bd9c664b1a tried to remove it and use
the system resolver. However, we found that debian has a quirk that it adds
it adds the fqdn as 127.0.1.1. This means that the docker containers
resolve the my.example.com domain to that and can't connect.
This affects any apps doing a turn test (CLOUDRON_TURN/STUN_SERVER)
and also apps like SOGo which use the mail server hostname directly (since
they require proper certs).
https://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-reference/ch05.en.html#_the_hostname_resolution
So, the solution is to go back to unbound, now that port 53 binding is specially
handled anyway in docker.js
It's all very complicated.
Approach 1: Simple move unbound to not listen on 0.0.0.0 and only the internal
ones. However, docker has no way to bind only to the "public" interface.
Approach 2: Move the internal unbound to some other port. This required a PR
for haraka - https://github.com/haraka/Haraka/pull/2863 . This works and we use
systemd-resolved by default. However, it turns out systemd-resolved with hog the
lo and thus docker cannot bind again to port 53.
Approach 3: Get rid of systemd-resolved and try to put the dns server list in
/etc/resolv.conf. This is surprisingly hard because the DNS listing can come from
DHCP or netplan or wherever. We can hardcode some public DNS servers but this seems
not a good idea for privacy.
Approach 4: So maybe we don't move the unbound away to different port after all.
However, all the work for approach 2 is done and it's quite nice that the default
resolver is used with the default dns server of the network (probably a caching
server + also maybe has some home network firewalled dns).
So, the final solution is to bind to the make docker bind to the IP explicity.
It's unclear what will happen if the IP changes, maybe it needs a restart.
'setup' endpoint for setup/restore. we show the setup wizard.
'ip' endpoint is post activation. we show a splash screen here.
Also, the https://ip will not respond to any api calls anymore
(since this will leak the admin fqdn otherwise).
We should probably make this customizable at some point.
Fixes#739
BindsTo will kill all the tasks when systemctl stop box is executed.
But when restarted, it keeps the tasks running. Because of this behavior,
we kill the tasks on startup and stop of the box code.
* explicitly specify the dirs that are getting rotated
* app log rules are now moved to logrotate.ejs
* we keep task logs for a week
Some testing notes:
* touch -d "10 days ago" foo
* logrotate /etc/logrotate.conf -v to test rotation. there is a state
file created in /var/lib/logrotate/status. If we have a 'daily' rule,
it will get processed only after a log line in status exists and it's atleast
1 day old timestamp.
https://github.com/logrotate/logrotate/blob/master/logrotate.c is quite
readable