/30_exim4-config_schleuder
  4564. #+END_SRC
  4565. Add the following.
  4566. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4567. schleuder_transport:
  4568. debug_print = "T: schleuder_transport for $local_part@$domain"
  4569. driver = pipe
  4570. home_directory = "/var/lib/schleuder/$domain/$local_part"
  4571. command = "/usr/bin/schleuder $local_part@$domain"
  4572. #+END_SRC
  4573. Save and exit.
  4574. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4575. chown -R schleuder:schleuder /var/lib/schleuder
  4576. update-exim4.conf.template -r
  4577. update-exim4.conf
  4578. service exim4 restart
  4579. useradd -d /var/schleuderlists -s /bin/false schleuder
  4580. adduser Debian-exim schleuder
  4581. usermod -a -G mail schleuder
  4582. #+END_SRC
  4583. Test the routing.
  4584. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4585. exim -d -bt mailinglistname@mydomainname.com
  4586. #+END_SRC
  4587. **** Importing the public key of the mailing list
  4588. Before you can use the mailing list you will first need to import its public key. How you do this depends upon which email client you're using.
  4589. ***** Using Mutt
  4590. Send an email to /mailinglistname-sendkey@mydomainname.com/ to have the list public key emailed to you.
  4591. When you receive the email open it and press *CTRL-k* to import it.
  4592. ***** Using Thunderbird
  4593. Send an email to /mailinglistname-sendkey@mydomainname.com/ to have the list public key emailed to you.
  4594. When you receive the email open it, select all the text with *CTRL-a* then *CTRL-c*.
  4595. On the menu select *OpenPGP* followed by *Key Management*.
  4596. You will now see a new menu bar. Select *Edit* followed by *Import keys from clipboard*.
  4597. Click on *Import* followed by *Ok*.
  4598. **** Using the list
  4599. To obtain the public keys of list members send an email to /mailinglistname-request@mydomainname.com/ containing *X-LIST-KEYS* in the message body.
  4600. To add a member: *X-ADD-MEMBER: othermember@otherdomain.net*
  4601. An example of adding a public key to the list:
  4602. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4603. X-ADD-KEY:
  4604. -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
  4605. Version: GnuPG v1.4.9 (GNU/Linux)
  4606. mQGiBEjVO7oRBADQvT6wtD2IzzIiK0NbrcilCKCp4MWb8cYXTXguwPQI6y0Nerz4
  4607. dsK6J0X1Vgeo02tqA4xd3EDK8rdqL2yZfl/2egH8+85R3gDk+kqkfEp4pwCgp6VO
  4608. [...]
  4609. pNlF/qkaWwRb048h+iMrW21EkouLKTDPFkdFbapV2X5KJZIcfhO1zEbwc1ZKF3Ju
  4610. Q9X5GRmY62hz9SCZnsC0jeYAni8OUQV9NXfXlS/vePBUnOL08NQB
  4611. =xTv3
  4612. -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
  4613. #+END_SRC
  4614. To get details for a member: *X-GET-MEMBER: othermember@otherdomain.net*
  4615. To delete a member: *X-DELETE-MEMBER: othermember@otherdomain.net*
  4616. To delete a public key: *X-DELETE-KEY: keyID*
  4617. You can unsubscribe from the list with *X-UNSUBSCRIBE* in the message body.
  4618. *** Decentralised mailing list
  4619. A disadvantage with encrypted mailing lists which use the conventional email system is that there is a single server on which the list resides, and this creates a single point of failure and a bandwidth bottleneck for more heavily subscribed lists. If the mailing list server goes down for whatever reason then that may cause a lot of disruption to its users.
  4620. An alternative is to use a decentralised mailing list, implemented using Bitmessage. On your local machine (not the BBB) you can make a private mailing list which is difficult to censor and where there is no single point of failure. This type of mailing list is known as a "/chan/".
  4621. With Bitmessage if any one computer goes offline then the conversation can still keep going since there is no central mailing list server. Bitmessages are also encrypted with public/private key pairs and the manner in which the system operates makes it very difficult for the surveillance apparatus to exfiltrate the social graph of list users.
  4622. On a Debian based system:
  4623. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4624. sudo apt-get install makepasswd
  4625. #+END_SRC
  4626. or on an RPM based system:
  4627. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4628. sudo yum install makepasswd
  4629. #+END_SRC
  4630. Create a name for your mailing list. This will be a random string.
  4631. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4632. makepasswd -c 40
  4633. #+END_SRC
  4634. Keep a note of this.
  4635. Run the Bitmessage client and on the menu select *File/Join-Create Chan/Create new chan*
  4636. Enter the random string which you created as the name of the mailing list. Also take a note of the BM address which is created.
  4637. You can hand out the random string used to generate the mailing list and its corresponding BM address to fellow members, either within a bitmessage or on paper or via [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneakernet][sneakernet]] or in a GPG/PGP encrypted email or via an XMPP+OTR or Friendica private message. Once others have those two pieces of data then they will be able to join.
  4638. To make the list easier to identify, rather than just appearing as a random string, then under the *Your Identities* tab right click on it and select *Set Avatar* and assign a suitable icon.
  4639. The disadvantage of this type of mailing list is that it's not possible for any one participant to act as a list moderator, or in other words each participant must do their own moderation. That's ok if the size of the group is small, but if it's larger then anyone spamming or trolling the list can make things miserable for the others.
  4640. ** Install a microblog
  4641. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  4642. /If you want to have more control over how you interact on the web, and regain your freedom, privacy and autonomy from outside interference, you need to start moving towards using programs like GNU Social/
  4643. -- Jason Self
  4644. #+END_VERSE
  4645. For a microblog you will need a separate domain/subdomain, so see [[Setting up a web site]] for details of how to create an Apache configuration for your microblog. If you're using freedns then you will need to create a new subdomain.
  4646. Install some dependencies:
  4647. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4648. apt-get install php5-xcache php-gettext php5-curl php5-gd php5-mysql
  4649. #+END_SRC
  4650. Download GNU Social
  4651. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4652. cd /tmp
  4653. wget http://freedombone.uk.to/gnu-social.tar.gz
  4654. #+END_SRC
  4655. Verify it.
  4656. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4657. sha256sum gnu-social.tar.gz
  4658. 1f886241c7f1a175e7be3cccbcb944ab6c03617fb75aefa4d62d37abed87d2b4
  4659. #+END_SRC
  4660. Extract the files and set permissions on them, where /mydomainname.com/ is your domain name.
  4661. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4662. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  4663. tar zxf gnu-social.tar.gz
  4664. rm -rf /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  4665. mv statusnet-gnu-social /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  4666. chmod a+w /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  4667. chown www-data:www-data /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs
  4668. chmod a+w /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/avatar
  4669. chmod a+w /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/background
  4670. chmod a+w /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/file
  4671. chmod +x /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/scripts/maildaemon.php
  4672. #+END_SRC
  4673. Edit the Apache access settings.
  4674. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4675. editor /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/.htaccess
  4676. #+END_SRC
  4677. Add the following:
  4678. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4679. <IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
  4680. RewriteEngine On
  4681. RewriteBase /
  4682. ## Uncomment these if having trouble with API authentication
  4683. ## when PHP is running in CGI or FastCGI mode.
  4684. #
  4685. #RewriteCond %{HTTP:Authorization} ^(.*)
  4686. #RewriteRule ^(.*) - [E=HTTP_AUTHORIZATION:%1]
  4687. RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
  4688. RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
  4689. RewriteRule (.*) index.php?p=$1 [L,QSA]
  4690. </IfModule>
  4691. <FilesMatch "\.(ini)">
  4692. Order allow,deny
  4693. </FilesMatch>
  4694. #+END_SRC
  4695. Save and exit, then create a database.
  4696. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4697. mysql -u root -p
  4698. create database gnusocial;
  4699. CREATE USER 'gnusocialadmin'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'gnusocialpassword';
  4700. GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON gnusocial.* TO 'gnusocialadmin'@'localhost';
  4701. quit
  4702. #+END_SRC
  4703. Add the mailer script to the aliases file:
  4704. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4705. editor /etc/aliases
  4706. #+END_SRC
  4707. Add the following, replacing /mydomainname.com/ with your domain name.
  4708. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4709. www-data: root
  4710. *: /var/www/mydomainname.com/htdocs/scripts/maildaemon.php
  4711. #+END_SRC
  4712. Save and exit. Update the aliases by typing:
  4713. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4714. newaliases
  4715. #+END_SRC
  4716. Then with a web browser navigate to:
  4717. https://$HOSTNAME/install.php
  4718. Set a name for the site.
  4719. Server SSL: enable
  4720. Hostname: localhost
  4721. Type: MySql
  4722. Name: gnusocial
  4723. DB username: gnusocialadmin
  4724. DB Password; your gnu social admin password goes here
  4725. Administrator nickname: myusername
  4726. Administrator password: mylongrandompassword
  4727. Subscribe to announcements: ticked
  4728. Site profile: Community
  4729. Press the *Submit* button. It may take a few minutes, so don't be concerned that it has crashed. When the process completes you will see a lot of "Strict standards" warnings which you can ignore.
  4730. Navigate to http://$HOSTNAME/gnusocial and you can then complete the configuration via the *Admin* section on the header bar. Some recommended admin settings are:
  4731. Under the *Site* settings:
  4732. Text limit: 140
  4733. Dupe Limit: 60000
  4734. Under the *User* settings:
  4735. Bio limit: 1000
  4736. Under the *Access* settings:
  4737. /Invite only/ ticked
  4738. Under the License section select a license if you wish. Details for Creative Commons licenses [[https://creativecommons.org/licenses/][can be found here]]. If you only intend to do private microblogging then just leave these settings as they are.
  4739. If you want to invite more users then click on the big button *Invite more colleagues*, then enter their email addresses and hit the *send* button. The invite only configuration which you've just installed is useful because it prevents spammers, or other [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Threat_Research_Intelligence_Group]["bad actors"]], from clogging your system with nonsense.
  4740. Edit the config file.
  4741. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4742. editor /var/www/$HOSTNAME/htdocs/config.php
  4743. #+END_SRC
  4744. Change the ssl setting from *always* to *sometimes*, hten save and exit.
  4745. So, you're now microblogging on the open web, with no companies in the middle. Congratulations! To find some other people to connect to you can try searching other nodes listed at http://gnu.io/try/
  4746. When following other GNU Social users enter the URL of your profile. For example, https://mygnusocialdomain/myusername
  4747. ** Install Mediagoblin
  4748. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  4749. /The silos that are the main current points of media sharing are not only vulnerable to attacks on free speech, but also hamper important grassroots economic activity by privileging the interests of a tiny minority over those of most of the world./
  4750. #+END_VERSE
  4751. Mediagoblin allows you to have a YouTube/Soundcloud/Flickr/Picasa type of site to share your pictures, videos or audio files. An advantage of not having any company in the middle is that you can't be arbitrarily censored without any explanation, as seems to frequently occur on YouTube. It is recommended that you use media formats which are not encumbered by patents, such as /ogg/ or /ogv/.
  4752. For a mediagoblin site it is recommended to use a separate domain/subdomain, so see [[Setting up a web site]] for details of how to create an Apache configuration for your microblog. If you're using freedns then you will need to create a new subdomain.
  4753. Install some dependencies.
  4754. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4755. apt-get install git-core python python-dev python-lxml python-imaging python-virtualenv python-gst0.10 libjpeg8-dev sqlite3 libapache2-mod-fcgid gstreamer0.10-plugins-base gstreamer0.10-plugins-bad gstreamer0.10-plugins-good gstreamer0.10-plugins-ugly gstreamer0.10-ffmpeg python-numpy python-scipy libsndfile1-dev
  4756. #+END_SRC
  4757. Create a user, replacing /mymediagoblindomain/ with the domain name for your mediagoblin site.
  4758. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4759. export HOSTNAME=mymediagoblindomain
  4760. adduser mediagoblin
  4761. #+END_SRC
  4762. Give the user a long random password.
  4763. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4764. mkdir -p /srv/$HOSTNAME
  4765. chown -hR mediagoblin:mediagoblin /srv/$HOSTNAME
  4766. su - mediagoblin
  4767. export HOSTNAME=mymediagoblindomain
  4768. cd /srv/$HOSTNAME
  4769. git clone git://gitorious.org/mediagoblin/mediagoblin.git
  4770. cd mediagoblin
  4771. git submodule init
  4772. git submodule update
  4773. virtualenv --system-site-packages .
  4774. ./bin/python setup.py develop
  4775. ./bin/easy_install flup
  4776. cp mediagoblin.ini mediagoblin_local.ini
  4777. cp paste.ini paste_local.ini
  4778. editor mediagoblin_local.ini
  4779. #+END_SRC
  4780. Change *email_sender_address* to your email address and set *email_debug_mode* to false. Also append the following to the bottom of the file, under the *plugins* section.
  4781. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4782. [[mediagoblin.media_types.audio]]
  4783. [[mediagoblin.media_types.video]]
  4784. [[mediagoblin.media_types.stl]]
  4785. #+END_SRC
  4786. Then save and exit.
  4787. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4788. ./bin/pip install scikits.audiolab
  4789. ./bin/gmg dbupdate
  4790. exit # to go back to the root user
  4791. editor /etc/init.d/mediagoblin
  4792. #+END_SRC
  4793. Add the following, replacing /mymediagoblindomain/ with the domain name for your mediagoblin site.
  4794. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4795. #!/bin/bash
  4796. # /etc/init.d/mediagoblin
  4797. ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  4798. # Provides: mediagoblin
  4799. # Required-Start: $remote_fs $syslog
  4800. # Required-Stop: $remote_fs $syslog
  4801. # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  4802. # Default-Stop: 0 1 6
  4803. # Short-Description: starts mediagoblin
  4804. # Description: Other methods may work, but I found this the easiest
  4805. ### END INIT INFO
  4806. # Author: Bob Mottram <bob@robotics.uk.to>
  4807. #Settings
  4808. SERVICE='mediagoblin'
  4809. LOGFILE='/srv/mymediagoblindomain/mediagoblin.log'
  4810. COMMAND="./lazyserver.sh > $LOGFILE"
  4811. USERNAME='mediagoblin'
  4812. NICELEVEL=15 # from 0-19 the bigger the number, the less the impact on system resources
  4813. HISTORY=1024
  4814. MG_LOCATION="/srv/mymediagoblindomain/mediagoblin"
  4815. INVOCATION="nice -n ${NICELEVEL} ${COMMAND}"
  4816. PATH='/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/bin/core_perl:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin'
  4817. mg_start() {
  4818. echo "Starting $SERVICE..."
  4819. cd ${MG_LOCATION}
  4820. su --command "screen -h ${HISTORY} -dmS ${SERVICE} ${INVOCATION}" $USERNAME
  4821. }
  4822. mg_stop() {
  4823. echo "Stopping $SERVICE"
  4824. su --command "screen -p 0 -S ${SERVICE} -X stuff "'^C'"" $USERNAME
  4825. }
  4826. #Start-Stop here
  4827. case "$1" in
  4828. start)
  4829. mg_start
  4830. ;;
  4831. stop)
  4832. mg_stop
  4833. ;;
  4834. restart)
  4835. mg_stop
  4836. sleep 10s
  4837. mg_start
  4838. ;;
  4839. *)
  4840. echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart}"
  4841. exit 1
  4842. ;;
  4843. esac
  4844. exit 0
  4845. #+END_SRC
  4846. Save and exit.
  4847. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4848. chmod +x /etc/init.d/mediagoblin
  4849. update-rc.d mediagoblin defaults
  4850. service mediagoblin start
  4851. #+END_SRC
  4852. Edit the Apache configuration for your mediagoblin site.
  4853. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4854. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/mymediagoblindomain
  4855. #+END_SRC
  4856. Delete the existing configuration (in Emacs it's CTRL-x h then CTRL-w) and paste the following, replacing /mymediagoblindomain/ with your mediagoblin domain name and /myusername@mydomainname.com/ with your email address.
  4857. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4858. <VirtualHost *:80>
  4859. ServerAdmin myusername@mydomainname.com
  4860. DocumentRoot /srv/mymediagoblindomain/mediagoblin
  4861. ServerName mymediagoblindomain
  4862. <Directory />
  4863. Options FollowSymLinks
  4864. AllowOverride None
  4865. </Directory>
  4866. <Directory /srv/mymediagoblindomain/mediagoblin/>
  4867. Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
  4868. AllowOverride All
  4869. Order allow,deny
  4870. allow from all
  4871. </Directory>
  4872. LogLevel warn
  4873. ProxyVia On
  4874. ProxyRequests off
  4875. ProxyPreserveHost on
  4876. ProxyPass / http://localhost:6543/
  4877. ErrorLog "/var/log/apache2/error.log"
  4878. CustomLog "/var/log/apache2/access.log" combined
  4879. RewriteEngine On
  4880. RewriteOptions Inherit
  4881. </VirtualHost>
  4882. #+END_SRC
  4883. Save and exit.
  4884. Now in a browser visit http://mymediagoblindomain and create a user. If you wish this to be a single user installation to prevent a lot of spammers signing up.
  4885. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4886. editor /srv/mymediagoblindomain/mediagoblin/mediagoblin_local.ini
  4887. #+END_SRC
  4888. Then set:
  4889. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4890. allow_registration = false
  4891. #+END_SRC
  4892. Save and exit.
  4893. ** Install Tripwire
  4894. #+BEGIN_VERSE
  4895. /...by the time you get done with all of that, we have a freedom box/
  4896. -- Eben Moglen
  4897. #+END_VERSE
  4898. Tripwire will try to detect any intrusions into your system. It's a good idea to install it after you have installed all of the other programs which you intend to use.
  4899. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4900. apt-get install tripwire
  4901. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  4902. cd /etc/tripwire
  4903. cp arm-local.key $HOSTNAME-local.key
  4904. cp site.key $HOSTNAME-site.key
  4905. tripwire --init
  4906. tripwire --update-policy --secure-mode low /etc/tripwire/twpol.txt
  4907. tripwire --check --interactive
  4908. #+END_SRC
  4909. you will be asked for two passphrases ("site" and "local"). Make a note of these.
  4910. Turn off reporting of changes to system logs.
  4911. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4912. editor /etc/tripwire/twcfg.txt
  4913. #+END_SRC
  4914. Set *SYSLOGREPORTING* to false and comment out the line, then save and exit.
  4915. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4916. editor /etc/tripwire/twpol.txt
  4917. #+END_SRC
  4918. Comment out the lines:
  4919. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4920. /var/log -> $(SEC_CONFIG) ;
  4921. /proc -> $(Device) ;
  4922. #+END_SRC
  4923. Then save and exit.
  4924. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4925. editor /usr/bin/reset-tripwire
  4926. #+END_SRC
  4927. Add the following:
  4928. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4929. #!/bin/sh
  4930. tripwire --update-policy --secure-mode low /etc/tripwire/twpol.txt
  4931. #+END_SRC
  4932. Save and exit.
  4933. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4934. chmod +x /usr/bin/reset-tripwire
  4935. #+END_SRC
  4936. If you subsequently install any more packages or make configuration changes then update the policy again with:
  4937. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4938. reset-tripwire
  4939. #+END_SRC
  4940. Also, to look for any rootkits.
  4941. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4942. apt-get install rkhunter
  4943. #+END_SRC
  4944. * Router/Firewall ports
  4945. The following ports on your internet router/firewall should be forwarded to the BBB.
  4946. | Protocol | Port/s |
  4947. |---------------+------------|
  4948. | Gopher | 70 |
  4949. | HTTP | 80 |
  4950. | HTTPS | 443 |
  4951. | IMAP | 143 |
  4952. | IRC SSL | 6697 |
  4953. | SIP | 5060..5061 |
  4954. | SMTP | 25,587 |
  4955. | SMTPS | 465 |
  4956. | SSH | 22 |
  4957. | XMPP | 5222..5223 |
  4958. | XMPP (server) | 5269 |
  4959. | XMPP (BOSH) | 5280..5281 |
  4960. | Bitmessage | 8444 |
  4961. | Convergence | 8432..8433 |
  4962. * Hints and Tips
  4963. ** Example software sources
  4964. If you get errors when running *apt-get update* then you may need to check your repositories list. Here are examples of repositories within */etc/apt/sources.list*
  4965. *** Beaglebone Black
  4966. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4967. deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
  4968. deb-src http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
  4969. deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy-updates main contrib non-free
  4970. deb-src http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy-updates main contrib non-free
  4971. deb http://security.debian.org/ wheezy/updates main contrib non-free
  4972. deb-src http://security.debian.org/ wheezy/updates main contrib non-free
  4973. deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian wheezy-backports main contrib non-free
  4974. #+END_SRC
  4975. *** Cubieboard
  4976. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4977. deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
  4978. deb-src http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
  4979. deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy-updates main contrib non-free
  4980. deb-src http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ wheezy-updates main contrib non-free
  4981. deb http://security.debian.org/ wheezy/updates main contrib non-free
  4982. deb-src http://security.debian.org/ wheezy/updates main contrib non-free
  4983. deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian wheezy-backports main contrib non-free
  4984. deb http://mirrors.sohu.com/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
  4985. deb-src http://mirrors.sohu.com/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
  4986. deb http://packages.cubian.org/ wheezy main non-free
  4987. deb http://repo.ajenti.org/debian main main debian
  4988. #+END_SRC
  4989. ** Messaging security
  4990. If you're connected to other friends via Friendica then the preferred way to send private messages is via Friendica's built-in messaging system. This is a lot more convenient than using GPG with ordinary email and yet still provides a similar level of protection from unwarranted interception.
  4991. ** Moving Domains
  4992. If you're moving servers and using a different domain name or path then you can search and replace URLs within files in the following way:
  4993. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4994. find /var/www/mynewdomain/htdocs -type f -exec sed -i 's@myolddomain@mynewdomain@g' {} \;
  4995. #+END_SRC
  4996. If you're moving the blog to a new domain then you will need to delete the lock file:
  4997. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  4998. rm /var/www/myblogdomainname.com/htdocs/fp-content/%%setup.lock
  4999. #+END_SRC
  5000. Then visit your blog and reinstall it. Your existing content will be unaffected but you will need to delete the welcome post which gets added and also re-select your chosen theme.
  5001. If you need to import blog posts from another blog then copy the *fp-content/content* directory from the old blog to the new blog, then within the admin panel select *maintain* and *rebuild index*.
  5002. ** MySql foo
  5003. *** Backup all databases
  5004. To back up all mysql databases:
  5005. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5006. mysqldump -u root -p --all-databases --events > /var/backups/databasebackup.sql
  5007. #+END_SRC
  5008. *** Restoring a particular mysql database
  5009. To restore yesterday's friendica backup:
  5010. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5011. mysql -D friendica -o < /var/backups/friendica_daily.sql
  5012. #+END_SRC
  5013. To restore yesterday's mediawiki backup:
  5014. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5015. mysql -D wikidb -o < /var/backups/wikidb_daily.sql
  5016. #+END_SRC
  5017. *** Removing mysql server
  5018. If you manage to screw up sql server completely then it can be fully deleted with:
  5019. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5020. ps aux | grep mysql
  5021. #+END_SRC
  5022. and use /kill -9 <pid>/ to kill all mysql processes.
  5023. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5024. apt-get remove --purge mysql\*
  5025. apt-get clean
  5026. updatedb
  5027. #+END_SRC
  5028. ** Regenerating SSL certificates
  5029. If a security vulnerability arrises which requires you to regenerate your SSL certificates, such as [[http://filippo.io/Heartbleed]["heartbleed"]], then this can be done as follows:
  5030. Obtain the latest updates:
  5031. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5032. apt-get update
  5033. apt-get upgrade
  5034. #+END_SRC
  5035. Run *makecert <domain>* for each of your sites.
  5036. Recreate the XMPP certificate:
  5037. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5038. openssl genrsa -out /etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key 4096
  5039. openssl req -new -x509 -key /etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key -out /etc/ssl/certs/xmpp.crt -days 3650
  5040. chmod 600 /etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key
  5041. chmod 600 /etc/ssl/certs/xmpp.crt
  5042. chown prosody:prosody /etc/ssl/private/xmpp.key
  5043. chown prosody:prosody /etc/ssl/certs/xmpp.crt
  5044. #+END_SRC
  5045. And regenerate the IRC server keys:
  5046. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5047. openssl genrsa -out /etc/ircd-hybrid/key/ircd.key 4096
  5048. openssl req -new -x509 -key /etc/ircd-hybrid/key/ircd.key -out /etc/ircd-hybrid/key/ircd.pem -days 3650
  5049. chmod 600 /etc/ircd-hybrid/key/ircd.key
  5050. chmod 600 /etc/ircd-hybrid/key/ircd.pem
  5051. #+END_SRC
  5052. Regenerate email certificate.
  5053. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5054. exim-gencert --force
  5055. #+END_SRC
  5056. As an added precaution you may wish to regenerate your ssh host keys:
  5057. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5058. rm /etc/ssh/ssh_host_*
  5059. dpkg-reconfigure openssh-server
  5060. #+END_SRC
  5061. Then reboot the server with:
  5062. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5063. reboot
  5064. #+END_SRC
  5065. ** Example crontab file
  5066. This is an example of what your crontab file might look like, with the more frequently run tasks at the top. For the two most frequent tasks specific minutes within each hour are given and they're arranged to try to minimise the number of things running simultaneously.
  5067. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5068. # /etc/crontab: system-wide crontab
  5069. # Unlike any other crontab you don't have to run the `crontab'
  5070. # command to install the new version when you edit this file
  5071. # and files in /etc/cron.d. These files also have username fields,
  5072. # that none of the other crontabs do.
  5073. SHELL=/bin/sh
  5074. PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
  5075. # m h dom mon dow user command
  5076. 10,20,30,40,50 * * * * root /usr/bin/timeout 120 /usr/bin/dynamicdns && /usr/bin/spamfilter myusername
  5077. 15,35,55 * * * * root cd /var/www/mydomainname/htdocs; /usr/bin/timeout 240 /usr/bin/php include/poller.php
  5078. 17 * * * * root cd / && run-parts --report /etc/cron.hourly
  5079. 25 6 * * * root test -x /usr/sbin/anacron || ( cd / && run-parts --report /etc/cron.daily )
  5080. 47 6 * * 7 root test -x /usr/sbin/anacron || ( cd / && run-parts --report /etc/cron.weekly )
  5081. 52 6 1 * * root test -x /usr/sbin/anacron || ( cd / && run-parts --report /etc/cron.monthly )
  5082. #+END_SRC
  5083. ** Using your own domain
  5084. Suppose that you have bought a domain name (rather than using a free subdomain on freedns) and you want to use that instead.
  5085. Remove any existing nameservers for your domain (or select "custom" nameservers), then add:
  5086. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5087. NS1.AFRAID.ORG
  5088. NS2.AFRAID.ORG
  5089. NS3.AFRAID.ORG
  5090. NS4.AFRAID.ORG
  5091. #+END_SRC
  5092. It might take a few minutes for the above change to take effect. Within freedns click on "Domains" and add your domains (this might only be available to paid members). Make sure that they're marked as "private".
  5093. Select "Subdomains" from the menu on the left then select the MX entry for your domain and change the destination to *10:mydomainname* rather than *10:mail.mydomainname*.
  5094. To route email to one of your freedns domains:
  5095. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5096. editor /etc/mailname
  5097. #+END_SRC
  5098. Add any extra domains which you own, then save and exit.
  5099. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5100. editor /etc/exim4/update-exim4.conf.conf
  5101. #+END_SRC
  5102. Within dc_other_hostnames add your extra domain names, separated by a colon ':' character.
  5103. Save and exit, then restart exim.
  5104. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5105. update-exim4.conf.template -r
  5106. update-exim4.conf
  5107. service exim4 restart
  5108. #+END_SRC
  5109. You should now be able to send an email from /postmaster@mynewdomainname/ and it should arrive in your inbox.
  5110. ** Obtaining an "official" SSL certificate
  5111. You can obtain a free "official" (as in recognised by default by web browsers) SSL certificate from [[https://www.startssl.com/][StartSSL]]. You will first need to have bought a domain name, since it's not possible to obtain one for a freedns subdomain, so see [[Using your own domain]] for details of how to do that. You should also have tested that you can send email to the domain and receive it on the BBB (via Mutt or any other email client).
  5112. When creating a SSL certificate it's important that the private key (the private component of the public/private pair in [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public-key_cryptography][public key cryptography]]) be generated on the BBB /and remain there/. Don't generate the private key via the StartSSL certificate wizard because this means that potentially they may retain a copy of it which could then be exfiltrated either via [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavabit][Lavabit]] style methodology, "implants", compromised sysadmins or other "side channel" methods. So that the private key isn't broadcast on the internet we can instead generate a certificate request, which is really just a request for authorisation of a public key.
  5113. Firstly you should have an Apache web site configutaion ready to go. See [[Setting up a web site]] for details.
  5114. Within StartSSL under the validations wizard validate your domain, which means sending an email to it and confirming a code.
  5115. Now we can generate the certificate request as follows.
  5116. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5117. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  5118. openssl genrsa -out /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.key 2048
  5119. chown root:ssl-cert /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.key
  5120. chmod 440 /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.key
  5121. mkdir /etc/ssl/requests
  5122. #+END_SRC
  5123. Now make a certificate request as follows. You should copy and paste the whole of this, not just line by line.
  5124. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5125. openssl req -new -key /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.key -out /etc/ssl/requests/$HOSTNAME.csr
  5126. #+END_SRC
  5127. For the email address it's a good idea to use postmaster@mydomainname.
  5128. Use a random 20 character password, and keep a note of it. We'll remove this later.
  5129. View the request with:
  5130. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5131. cat /etc/ssl/requests/$HOSTNAME.csr
  5132. #+END_SRC
  5133. You can then click on "skip" within the StartSSL certificates wizard and copy and paste the encrypted request into the text entry box. A confirmation will be emailed back to you normally within a few hours.
  5134. Log into your StartSSL account and select *Retrieve Certificate* from the *Tool Box* tab. Copy the text.
  5135. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5136. editor /etc/ssl/certs/$HOSTNAME.crt
  5137. #+END_SRC
  5138. Paste the public key, then save and exit. Then on the BBB.
  5139. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5140. mkdir /etc/ssl/roots
  5141. mkdir /etc/ssl/chains
  5142. wget "http://www.startssl.com/certs/ca.pem" --output-document="/etc/ssl/roots/startssl-root.ca"
  5143. wget "http://www.startssl.com/certs/sub.class1.server.ca.pem" --output-document="/etc/ssl/chains/startssl-sub.class1.server.ca.pem"
  5144. wget "http://www.startssl.com/certs/sub.class2.server.ca.pem" --output-document="/etc/ssl/chains/startssl-sub.class2.server.ca.pem"
  5145. wget "http://www.startssl.com/certs/sub.class3.server.ca.pem" --output-document="/etc/ssl/chains/startssl-sub.class3.server.ca.pem"
  5146. ln -s "/etc/ssl/roots/startssl-root.ca" "/etc/ssl/roots/$HOSTNAME-root.ca"
  5147. ln -s "/etc/ssl/chains/startssl-sub.class1.server.ca.pem" "/etc/ssl/chains/$HOSTNAME.ca"
  5148. cp "/etc/ssl/certs/$HOSTNAME.crt" "/etc/ssl/certs/$HOSTNAME.crt+chain+root"
  5149. test -e "/etc/ssl/chains/$HOSTNAME.ca" && cat "/etc/ssl/chains/$HOSTNAME.ca" >> "/etc/ssl/certs/$HOSTNAME.crt+chain+root"
  5150. test -e "/etc/ssl/roots/$HOSTNAME-root.ca" && cat "/etc/ssl/roots/$HOSTNAME-root.ca" >> "/etc/ssl/certs/$HOSTNAME.crt+chain+root"
  5151. #+END_SRC
  5152. To avoid any possibility of the certificates being accidentally overwritten by self-signed ones at a later date you can create backups.
  5153. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5154. mkdir /etc/ssl/backups
  5155. mkdir /etc/ssl/backups/certs
  5156. mkdir /etc/ssl/backups/private
  5157. cp /etc/ssl/certs/$HOSTNAME* /etc/ssl/backups/certs/
  5158. cp /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME* /etc/ssl/backups/private/
  5159. chmod -R 400 /etc/ssl/backups/certs/*
  5160. chmod -R 400 /etc/ssl/backups/private/*
  5161. #+END_SRC
  5162. Remove the certificate password, so if the server is rebooted then it won't wait indefinitely for a non-existant keyboard user to type in a password.
  5163. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5164. openssl rsa -in /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.key -out /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.new.key
  5165. cp /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.new.key /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.key
  5166. shred -zu /etc/ssl/private/$HOSTNAME.new.key
  5167. #+END_SRC
  5168. Edit your Apache configuration file.
  5169. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5170. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/$HOSTNAME
  5171. #+END_SRC
  5172. Add the following to the section which starts with *<VirtualHost *:443>*
  5173. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5174. SSLCertificateChainFile /etc/ssl/chains/startssl-sub.class1.server.ca.pem
  5175. #+END_SRC
  5176. Save and exit, then restart apache.
  5177. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5178. service apache2 restart
  5179. #+END_SRC
  5180. Now visit your web site at https://mydomainname.com and you should notice that there is no certificate warning displayed. You will now be able to install systems which don't allow the use of self-signed certificates, such as [[https://redmatrix.me/&JS=1][Red Matrix]].
  5181. * Deprecated
  5182. The following items have been deprecated until such time as a successful installation is achieved.
  5183. ** Gitlab
  5184. Install some dependencies:
  5185. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5186. apt-get update -y
  5187. apt-get upgrade -y
  5188. apt-get install sudo -y
  5189. apt-get install -y build-essential zlib1g-dev libyaml-dev libssl-dev libgdbm-dev libreadline-dev libncurses5-dev libffi-dev curl openssh-server redis-server checkinstall libxml2-dev libxslt-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libicu-dev logrotate git-core
  5190. #+END_SRC
  5191. Install bundler
  5192. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5193. gem install bundler --no-ri --no-rdoc
  5194. #+END_SRC
  5195. Create a user for running Gitlab.
  5196. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5197. adduser --disabled-login --gecos 'GitLab' git
  5198. #+END_SRC
  5199. Install mysql (it may already be installed).
  5200. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5201. apt-get install -y mysql-server mysql-client libmysqlclient-dev
  5202. mysql_secure_installation
  5203. mysql -u root -p
  5204. #+END_SRC
  5205. Enter the following commands, substituting /gitlabpassword/ with a password to be used for the Gitlab installation.
  5206. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5207. CREATE USER 'git'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'gitlabpassword';
  5208. SET storage_engine=INNODB;
  5209. CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `gitlabhq_production` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET `utf8` COLLATE `utf8_unicode_ci`;
  5210. GRANT SELECT, LOCK TABLES, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE, DROP, INDEX, ALTER ON `gitlabhq_production`.* TO 'git'@'localhost';
  5211. quit
  5212. #+END_SRC
  5213. Obtain the code and install it.
  5214. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5215. cd /home/git
  5216. sudo -u git -H git clone https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce.git -b 6-8-stable gitlab
  5217. cd /home/git/gitlab
  5218. sudo -u git -H cp /home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml.example /home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml
  5219. sudo -u git -H editor /home/git/gitlab/config/gitlab.yml
  5220. #+END_SRC
  5221. Set /host/ to your gitlab domain name, /port/ to 443 and /https/ to true, then save and exit.
  5222. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5223. chown -R git /home/git/gitlab/log/
  5224. chown -R git /home/git/gitlab/tmp/
  5225. chmod -R u+rwX /home/git/gitlab/log/
  5226. chmod -R u+rwX /home/git/gitlab/tmp/
  5227. sudo -u git -H mkdir /home/git/gitlab-satellites
  5228. chmod u+rwx,g+rx,o-rwx /home/git/gitlab-satellites
  5229. chmod -R u+rwX /home/git/gitlab/tmp/pids/
  5230. chmod -R u+rwX /home/git/gitlab/tmp/sockets/
  5231. chmod -R u+rwX /home/git/gitlab/public/uploads
  5232. sudo -u git -H cp /home/git/gitlab/config/unicorn.rb.example /home/git/gitlab/config/unicorn.rb
  5233. #sudo -u git -H editor /home/git/gitlab/config/unicorn.rb
  5234. sudo -u git -H cp /home/git/gitlab/config/initializers/rack_attack.rb.example /home/git/gitlab/config/initializers/rack_attack.rb
  5235. sudo -u git -H git config --global user.name "GitLab"
  5236. sudo -u git -H git config --global user.email "gitlab@localhost"
  5237. sudo -u git -H git config --global core.autocrlf input
  5238. sudo -u git cp /home/git/gitlab/config/database.yml.mysql /home/git/gitlab/config/database.yml
  5239. sudo -u git -H chmod o-rwx /home/git/gitlab/config/database.yml
  5240. sudo -u git -H bundle install --deployment --without development test postgres aws
  5241. #+END_SRC
  5242. Fails here with:
  5243. /Could not find libv8-3.16.14.3 in any of the sources/
  5244. /Run `bundle install` to install missing gems./
  5245. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5246. sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:setup RAILS_ENV=production
  5247. sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:shell:install[v1.9.3] REDIS_URL=redis://localhost:6379
  5248. sudo -u git -H editor /home/git/gitlab-shell/config.yml
  5249. cp lib/support/init.d/gitlab /etc/init.d/gitlab
  5250. update-rc.d gitlab defaults 21
  5251. cp lib/support/logrotate/gitlab /etc/logrotate.d/gitlab
  5252. sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:env:info RAILS_ENV=production
  5253. sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake assets:precompile RAILS_ENV=production
  5254. service gitlab start
  5255. #+END_SRC
  5256. Set up the Apache configuration.
  5257. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5258. cp lib/support/apache/gitlab /etc/apache2/sites-available/mygitlabdomain
  5259. editor /etc/apache2/sites-available/mygitlabdomain
  5260. #+END_SRC
  5261. Set your domain name and email accordingly.
  5262. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5263. a2ensite mygitlabdomain
  5264. #+END_SRC
  5265. ** Monkeysphere
  5266. #+BEGIN_SRC: bash
  5267. aptitude install monkeysphere
  5268. aptitude install msva-perl
  5269. aptitude install xul-ext-monkeysphere
  5270. export HOSTNAME=mydomainname.com
  5271. monkeysphere-host import-key /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key ssh://$HOSTNAME
  5272. monkeysphere-host publish-key
  5273. #+END_SRC
  5274. * Related projects
  5275. * [[https://freedomboxfoundation.org/][Freedombox]]
  5276. * [[https://arkos.io/][ArkOS]]
  5277. * [[https://github.com/JoshData/mailinabox][Mail-in-a-Box]]