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Carlos Ramos Carreño
slapos
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d93ef354
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d93ef354
authored
Jul 03, 2013
by
Marco Mariani
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zimbra: more README.txt (assumption 4)
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software/zimbra/README.txt
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@@ -177,6 +177,185 @@ Assumption 3: scripts provided by the packaging system (preinst, postinst, /etc/
new components, data migrations and environment constraints.
Assumption 4: scripts, binaries, libraries, configuration files and databases will be present
under specific filesystem locations (like /opt/zimbra/ or /etc)
Although it is possible to specify a $ZIMBRA_HOME environment variable to
attemp a build targeting a different directory, that is seldom used, and
hardcoded pathnames abound in makefiles, scripts and even Java code, with
literally thousands of references to /opt/zimbra.
A naive approach that replaces /opt/zimbra with the desired target would break several scripts
in ways that are not possible to predict and hard to debug.
A layered approach has been applied:
- when possible, replace /opt/zimbra with ${ZIMBRA_HOME} in bash
(and /usr/local/java with JAVA_HOME)
Pay attention to the quotes. Inside shell scripts, "$VAR" does variable
replacement, but '$VAR' does not. Therefore, in order to replace
'/opt/zimbra' the quoting must be changed as well: "${ZIMBRA_HOME}"
and not '${ZIMBRA_HOME}'. Proper escaping of quotes must be applied
in case of embedded command strings, and strings written to files that
will later be executed.
Make the variable mandatory and remove assignments to the old default.
An error is returned in buildThirdParty.sh if ZIMBRA_HOME is not set up.
- use $(ZIMBRA_HOME) in makefiles
Be careful of using proper parens: $() and not ${}
Makefiles will automatically use the envvar if defined, but when debugging
we need to build individual Third Party packages, and be sure that
environment.sh has been sourced.
By removing the many "ZIMBRA_HOME ?= /opt/zimbra" from all the Makefiles,
we make sure we remember to use of environment.sh
- plain sed replacement
Before starting the build, all remaining /opt/zimbra occurrences are replaced
with a global
sed 's#/opt/zimbra#${ZIMBRA_HOME}#g'
(see buildout.cfg:[zimbra-sources-search-replace])
- replace s/../../ with s|..|..| in bash (and m|...| in Perl)
There are several occurences of /opt/zimbra in regular expressions, where
it appears as \/opt\/zimbra.
The delimiter has been changed in bash and Perl scripts, therefore
a s/\/opt\/zimbra\/whatever/ become s|/opt/zimbra/whatever| and can be
replaced by the sed command described above.
Pay attention to Perl: regexps can be 'naked', therefore an expression like
$cmdline =~ /\/opt\/zimbra\/db/
would be changed to
$cmdline =~ m|/opt/zimbra/db|
As always, in bash, look the quote characters around the regexp, if present,
and change them from ' to " where needed.
- sed replacement for awk
Unfortunately, awk cannot use other characters in place of the slash delimiter.
A more complex sed substitution is performed for these cases:
ZIMBRA_HOME_WITH_BACKSLASHES=`echo $ZIMBRA_HOME | sed "s#/#\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\/#g"`
SUB3="s#\\\\/opt\\\\/zimbra#$ZIMBRA_HOME_WITH_BACKSLASHES#g"
- sed replacement for Java code
There is also a case of '/opt/zimbra' that is built by string composition in Java.
A file-specific substitution is applied here:
find . -name LocalConfig.java -exec sed -i 's#= FS + "opt" + FS + "zimbra"#= "${:ZIMBRA_HOME}"#g' {} \;
A grep search for all occurrences of 'opt' in Java sources may help to detect similar cases.
Assumption 5: processes can be run by a specific user (zimbra, postfix, postdrop) or as root
The first issue posed by this assumption is that we need to allow the application to
use the resources it needs. Giving permissions to regular users through linux
capabilities is a possible approach, but only solves a part of the use cases.
A limitation of setcap is described in
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9843178/linux-capabilities-setcap-seems-to-disable-ld-library-path
The second issue is the amount of code that was written in order to report errors if the current
user does not match, call processes through su/sudo, change file permissions, set up usernames and uids
in configuration files, and so on. This code may be part of the build process, the configuration/deployment
scripts, or administration scripts.
The changes can be grouped by purpose:
- Removing user checks
The first thing to remove are the parts of code that abort a script when run by a different user.
This change should generally be applied as soon as possible, so that further permission problems can be detected.
The code often looks like
if [ x`whoami` != xzimbra ]; then
echo Error: must be run as zimbra user
exit 1
fi
or with `id -un` in place of whoami.
In Perl, the checks can take very different forms, which are hard to find with grep:
($>) and usage();
- Removing usage of su/sudo
This goes both ways: scripts run by root that need to run scripts as zimbra, and vice-versa.
For the latter, Zimbra requires /etc/sudoers to be properly set up:
%zimbra ALL=NOPASSWD:/opt/zimbra/libexec/zmstat-fd *
%zimbra ALL=NOPASSWD:/opt/zimbra/openldap/libexec/slapd
%zimbra ALL=NOPASSWD:/opt/zimbra/libexec/zmslapd
%zimbra ALL=NOPASSWD:/opt/zimbra/postfix/sbin/postfix, /opt/zimbra/postfix/sbin/postalias,
/opt/zimbra/postfix/sbin/qshape.pl, /opt/zimbra/postfix/sbin/postconf,
/opt/zimbra/postfix/sbin/postsuper
%zimbra ALL=NOPASSWD:/opt/zimbra/libexec/zmqstat,/opt/zimbra/libexec/zmmtastatus
%zimbra ALL=NOPASSWD:/opt/zimbra/libexec/zmmailboxdmgr
%zimbra ALL=NOPASSWD:/opt/zimbra/bin/zmcertmgr
We have removed all the explicit calls to sudo.
Sometimes it's as easy as removing the 'sudo' word before a command, but at times the
subprocess behavior must be retained, so that
$SU = "su - zimbra -c -l ";
becomes
$SU = "bash -c ";
While applying this kind of change, string quoting/backquoting and escaped characters
may need to be adjusted.
- Configuration changes
Users "zimbra", "postfix" and "postdrop" are referenced in the configuration files
used by postfix, opendkim, amavis, clamd, dspam.
Some of these files are provided as templates and need to be patched by sed replacement
(see buildout.cfg:[zimbra-sources-search-replace]).
The actual configuration files are written by zmconfigd.
- Ad-hoc patches to C code
Three patches to postfix are provided, to avoid using initgroups(3), seteuid(2),
setgid(2) and explicit user checks.
A patch is also needed for the mailbox wrapper (zmmailboxdmgr) to avoid the stripping
of LD_PRELOAD from the environment variables.
The stripping of such variable is a security need when zmmailboxdmgr runs as root,
but we don't, so we allow it because authbind relies on it to preload libauthbind.so
- Removed calls to chown/chmod and zmfixperms
This required directly changing permissions of files in the repository to allow +x.
- Granting access to IP ports lower than 1024
This is a common requirement, and port forwarding through iptables is not always possible.
The only solution that we found working with ipv4/ipv6, with all versions of Java and allows
LD_PRELOAD/LD_LIBRARY_PATH usage is the authbind package.
Versions 1.x only work with IPv4, therefore we backported 2.1.1 to Ubuntu 12.04 and provided
it together with the buildout.cfg
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