9c8f78a059 already fixed many of the cert issues.
However, some issues were caught in the CI:
* The TLS addon has to be rebuilt and not just restarted. For this reason, we now
move things to a directory instead of mounting files. This way the container is just restarted.
* Cleanups must be driven by the database and not the filesystem . Deleting files on disk or after a restore,
the certs are left dangling forever in the db.
* Separate the db cert logic and disk cert logic. This way we can sync as many times as we want and whenever we want.
Previously, the du plugin was collecting data every 20 seconds but
carbon was configured to only keep data every 12 hours causing much
confusion.
In the process of reworking this, it was determined:
* No need to collect disk usage info over time. Not sure how that is useful
* Instead, collect CPU/Network/Block info over time. We get this now from docker stats
* We also collect info about the services (addon containers)
* No need to reconfigure collectd for each app change anymore since there is no per
app collectd configuration anymore.
it failed with:
Feb 22 08:52:30 strawberry cloudron-firewall.sh[14300]: /home/yellowtent/box/setup/start/cloudron-firewall.sh: line 14: iptables --wait 120 --wait-interval 1: command not found
the root cause was that IFS was getting set but not getting reset later.
the IFS=xx line is not line local as it seems to appear (just a bash statement)
cloudron-firewall.sh[30679]: ==> Setting up firewall
cloudron-firewall.sh[30693]: iptables: Chain already exists.
cloudron-firewall.sh[30694]: ip6tables: Chain already exists.
cloudron-firewall.sh[30699]: ipset v7.5: Set cannot be created: set with the same name already exists
cloudron-firewall.sh[30702]: ipset v7.5: Set cannot be created: set with the same name already exists
cloudron-firewall.sh[30740]: Another app is currently holding the xtables lock. Perhaps you want to use the -w option?
Docker's initial IPv6 support is based on allocating public IPv6 to containers.
This approach has many issues:
* The server may not get a block of IPv6 assigned to it
* It's complicated to allocate a block of IPv6 to cloudron server on home setups
* It's unclear how dynamic IPv6 is. If it's dynamic, then should containers be recreated?
* DNS setup is complicated
* Not a issue for Cloudron itself, but with -P, it just exposed the full container into the world
Given these issues, IPv6 NAT is being considered. Even though NAT is not a security mechanism as such,
it does offer benefits that we care about:
* We can allocate some private IPv6 to containers
* Have docker NAT66 the exposed ports
* Works similar to IPv4
Currently, the IPv6 ports are always mapped and exposed. The "Enable IPv6" config option is only whether
to automate AAAA records or not. This way, user can enable it and 'sync' dns and we don't need to
re-create containers etc. There is no inherent benefit is not exposing IPv6 at all everywhere unless we find
it unstable.
Fixes#264