FeministWiki:Technical documentation

    From FeministWiki

    This page documents the FeministWiki's technical infrastructure, the target audience being technicians. Note that while this page will help you understand the inner workings of the FeministWiki, it's not optimal for guiding you through the setup of a new server. For that, see the page FW:Server setup instead.

    Hosts

    The following table documents the basic DNS configuration, and can be used as part of the /etc/hosts file on each server to obviate the need for DNS lookups when connecting to one another.

    IP FQDN Host Purpose Ports
    85.214.206.20 feministwiki.org Wiki 80, 443
    85.214.206.20 www.feministwiki.org www Wiki 80, 443
    85.214.206.20 ldap.feministwiki.org ldap LDAP -
    85.214.206.20 blogs.feministwiki.org blogs Blogging 80, 443
    85.214.206.20 chat.feministwiki.org chat Web-client for XMPP 80, 443
    85.214.206.20 forum.feministwiki.org forum BBS Forum 80, 443
    85.214.206.20 mail.feministwiki.org mail Web-client for Mail 80, 443
    85.214.206.20 files.feministwiki.org files File storage 80, 443
    85.214.206.20 imap.feministwiki.org imap IMAP 993
    85.214.206.20 pop3.feministwiki.org pop3 POP3 995
    85.214.206.20 smtp.feministwiki.org smtp SMTP 25, 465, 587
    85.214.206.20 xmpp.feministwiki.org xmpp XMPP 5222, 5223, 5269, 5270, 5443, 7777
    85.214.206.20 irc.feministwiki.org irc IRC 6697
    85.214.206.20 account.feministwiki.org account Account operations 80, 443

    As you can see, all services are on the same server for now. However, it should be kept as an open possibility that the hosts are split across different IPs. When done so, the ldap host should listen on 636 for LDAPS connections.

    There are no AAAA entries in the DNS because we only allow IPv4 for incoming connections. This simplifies security auditing.

    Special DNS entries

    For CAA:

    Type Name Flag Tag Value
    CAA @ 0 issue letsencrypt.org
    CAA @ 0 iodef admin@feministwiki.org

    For email:

    Type Host Data Purpose
    MX @ smtp.feministwiki.org Mail server
    TXT @ v=spf1 mx -all SPF
    TXT mail._domainkey v=DKIM1; k=rsa; p=<pubkey> DKIM
    TXT _dmarc v=DMARC1; p=reject; rua=mailto:admin@feministwiki.org DMARC

    Note: There must be a direct A or AAAA record (not a CNAME record) for the domain name specified in the MX record.

    For XMPP:

    Type Service Protocol Name Destination Port
    SRV _xmpp-client _tcp @ xmpp.feministwiki.org 5222
    SRV _xmpp-server _tcp @ xmpp.feministwiki.org 5269
    SRV _xmpps-client _tcp @ xmpp.feministwiki.org 5223
    SRV _xmpps-server _tcp @ xmpp.feministwiki.org 5270

    Google Site Verification:

    Type Host Data
    TXT @ google-site-verification=<key>

    Firewall

    The simple ufw firewall-frontend is used to trivially limit all network I/O to the ports you can see in the host table above, plus port 22 for ssh and scp.

    UFW adds IPv6 rules by default, which can be prevented by using more explicit rules. Consider the following rule:

     ufw allow 12345/tcp  # will allow TCP connections to port 12345 via IPv4 and IPv6
    

    To limit this to IPv4 you can instead use this:

     ufw allow proto tcp to 0.0.0.0/0 port 12345  # will allow TCP connections to port 12345 via IPv4 only
    

    Fail2ban

    We use fail2ban to detect brute force attempts on some services. The git repository for scripts and config contains the relevant Fail2ban configuration under etc/fail2ban.

    SSH access

    FeministWiki hosts have ssh enabled for root access, but password login is disabled. You must own a valid private key to log in.

    Git repo of scripts and configuration

    The following GitHub account hosts repositories with scripts and configuration used by the FeministWiki:

    https://github.com/FeministWiki

    Certs

    The FeministWiki uses LetsEncrypt to acquire digital certificates for encrypted communication.

    After certificates are generated with certbot, copies of them are put into /etc/fw-certs, and the group ownership and permissions of the privkey.pem and bundle.pem files are set such that any user who's in the ssl-cert group can read the private key and bundle. (The others can be read by anyone anyway.) A script in /etc/letsencrypt/renewal-hooks/post is responsible for taking care of this after automatic executions of certbot scheduled by the operating system.

    The file /etc/fw-certs/bundle.pem is useful for programs that don't have the capability of reading a separate cert and key file; it combines the full certificate chain (fullchain.pem) with the private key in a single file.

    If you ever add a new domain under which the FeministWiki server will be reachable, add it as a line to the file /etc/feministwiki/domains and run the script /root/bin/letsencrypt-refresh. This script takes care of running certbot to refresh the cert files, and populating the /etc/fw-certs directory with updated files.

    Note that whenever you run the letsencrypt-refresh script, it will momentarily stop the web server. This means you're causing a short outage of the web-based services of the FeministWiki whenever you run the script.

    Services

    This section documents the individual services of the FeministWiki. They should work regardless of what server they're on. I.e. every service could in theory be hosted on its own server.

    LDAP

    Host: ldap.feministwiki.org
    Software: OpenLDAP

    The LDAP service contains the central database of FeministWiki members. For details on the LDAP schema, see FeministWiki:LDAP Schema.

    Wiki

    Host: feministwiki.org, www.feministwiki.org, fem.wiki, feminist.wiki, feminism.wiki, feministwiki.de, www.feministwiki.de
    Software: MediaWiki

    The wiki uses a MediaWiki installation located at /var/www/fw/wiki/w. It uses the LDAP Stack extension for login management, and the "Short URL" feature is enabled. The wiki uses the SQL database called "feministwiki" and the SQL user of the same name.

    The default wiki is in English. Parallel wiki installations for different languages are supported via a combination of Apache's URL rewriting, and conditional branches in the LocalSettings.php file of the MediaWiki installation:

    • The rewrite rules ensure that, for any supported language xy, URLs beginning with /xy/wiki/... internally resolve to /w/index.php and URLs beginning with /xy/w/... resolve to /w/....
    • The LocalSettings file checks $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] to determine the language code prefix in the requested URL, and configures things accordingly:
      • It sets $wgArticlePath to /xy/wiki/$1 so that /w/index.php knows that when it's invoked via such a URL, it should serve an article.
      • It sets $wgScriptPath to /xy/w so that links to scripts served by MediaWiki are correct for the language.
      • It sets the SQL database name to feministwiki_xy.
      • It configures a "foreign" image database via the ForeignDBRepo method so that the media upload database of the default wiki is used by all, instead of every parallel wiki having its own media database.

    To add a new language, follow these steps:

    • Clone the English wiki's database into a new one via: mysqldump feministwiki | mysql feministwiki_xy
    • Grant permissions on the new database via: GRANT ALL ON feministwiki_xy.* TO feministwiki@localhost;
    • Edit /etc/apache2/sites-available/000-wiki.conf to add the line: Use Wiki xy
    • Add the language to ~/bin/fw-update-languages.sh and run it

    The last step will produce a lot of errors complaining about keys already existing; these can be safely ignored.

    The domain names feministwiki.de and www.feministwiki.de redirect to https://feministwiki.org/de. For instance, requesting https://feministwiki.de/wiki/Hauptseite will result in an HTTP redirect to https://feministwiki.org/de/wiki/Hauptseite.

    Blogs

    Host: blogs.feministwiki.org
    Software: WordPress (multisite)

    This is an installation of WordPress in /var/www/fw/blogs, with the "multisite network" feature enabled on a path-basis, so users can have their own blogs on URLs like blogs.feministwiki.org/janedoe. LDAP authentication is enabled via the AD/LDAP plugin from miniOrange.

    Users from LDAP who log in for the first time are automatically registered as "Subscriber" accounts, and the admin can change their WordPress role "Author" to allow publishing.

    This WordPress installation uses the SQL database called "blogs" and an SQL user of the same name.

    Chat (web interface)

    Host: chat.feministwiki.org
    Software: Converse.js

    The web-interface for the FeministChat uses the full-screen "Impress" variant of the Converse.js XMPP client. The hosted HTML and JS files are located at /var/www/fw/chat, although they load Converse.js as an external script from upstream, which is why the self-hosted HTML and JS are very minimal.

    Forum

    Host: forum.feministwiki.org
    Software: phpBB

    The forum uses a phpBB installation located at /var/www/fw/forum. Most configuration of phpBB, including LDAP authentication, is done through its administration panel. The style used by the forum is a minimally changed "ProSilver Dark". The forum uses the SQL database called "feministforum" and the SQL user of the same name.

    Mail (web interface)

    Host: mail.feministwiki.org
    Software: Roundcube

    The web-interface for the FeministMail uses the Roundcube mail client, installed at /var/www/fw/mail. It uses a FeministWiki-branded modification of the new "elastic" style.

    Files

    Host: files.feministwiki.org
    Software: Nextcloud

    FeministFiles is a Nextcloud installation with some branding, and LDAP authentication, installed at /var/www/fw/files.

    IMAP

    Host: imap.feministwiki.org
    Software: Dovecot

    FeministMail uses the Dovecot IMAP server, configured for LDAP authentication and using virtual mail boxes under /home/vmail.

    POP3

    Host: pop3.feministwiki.org
    Software: Dovecot

    While Dovecot is primarily an IMAP server, it also offers POP3 support, which the FeministWiki installation has enabled.

    SMTP

    Host: smtp.feministwiki.org
    Software: Postfix, OpenDKIM

    FeministMail uses the Postfix SMTP server, using SASL authentication through Dovecot, LDAP-based virtual mail boxes under /home/vmail, and DKIM signing via OpenDKIM. Send a mail to a Gmail account and use the "Show original" feature of Gmail to see if the mail passes SPF, DKIM, and DMARC tests.

    There are also various tools on the web to automatically test the DNS settings for correctness, to check if the domain/IP is on blacklists, etc., which you can find via Google. All in all, FeministMail is probably the most complicated service of the FeministWiki, as far as technical background goes.

    Mailing lists

    Email domain: lists.feministwiki.org
    Software: GNU Mailman, Postfix

    Postfix is configured to recognize lists.feministwiki.org as a "local" domain. This means it uses the file specified in the alias_maps configuration directive (typically /etc/aliases) to decide the final recipient of an e-mail sent to this domain. Correspondingly, we populate /etc/aliases with the aliases needed by Mailman to operate each mailing list it controls.

    Note that there is no DNS entry for lists.feministwiki.org because e-mail software just checks the MX record for feministwiki.org when the recipient is from the domain anything.feministwiki.org.

    XMPP

    Host: xmpp.feministwiki.org
    Software: ejabberd

    FeministChat uses the ejabberd XMPP server, configured to use LDAP authentication and an LDAP-based shared roster group for all members.

    IRC

    Host: irc.feministwiki.org
    Software: InspIRCd

    FeministIRC uses the InspIRCd IRC server with the ldapauth module for LDAP authentication. The client is authenticated via the combination of the NICK and PASS provided upon connection, which must correspond to the FeministWiki credentials.

    Account operations

    Host: account.feministwiki.org
    Software: custom

    This custom web interface hosted at /var/www/fw/account lets you complete several tasks related to FeministWiki membership, such as changing your account settings, resetting your password, or adding a new member. It also contains a form to request membership. The interface is written in HTML, CSS, PHP, and C.