💾 Archived View for log.aviary.biz › 2022-01-08.gmi captured on 2022-06-11 at 20:43:52. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2022-03-01)
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i run a few web sites in addition to this gemini service. they're all tiny, mostly single-page sites that i run for friends and family. i'm not too into the web design part of it, but i am very into the aesthetics of deploying them.
my job is the opposite of tiny: i hold a pager for thousands of customers, and i work on projects that make such large-scale maintenance tractable.
at home, though, i'm interested in exploring the minimum requirements for a functional service or program. here's the deployment script for a website i run.
#!/bin/ksh set -e set -u set -o pipefail echo "deploy to $domain at $destination" deploy="$(TZ=UTC date +%FT%TZ)" current="/var/www/sites/${domain}/current" if ssh "$destination" -- test -L "$current" then old="$(ssh "$destination" -- readlink "$current")" echo "old deploy is $old" else echo "no old deploy" # we rm this later, and we don't want to rm -f if we don't have to ssh "$destination" -- touch "$current" fi echo "new deploy is $deploy" rsync -a ./dist/ "${destination}:/var/www/sites/${domain}/${deploy}" ssh "$destination" -- "cd /var/www/sites/${domain} && rm current && ln -s ${deploy} current" # TODO: roll back automatically curl --fail --silent "https://$domain/" >/dev/null || echo "curl failed" echo done!
i serve several virtual hosts on this particular VM, so the domain name and destination hostname are different. this site is not "highly available." if i lose this server, i need to start over. that's ok, though; it's just the landing page for someone's small business. it gets maybe five thousand requests per month. i don't analyze the logs, but i'm sure most of those are crawlers and scanners.
my only monitoring is the fact that i regularly log in for fun and to maintain other sites. if httpd(8) is down, i'll notice within a day or so.
if it does go down, though, i want some automation. i ran a "disaster recovery test" and came up with these shell scripts.
#!/bin/ksh set -x set -e set -u set -o pipefail doas pkg_add -u \ checkrestart \ kakoune \ rsync-- \ ; if ! grep -q 'server "www.example.com"' /etc/httpd.conf then doas tee -a /etc/httpd.conf <<EOF server "www.example.com" { alias "example.com" listen on * tls port 443 tls { certificate "/etc/ssl/www.example.com.fullchain.pem" key "/etc/ssl/private/www.example.com.key" } location "/.well-known/acme-challenge/*" { root "/acme" request strip 2 } location "*" { root "/sites/redacted.example.com/current" } } EOF fi if ! test -d /var/www/sites/www.example.com then doas mkdir -p /var/www/sites/www.example.com doas chown -R $(whoami):$(whoami) /var/www/sites fi
i run this script on a fresh OpenBSD installation. it writes the httpd(8) config, etc. as you might tell from the config, i use acme-client(1) to generate TLS material, and daily(8) to periodically renew the certificate. i've omitted that configuration, but it's basically what's written in the manual page. when recovering from a failure, i copy the existing TLS material if i can.
#!/bin/ksh set -x set -e set -u set -o pipefail echo "copy tls material for $domain from $src to $dst" tmp=$(ssh $dst -- mktemp -d) trap "ssh $dst -- rm -r $tmp" EXIT scp $src:/etc/ssl/$domain.crt $dst:$tmp/ scp $src:/etc/ssl/$domain.fullchain.pem $dst:$tmp/ ssh $src -- doas cat /etc/ssl/private/$domain.key | ssh $dst -- tee $tmp/$domain.key >/dev/null ssh $dst -- doas install -o root -g wheel -m 0444 $tmp/$domain.crt /etc/ssl/$domain.crt ssh $dst -- doas install -o root -g wheel -m 0444 $tmp/$domain.fullchain.pem /etc/ssl/$domain.fullchain.pem ssh $dst -- doas install -o root -g wheel -m 0400 $tmp/$domain.key /etc/ssl/private/$domain.key ssh $src -- doas cksum -a sha256 \ /etc/ssl/$domain.crt \ /etc/ssl/$domain.fullchain.pem \ /etc/ssl/private/$domain.key \ | ssh $dst -- doas cksum -c
i run this script from my local machine. it copies everything generated by acme-client(1).
you might ask what i use to generate html that i deploy. i use a text editor, of course! there are no "source" files in this site, only "dist."
. |-- bin | |-- copytls | |-- deploy | `-- setuphttpd `-- dist |-- assets | `-- forms | |-- Very Important Form.pdf | `-- Yes We Have MS Word.doc |-- images | |-- headshot.png | `-- trees.jpg |-- index.html |-- robots.txt `-- styles `-- main.css
i've been maintaining this site for five years. it started out with npm and polyfill packages out the wazoo. all the text was templated from a json file through some gulp task. one day i broke my npm installation, and after a frustrating several hours to fix it, i decided to check in the generated html. one day i just deleted the source because it wasn't up to date anyway.
i like to run my own servers on rented VMs, and i like to understand what exactly is required to perform a given task. i make it a point to not rent VMs from a hyperscaler like AWS or GCP. instead, i rent from a friendly group of people at prgmr.