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diff --git a/posts/unix/2019-07-04-the-best-way-to-transfer-gopro-files-with-linux.html b/posts/unix/2019-07-04-the-best-way-to-transfer-gopro-files-with-linux.html deleted file mode 100644 index bbe5b28..0000000 --- a/posts/unix/2019-07-04-the-best-way-to-transfer-gopro-files-with-linux.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,127 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html> -<html> - <head> - <link rel="stylesheet" href="/includes/stylesheet.css" /> - <meta charset="utf-8" /> - <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> - <meta - property="og:description" - content="The World Wide Web pages of Adam Carpenter" - /> - <meta property="og:image" content="https://nextcloud.53hor.net/index.php/s/Nx9e7iHbw4t99wo/preview" /> - <meta property="og:site_name" content="53hor.net" /> - <meta - property="og:title" - content="Offloading GoPro Footage the Easy Way!" - /> - <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> - <meta property="og:url" content="https://www.53hor.net" /> - <title>53hornet ➙ Offloading GoPro Footage the Easy Way!</title> - </head> - - <body> - <nav> - <ul> - <li> - <a href="/"> - <img src="/includes/icons/home-roof.svg" /> - Home - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/info.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/information-variant.svg" /> - Info - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="https://git.53hor.net"> - <img src="/includes/icons/git.svg" /> - Repos - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/hosted.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/desktop-tower.svg" /> - Hosted - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a type="application/rss+xml" href="/rss.xml"> - <img src="/includes/icons/rss.svg" /> - RSS - </a> - </li> - </ul> - </nav> - - <article> - <h1>Offloading GoPro Footage the Easy Way!</h1> - - <p> - Transferring files off of most cameras to a Linux computer isn't all - that difficult. The exception is my GoPro Hero 4 Black. For 4th of July - week I took a bunch of video with the GoPro, approximately 20 MP4 files, - about 3GB each. The annoying thing about the GoPro's USB interface is - you need additional software to download everything through the cable. - The camera doesn't just show up as a USB filesystem that you can mount. - The GoPro does have a micro-SD card but I was away from home and didn't - have any dongles or adapters. Both of these solutions also mean taking - the camera out of its waterproof case and off of its mount. So here's - what I did. - </p> - - <p> - GoPro cameras, after the Hero 3, can open up an ad-hoc wireless network - that lets you browse the GoPro's onboard files through an HTTP server. - This means you can open your browser and scroll through the files on the - camera at an intranet address, <code>10.5.5.9</code>, and download them - one by one by clicking every link on every page. If you have a lot of - footage on there it kinda sucks. So, I opened up the manual for - <code>wget</code>. I'm sure you could get really fancy with some of the - options but the only thing I cared about was downloading every single - MP4 video off of the camera, automatically. I did not want to download - any of the small video formats or actual HTML files. Here's what I used: - </p> - - <pre> - <code> -sh wget --recursive --accept "*.MP4" http://10.5.5.9:8080/ - </code> - </pre> - - <p> - This tells <code>wget</code> to download all of the files at the GoPro's - address recursively and skips any that don't have the MP4 extension. Now - I've got a directory tree with all of my videos in it. And the best part - is I didn't have to install the dinky GoPro app on my laptop. Hopefully - this helps if you're looking for an easy way to migrate lots of footage - without manually clicking through the web interface or installing - additional software. The only downside is if you're moving a whole lot - of footage, it's not nearly as quick as just moving files off the SD - card. So I'd shoot for using the adapter to read off the card first and - only use this if that's not an option, such as when the camera is - mounted and you don't want to move it. - </p> - - <p>Some things I would like to change/add:</p> - - <ul> - <li> - Download all image files as well; should be easy, just another - <code>--accept</code> - </li> - <li>Initiate parallel downloads</li> - <li> - Clean up the directory afterwards so I just have one level of depth - </li> - </ul> - - <p> - I could probably write a quick and dirty shell script to do all of this - for me but I use the camera so infrequently that it's probably not even - worth it. - </p> - </article> - </body> -</html> diff --git a/posts/unix/2019-09-28-my-preferred-method-for-data-recovery.html b/posts/unix/2019-09-28-my-preferred-method-for-data-recovery.html deleted file mode 100644 index 9751eda..0000000 --- a/posts/unix/2019-09-28-my-preferred-method-for-data-recovery.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,276 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html> -<html> - <head> - <link rel="stylesheet" href="/includes/stylesheet.css" /> - <meta charset="utf-8" /> - <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> - <meta - property="og:description" - content="The World Wide Web pages of Adam Carpenter" - /> - <meta property="og:image" content="https://nextcloud.53hor.net/index.php/s/Nx9e7iHbw4t99wo/preview" /> - <meta property="og:site_name" content="53hor.net" /> - <meta property="og:title" content="How I Do Data Recovery" /> - <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> - <meta property="og:url" content="https://www.53hor.net" /> - <title>53hornet ➙ How I Do Data Recovery</title> - </head> - - <body> - <nav> - <ul> - <li> - <a href="/"> - <img src="/includes/icons/home-roof.svg" /> - Home - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/info.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/information-variant.svg" /> - Info - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="https://git.53hor.net"> - <img src="/includes/icons/git.svg" /> - Repos - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/hosted.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/desktop-tower.svg" /> - Hosted - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a type="application/rss+xml" href="/rss.xml"> - <img src="/includes/icons/rss.svg" /> - RSS - </a> - </li> - </ul> - </nav> - - <article> - <h1>How I Do Data Recovery</h1> - - <p> - This week Amy plugged in her flash drive to discover that there were no - files on it. Weeks before there had been dozens of large cuts of footage - that she needed to edit down for work. Hours of recordings were - seemingly gone. And the most annoying part was the drive had worked - perfectly on several other occasions. Just not now that the footage was - actually needed of course. Initially it looked like everything had been - wiped clean, however both Amy's Mac and her PC thought the drive was - half full. It's overall capacity was 64GB but it showed only about 36GB - free. So there still had to be data on there if we could find the right - tool to salvage it. - </p> - - <p> - Luckily this wasn't the first time I had to recover accidentally (or - magically) deleted files. I had previously done so with some success at - my tech support job, for some college friends, and for my in-laws' - retired laptops. So I had a pretty clear idea of what to expect. The - only trick was finding a tool that knew what files it was looking for. - The camera that took the video clips was a Sony and apparently they - record into <code>m2ts</code> files, which are kind of a unique format - in that they only show up on Blu-Ray discs and Sony camcorders. Enter my - favorite two tools for dealing with potentially-destroyed data: - <code>ddrescue</code> and <code>photorec</code>. - </p> - - <h2>DDRescue</h2> - - <p> - <code>ddrescue</code> is a godsend of a tool. If you've ever used - <code>dd</code> before, forget about it. Use <code>ddrescue</code>. You - might as well <code>alias dd=ddrescue</code> because it's that great. By - default it has a plethora of additional options, displays the progress - as it works, recovers and retries in the event of I/O errors, and does - everything that good old <code>dd</code> can do. It's particularly good - at protecting partitions or disks that have been corrupted or damaged by - rescuing undamaged portions first. Oh, and have you ever had to cancel a - <code>dd</code> operation? Did I mention that <code>ddrescue</code> can - pause and resume operations? It's that good. - </p> - - <h2>PhotoRec</h2> - - <p> - <code>photorec</code> is probably the best missing file recovery tool - I've ever used in my entire life. And I've used quite a few. I've never - had as good results as I've had with <code>photorec</code> with other - tools like Recuva et. al. And <code>photorec</code> isn't just for - photos, it can recover documents (a la Office suite), music, images, - config files, and videos (including the very odd - <code>m2ts</code> format!). The other nice thing is - <code>photorec</code> will work on just about any source. It's also free - software which makes me wonder why there are like $50 recovery tools for - Windows that look super sketchy. - </p> - - <h2>In Practice</h2> - - <p> - So here's what I did to get Amy's files back. Luckily she didn't write - anything out to the drive afterward so the chances (I thought) were - pretty good that I would get <em>something</em> back. The first thing I - always do is make a full image of whatever media I'm trying to recover - from. I do this for a couple of reasons. First of all it's a backup. If - something goes wrong during recovery I don't have to worry about the - original, fragile media being damaged or wiped. Furthermore, I can work - with multiple copies at a time. If it's a large image that means - multiple tools or even multiple PCs can work on it at once. It's also - just plain faster working off a disk image than a measly flash drive. So - I used <code>ddrescue</code> to make an image of Amy's drive. - </p> - - <pre><code> -$ sudo ddrescue /dev/sdb1 amy-lexar.dd -GNU ddrescue 1.24 -Press Ctrl-C to interrupt - ipos: 54198 kB, non-trimmed: 0 B, current rate: 7864 kB/s - opos: 54198 kB, non-scraped: 0 B, average rate: 18066 kB/s -non-tried: 63967 MB, bad-sector: 0 B, error rate: 0 B/s - rescued: 54198 kB, bad areas: 0, run time: 2s -pct rescued: 0.08%, read errors: 0, remaining time: 59m - time since last successful read: n/a -Copying non-tried blocks... Pass 1 (forwards) - </code></pre> - - <p> - The result was a very large partition image that I could fearlessly play - around with. - </p> - - <pre> - <code> -$ ll amy-lexar.dd --rw-r--r-- 1 root root 60G Sep 24 02:45 amy-lexar.dd - </code> - </pre> - - <p> - Then I could run <code>photorec</code> on the image. This brings up a - TUI with all of the listed media that I can try and recover from. - </p> - - <pre><code> -$ sudo photorec amy-lexar.dd - -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 -http://www.cgsecurity.org - - PhotoRec is free software, and -comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. - -Select a media (use Arrow keys, then press Enter): ->Disk amy-lexar.dd - 64 GB / 59 GiB (RO) - ->[Proceed ] [ Quit ] - -Note: -Disk capacity must be correctly detected for a successful recovery. -If a disk listed above has incorrect size, check HD jumper settings, BIOS -detection, and install the latest OS patches and disk drivers. - </code></pre> - - <p> - After hitting proceed <code>photorec</code> asks if you want to scan - just a particular partition or the whole disk (if you made a whole disk - image). I can usually get away with just selecting the partition I know - the files are on and starting a search. - </p> - - <pre><code> -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 -http://www.cgsecurity.org - -Disk amy-lexar.dd - 64 GB / 59 GiB (RO) - - Partition Start End Size in sectors - Unknown 0 0 1 7783 139 4 125042656 [Whole disk] -> P FAT32 0 0 1 7783 139 4 125042656 [NO NAME] - ->[ Search ] [Options ] [File Opt] [ Quit ] - Start file recovery - </code></pre> - - <p> - Then <code>photorec</code> asks a couple of questions about the - formatting of the media. It can usually figure them out all by itself so - I just use the default options unless it's way out in left field. - </p> - - <pre><code> -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 -http://www.cgsecurity.org - - P FAT32 0 0 1 7783 139 4 125042656 [NO NAME] - -To recover lost files, PhotoRec need to know the filesystem type where the -file were stored: - [ ext2/ext3 ] ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystem ->[ Other ] FAT/NTFS/HFS+/ReiserFS/... - </code></pre> - - <p> - Now this menu is where I don't just go with the default path. - <code>photorec</code> will offer to search just unallocated space or the - entire partition. I always go for the whole partition here; sometimes - I'll get back files that I didn't really care about but more often than - not I end up rescuing more data this way. In this scenario searching - just unallocated space found no files at all. So I told - <code>photorec</code> to search everything. - </p> - - <pre><code> -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 -http://www.cgsecurity.org - - P FAT32 0 0 1 7783 139 4 125042656 [NO NAME] - - -Please choose if all space need to be analysed: - [ Free ] Scan for file from FAT32 unallocated space only ->[ Whole ] Extract files from whole partition - </code></pre> - - <p> - Now it'll ask where you want to save any files it finds. I threw them - all into a directory under home that I could zip up and send to Amy's - Mac later. - </p> - - <pre><code> -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 - -Please select a destination to save the recovered files. -Do not choose to write the files to the same partition they were stored on. -Keys: Arrow keys to select another directory - C when the destination is correct - Q to quit -Directory /home/adam - drwx------ 1000 1000 4096 28-Sep-2019 12:10 . - drwxr-xr-x 0 0 4096 26-Jan-2019 15:32 .. ->drwxr-xr-x 1000 1000 4096 28-Sep-2019 12:10 amy-lexar-recovery - </code></pre> - - <p> - And then just press <code>C</code>. <code>photrec</code> will start - copying all of the files it finds into that directory. It reports what - kinds of files it found and how many it was able to locate. I was able - to recover all of Amy's lost footage this way, past, along with some - straggler files that had been on the drive at one point. This has worked - for me many times in the past, both on newer devices like flash drives - and on super old, sketchy IDE hard drives. I probably won't ever pay for - data recovery unless a drive has been physically damaged in some way. In - other words, this software works great for me and I don't foresee the - need for anything else out there. It's simple to use and is typically - pretty reliable. - </p> - </article> - </body> -</html> diff --git a/posts/unix/2020-07-26-now-this-is-a-minimal-install.html b/posts/unix/2020-07-26-now-this-is-a-minimal-install.html deleted file mode 100644 index 64652a7..0000000 --- a/posts/unix/2020-07-26-now-this-is-a-minimal-install.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,101 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html> -<html> - <head> - <link rel="stylesheet" href="/includes/stylesheet.css" /> - <meta charset="utf-8" /> - <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> - <meta - property="og:description" - content="The World Wide Web pages of Adam Carpenter" - /> - <meta property="og:image" content="https://nextcloud.53hor.net/index.php/s/Nx9e7iHbw4t99wo/preview" /> - <meta property="og:site_name" content="53hor.net" /> - <meta property="og:title" content="Now This is a Minimal Install!" /> - <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> - <meta property="og:url" content="https://www.53hor.net" /> - <title>53hornet ➙ Now This is a Minimal Install!</title> - </head> - - <body> - <nav> - <ul> - <li> - <a href="/"> - <img src="/includes/icons/home-roof.svg" /> - Home - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/info.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/information-variant.svg" /> - Info - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="https://git.53hor.net"> - <img src="/includes/icons/git.svg" /> - Repos - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/hosted.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/desktop-tower.svg" /> - Hosted - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a type="application/rss+xml" href="/rss.xml"> - <img src="/includes/icons/rss.svg" /> - RSS - </a> - </li> - </ul> - </nav> - - <article> - <h1>Now This is a Minimal Install!</h1> - - <p> - I just got done configuring Poudriere on Freebsd 12.1-RELEASE. The - awesome thing about it is it allows you to configure and maintain your - own package repository. All of the ports and their dependencies are - built from source with personalized options. That means that I can - maintain my own repo of just the packages I need with just the - compile-time options I need. For example, for the Nvidia driver set I - disabled all Wayland related flags. I use Xorg so there was no need to - have that functionality built in. - </p> - - <p> - Compile times are pretty long but I hope to change that by upgrading my - home server to FreeBSD as well (from Ubuntu Server). Then I can - configure poudriere to serve up a ports tree and my own pkg repo from - there. The server is a lot faster than my laptop and will build packages - way faster, and I'll be able to use those packages on both the server - and my laptop and any jails I have running. Jails (and ZFS) also make - poudriere really cool to use as all of the building is done inside a - jail. When the time comes I can just remove the jail and poudriere ports - tree from my laptop and update pkg to point to my web server. - </p> - - <p> - This is, as I understand it, the sane way to do package management in - FreeBSD. The binary package repo is basically the ports tree - pre-assembled with default options. Sometimes those packages are - compiled without functionality that most users don't need. In those - situations, you're forced to use ports. The trouble is you're not really - supposed to mix ports and binary packages. The reason, again as I - understand it, is because ports are updated more frequently. So binary - packages and ports can have different dependency versions, which can - sometimes break compatibility on an upgrade. Most FreeBSD users - recommend installing everything with ports (which is just a make install - inside the local tree) but then you lose the package management features - that come with pkg. Poudriere lets you kind of do both by creating your - "own personal binary repo" out of a list of preconfigured, pre-built - ports. - </p> - - <p>FreeBSD rocks.</p> - </article> - </body> -</html> diff --git a/posts/unix/2021-01-15-root-on-zfs-a-zpool-of-mirror-vdevs-the-easy-way.html b/posts/unix/2021-01-15-root-on-zfs-a-zpool-of-mirror-vdevs-the-easy-way.html deleted file mode 100644 index 6f515f3..0000000 --- a/posts/unix/2021-01-15-root-on-zfs-a-zpool-of-mirror-vdevs-the-easy-way.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,375 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html> -<html> - <head> - <link rel="stylesheet" href="/includes/stylesheet.css" /> - <meta charset="utf-8" /> - <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> - <meta - property="og:description" - content="The World Wide Web pages of Adam Carpenter" - /> - <meta - property="og:image" - content="https://nextcloud.53hor.net/index.php/s/Nx9e7iHbw4t99wo/preview" - /> - <meta property="og:site_name" content="53hor.net" /> - <meta - property="og:title" - content="Root on ZFS: A ZPool of Mirror VDEVs The Easy Way" - /> - <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> - <meta property="og:url" content="https://www.53hor.net" /> - <title>53hornet ➙ Root on ZFS: A ZPool of Mirror VDEVs The Easy Way</title> - </head> - - <body> - <nav> - <ul> - <li> - <a href="/"> - <img src="/includes/icons/home-roof.svg" /> - Home - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/info.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/information-variant.svg" /> - Info - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="https://git.53hor.net"> - <img src="/includes/icons/git.svg" /> - Repos - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/hosted.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/desktop-tower.svg" /> - Hosted - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a type="application/rss+xml" href="/rss.xml"> - <img src="/includes/icons/rss.svg" /> - RSS - </a> - </li> - </ul> - </nav> - - <article> - <h1>Root on ZFS: A ZPool of Mirror VDEVs</h1> - - <p class="description"> - I wanted/needed to make a root on ZFS pool out of multiple mirror VDEVs, - and since I'm not a ZFS expert, I took a little shortcut. - </p> - - <p> - I recently got a new-to-me server (yay!) and I wanted to do a - root-on-ZFS setup on it. I've really enjoyed using ZFS for my data - storage pools for a long time. I've also enjoyed the extra functionality - that comes with having a bootable system installed on ZFS on my laptop - and decided with this upgrade it's time to do the same on my server. - Historically I've used RAIDZ for my storage pools. RAIDZ functions - almost like a RAID10 but at the ZFS level. It gives you parity so that a - certain number of disks can die from your pool and you won't lose any - data. It does have a few tradeoffs however*, and for personal - preferences I've decided that for the future I would like to have a - single ZPool over top of multiple mirror VDEVs. In other words, my main - root+storage pool will be made up of two-disk mirrors and can be - expanded to include any number of new mirrors I can fit into the - machine. - </p> - - <p> - This did present some complications. First of all, - <code>bsdinstall</code> won't set this up for you automatically (and - sure enough, - <a - href="https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/bsdinstall-partitioning.html" - >in the handbook</a - > - it mentions the guided root on ZFS tool will only create a single, - top-level VDEV unless it's a stripe). It will happily let you use RAIDZ - for your ZROOT but not the more custom approach I'm taking. I did - however use - <code>bsdinstall</code> as a shortcut so I wouldn't have to do all of - the partitioning and pool setup manually, and that's what I'm going to - document below. Because I'm totally going to forget how this works the - next time I have to do it. - </p> - - <p> - In my scenario I have an eight-slot, hot-swappable PERC H310 controller - that's configured for AHCI passthrough. In other words, all FreeBSD sees - is as many disks as I have plugged into the backplane. I'm going to fill - it with 6x2TB hard disks which, as I said before, I want to act as three - mirrors (two disks each) in a single, bootable, growable ZPool. For - starters, I shoved the FreeBSD installer on a flash drive and booted - from it. I followed all of the regular steps (setting hostname, getting - online, etc.) until I got to the guided root on ZFS disk partitioning - setup. - </p> - - <p> - Now here's where I'm going to take the first step on my shortcut. Since - there is no option to create the pool of arbitrary mirrors I'm just - going to create a pool from a single mirror VDEV of two disks. Later I - will expand the pool to include the other two mirrors I had intended - for. My selections were as follows: - </p> - - <ul> - <li>Pool Type/Disks: mirror mfisyspd0 mfisyspd1</li> - <li>Pool Name: zroot</li> - <li>Partition Scheme: GPT (EFI)</li> - <li>Swap Size: 4g</li> - </ul> - - <p> - Everything else was left as a default. Then I followed the installer to - completion. At the end, when it asked if I wanted to drop into a shell - to do more to the installation, I did. - </p> - - <p> - The installer created the following disk layout for the two disks that I - selected. - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -atc@macon:~ % gpart show -=> 40 3907029088 mfisyspd0 GPT (1.8T) - 40 409600 1 efi (200M) - 409640 2008 - free - (1.0M) - 411648 8388608 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G) - 8800256 3898228736 3 freebsd-zfs (1.8T) - 3907028992 136 - free - (68K) - -=> 40 3907029088 mfisyspd1 GPT (1.8T) - 40 409600 1 efi (200M) - 409640 2008 - free - (1.0M) - 411648 8388608 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G) - 8800256 3898228736 3 freebsd-zfs (1.8T) - 3907028992 136 - free - (68K) -</code> -</pre> - - <p> - The installer also created the following ZPool from my single mirror - VDEV. - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -atc@macon:~ % zpool status - pool: zroot - state: ONLINE - scan: none requested -config: - - NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM - zroot ONLINE 0 0 0 - mirror-0 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mfisyspd0p3 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mfisyspd1p3 ONLINE 0 0 0 - -errors: No known data errors -</code> -</pre> - - <p> - There are a couple of things to take note of here. First of all, - <em>both</em> disks in the bootable ZPool have an EFI boot partition. - That means they're both a part of (or capable of?) booting the pool. - Second, they both have some swap space. Finally, they both have a third - partition which is dedicated to ZFS data, and that partition is what got - added to my VDEV. - </p> - - <p> - So where do I go from here? I was tempted to just - <code>zpool add mirror ... ...</code> and just add my other disks to the - pool (actually, I <em>did</em> do this but it rendered the volume - unbootable for a very important reason), but then I wouldn't have those - all-important boot partitions (using whole-disk mirror VDEVS). Instead, - I need to manually go back and re-partition four disks exactly like the - first two. Or, since all I want is two more of what's already been done, - I can just clone the partitions using <code>gpart backup</code> and - <code>restore</code>! Easy! Here's what I did for all four remaining - disks: - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -root@macon:~ # gpart backup mfisyspd0 | gpart restore -F mfisyspd2` -</code> -</pre> - - <p> - Full disclosure, I didn't even think of this as a possibility - <a - href="ihttps://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/472147/replacing-disk-when-using-freebsd-zfs-zroot-zfs-on-partition#472175" - >until I read this Stack Exchange post</a - >. This gave me a disk layout like this: - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -atc@macon:~ % gpart show -=> 40 3907029088 mfisyspd0 GPT (1.8T) - 40 409600 1 efi (200M) - 409640 2008 - free - (1.0M) - 411648 8388608 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G) - 8800256 3898228736 3 freebsd-zfs (1.8T) - 3907028992 136 - free - (68K) - -=> 40 3907029088 mfisyspd1 GPT (1.8T) - 40 409600 1 efi (200M) - 409640 2008 - free - (1.0M) - 411648 8388608 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G) - 8800256 3898228736 3 freebsd-zfs (1.8T) - 3907028992 136 - free - (68K) - -=> 40 3907029088 mfisyspd2 GPT (1.8T) - 40 409600 1 efi (200M) - 409640 2008 - free - (1.0M) - 411648 8388608 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G) - 8800256 3898228736 3 freebsd-zfs (1.8T) - 3907028992 136 - free - (68K) - -=> 40 3907029088 mfisyspd3 GPT (1.8T) - 40 409600 1 efi (200M) - 409640 2008 - free - (1.0M) - 411648 8388608 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G) - 8800256 3898228736 3 freebsd-zfs (1.8T) - 3907028992 136 - free - (68K) - -=> 40 3907029088 mfisyspd4 GPT (1.8T) - 40 409600 1 efi (200M) - 409640 2008 - free - (1.0M) - 411648 8388608 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G) - 8800256 3898228736 3 freebsd-zfs (1.8T) - 3907028992 136 - free - (68K) - -=> 40 3907029088 mfisyspd5 GPT (1.8T) - 40 409600 1 efi (200M) - 409640 2008 - free - (1.0M) - 411648 8388608 2 freebsd-swap (4.0G) - 8800256 3898228736 3 freebsd-zfs (1.8T) - 3907028992 136 - free - (68K) -</code> -</pre> - - <p> - And to be fair, this makes a lot of logical sense. You don't want a - six-disk pool to only be bootable by two of the disks or you're - defeating some of the purposes of redundancy. So now I can extend my - ZPool to include those last four disks. - </p> - - <p> - This next step may or may not be a requirement. I wanted to overwrite - where I assumed any old ZFS/ZPool metadata might be on my four new - disks. This could just be for nothing and I admit that, but I've run - into trouble in the past where a ZPool wasn't properly - exported/destroyed before the drives were removed for another purpose - and when you use those drives in future - <code>zpool import</code>s, you can see both the new and the old, failed - pools. And, in the previous step I cloned an old ZFS partition many - times! So I did a small <code>dd</code> on the remaining disks to help - me sleep at night: - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -root@macon:~ # dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mfisyspd2 bs=1M count=100 -</code> -</pre> - - <p> - One final, precautionary step is to write the EFI boot loader to the new - disks. In - <a href="https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/zfs-zpool.html" - >zpool admin handbook</a - > - it mentions you should do this any time you <em>replace</em> a zroot - device, so I'll do it just for safe measure on all four additional - disks: - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -root@macon:~ # gpart bootcode -p /boot/boot1.efifat -i 1 mfisyspd2 -</code> -</pre> - - <p> - Don't forget that the command is different for UEFI and a traditional - BIOS. And finally, I can add my new VDEVs: - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -root@macon:~ # zpool zroot add mirror mfisyspd2p3 mfisyspd3p3 -root@macon:~ # zpool zroot add mirror mfisyspd4p3 mfisyspd5p3 -</code> -</pre> - - <p>And now my pool looks like this:</p> - - <pre> -<code> -atc@macon:~ % zpool status - pool: zroot - state: ONLINE - scan: none requested -config: - - NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM - zroot ONLINE 0 0 0 - mirror-0 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mfisyspd0p3 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mfisyspd1p3 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mirror-1 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mfisyspd2p3 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mfisyspd3p3 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mirror-2 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mfisyspd4p3 ONLINE 0 0 0 - mfisyspd5p3 ONLINE 0 0 0 - -errors: No known data errors -</code> -</pre> - - <p> - Boom. A growable, bootable zroot ZPool. Is it easier than just - configuring the partitions and root on ZFS by hand? Probably not for a - BSD veteran. But since I'm a BSD layman, this is something I can live - with pretty easily. At least until this becomes an option in - <code>bsdintall</code> maybe? At least now I can add as many more - mirrors as I can fit into my system. And it's just as easy to replace - them. This is better for me than my previous RAIDZ, where I would have - to destroy and re-create the pool in order to add more disks to the - VDEV. Now I just create another little mirror and grow the pool and all - of my filesystems just see more storage. And of course, having ZFS for - all of my data makes it super easy to create filesystems on the fly, - compress or quota them, and take snapshots (including the live ZROOT!) - and send those snapshots over the network. Pretty awesome. - </p> - - <p> - * I'm not going to explain why here, but - <a - href="http://www.openoid.net/zfs-you-should-use-mirror-vdevs-not-raidz/" - >this is a pretty well thought out article</a - > - that should give you an idea about the pros and cons of RAIDZ versus - mirror VDEVs so you can draw your own conclusions. - </p> - </article> - </body> -</html> diff --git a/posts/unix/2021-03-19-how-to-automate-certbot-renewal-with-haproxy.html b/posts/unix/2021-03-19-how-to-automate-certbot-renewal-with-haproxy.html deleted file mode 100644 index 634530b..0000000 --- a/posts/unix/2021-03-19-how-to-automate-certbot-renewal-with-haproxy.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,256 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html> -<html> - <head> - <link rel="stylesheet" href="/includes/stylesheet.css" /> - <meta charset="utf-8" /> - <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> - <meta - property="og:description" - content="The World Wide Web pages of Adam Carpenter" - /> - <meta - property="og:image" - content="https://nextcloud.53hor.net/index.php/s/Nx9e7iHbw4t99wo/preview" - /> - <meta property="og:site_name" content="53hor.net" /> - <meta - property="og:title" - content="How to Automate Certbot Renewal with HAProxy" - /> - <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> - <meta property="og:url" content="https://www.53hor.net" /> - <title>53hornet ➙ How to Automate Certbot Renewal with HAProxy</title> - </head> - - <body> - <nav> - <ul> - <li> - <a href="/"> - <img src="/includes/icons/home-roof.svg" /> - Home - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/info.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/information-variant.svg" /> - Info - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="https://git.53hor.net"> - <img src="/includes/icons/git.svg" /> - Repos - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a href="/hosted.html"> - <img src="/includes/icons/desktop-tower.svg" /> - Hosted - </a> - </li> - <li> - <a type="application/rss+xml" href="/rss.xml"> - <img src="/includes/icons/rss.svg" /> - RSS - </a> - </li> - </ul> - </nav> - - <article> - <h1>How to Automate Certbot Renewal with HAProxy</h1> - - <p> - So this is specifically for HAProxy on FreeBSD, but it should apply to - other *nix systems as well. Basically, I use HAProxy as a reverse proxy - to a bunch of servers I administer. I use Let's Encrypt for a - certificate and I used <code>certbot</code> to generate that - certificate. Generating the certificate for the first time is easy and - has lots of documentation, but it wasn't initially clear on how I could - easily set up auto-renewal. Here's how I did it. - </p> - - <p> - If you've already set up TLS termination with HAProxy and - <code>certbot</code>, you know you need to combine your Let's Encrypt - fullchain and private key to get a combined certificate that HAProxy can - use. You can do this by <code>cat</code>-ing the chain and key together - like so: - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -cat /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/live/$SITE/fullchain.pem /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/live/$SITE/privkey.pem > /usr/local/etc/ssl/haproxy.pem -</code> - </pre> - - <p> - In this example, <code>$SITE</code> is your domain name that you fed - HAProxy when you created the certificate and <code>haproxy.pem</code> is - wherever you're storing HAProxy's combined certificate. Your HAProxy - config then points to that certificate like this: - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -macon% grep crt /usr/local/etc/haproxy.conf - bind *:443 ssl crt /usr/local/etc/ssl/haproxy.pem -</code> - </pre> - - <p> - And that was the end of the first-time setup. Then a few months later - you probably had to do it again because Let's Encrypt certs are only - good for 90 days in between renewals. To renew the certificate, you - usually run <code>certbot renew</code>, it detects which certificates - are present, and uses either the webroot or standlone server renewal - process. Then you have to <code>cat</code> the fullchain and privkey - together and restart HAProxy so it starts using the new certificate. - </p> - - <p> - To automate those steps, newer versions of - <code>certbot</code> will run any post renewal hooks (read: scripts) - that you want. You can also configure HAProxy and - <code>certbot</code> to perform the ACME challenge dance for renewal so - that you don't have to use it interactively. - </p> - - <p> - First, if you haven't already done it, change your HAProxy config so - there's a frontend+backend for responding to ACME challenges. In a - frontend listening for requests, create an access control list for any - request looking for <code>/.well-known/acme-challenge/</code>. Send - those requests to a backend server with an unused local port. - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -frontend http-in - acl letsencrypt-acl path_beg /.well-known/acme-challenge/ - use_backend letsencrypt-backend if letsencrypt-acl - ... -backend letsencrypt-backend - server letsencrypt 127.0.0.1:54321 -</code> - </pre> - - <p> - What this will do is allow <code>certbot</code> and Let's Encrypt to - renew your server in standalone mode via your reverse proxy. As an added - bonus it prevents you from having to open up an additional port on your - firewall. - </p> - - <p> - Now you've gotta configure <code>certbot</code> to do just that. A - config file was created in <code>certbot</code>'s - <code>renew</code> directory for your site. All you need to do in that - file is add a line to the <code>[renewalparams]</code> section - specifying the port you're using in your HAProxy config. - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -macon% echo "http01_port = 54321" >> /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/renewal/$SITE.conf -</code> - </pre> - - <p> - Now you need the post-renewal hooks. I dropped two separate scripts into - the <code>renewal-hooks</code> directory: one does the job of combining - the certificate chain and private key and the other just restarts - HAProxy. - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -macon% cat /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/renewal-hooks/post/001-catcerts.sh -#!/bin/sh - -SITE=(your site of course) - -cd /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/live/$SITE -cat fullchain.pem privkey.pem > /usr/local/etc/ssl/haproxy.pem -macon% cat /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/renewal-hooks/post/002-haproxy.sh -#!/bin/sh -service haproxy restart -</code> - </pre> - - <p> - When <code>certbot renew</code> is run, <code>certbot</code> checks the - <code>renewal-hooks/post</code> directory and runs any executable things - in it after it's renewed the certificate(s). As a side note, - <em>make sure you hit those scripts with <code>chmod +x</code></em> or - they probably won't run. - </p> - - <p> - Now all that's left is dropping a job into <code>cron</code> or - <code>periodic</code> to run <code>certbot renew</code> at least once or - twice within the renewal period. - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -macon% doas crontab -l|grep certbot -# certbot renewal -@monthly certbot renew -</code> - </pre> - - <p> - You can always test that your scripts are working with - <code>certbot renew --dry-run</code> just to be safe. - </p> - - <pre> -<code> -macon% doas certbot renew --dry-run -Saving debug log to /var/log/letsencrypt/letsencrypt.log - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Processing /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/renewal/53hor.net.conf -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Cert not due for renewal, but simulating renewal for dry run -Plugins selected: Authenticator standalone, Installer None -Simulating renewal of an existing certificate for 53hor.net and 7 more domains -Performing the following challenges: -http-01 challenge for 53hor.net -http-01 challenge for carpentertutoring.com -http-01 challenge for git.53hor.net -http-01 challenge for nextcloud.53hor.net -http-01 challenge for pkg.53hor.net -http-01 challenge for plex.53hor.net -http-01 challenge for theglassyladies.com -http-01 challenge for www.53hor.net -Waiting for verification... -Cleaning up challenges - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -new certificate deployed without reload, fullchain is -/usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/live/53hor.net/fullchain.pem -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Congratulations, all simulated renewals succeeded: - /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/live/53hor.net/fullchain.pem (success) -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Running post-hook command: /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/renewal-hooks/post/001-catcerts.sh -Running post-hook command: /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/renewal-hooks/post/002-haproxy.sh -Output from post-hook command 002-haproxy.sh: -Waiting for PIDS: 15191. -Starting haproxy. - -</code> - </pre> - - <p> - And there it is. Automated Let's Encrypt certificate renewal on FreeBSD - with HAProxy. - </p> - </article> - </body> -</html> |