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292 lines
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292 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Gophernicus - Copyright (c) 2009-2017 Kim Holviala <kim@holviala.com>
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Gophernicus is a modern full-featured (and hopefully) secure gopher
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daemon. It is licensed under the BSD license.
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Command line options:
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-h hostname Change server hostname (FQDN) [$HOSTNAME]
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-p port Change server port [70]
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-T port Change TLS/SSL port [0 = disabled]
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-r root Change gopher root [/var/gopher]
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-t type Change default gopher filetype [0]
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-g mapfile Change gophermap file [gophermap]
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-a tagfile Change gophertag file [gophertag]
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-c cgidir Change CGI script directory [/cgi-bin/]
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-u userdir Change users personal gopherspace [public_gopher]
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-l logfile Log to Apache-compatible combined format logfile
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-w width Change default page width [76]
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-o charset Change default output charset [US-ASCII]
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-s seconds Session timeout in seconds [1800]
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-i hits Maximum hits until throttling [4096]
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-k kbytes Maximum transfer until throttling [4194304]
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-f filterdir Specify directory for output filters
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-e ext=type Map file extension to gopher filetype
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-R old=new Rewrite the beginning of a selector
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-D text|file Set or load server description for caps.txt
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-L text|file Set or load server location for caps.txt
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-A admin Set admin email for caps.txt
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-nv Disable virtual hosting
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-nl Disable parent directory links
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-nh Disable menu header (title)
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-nf Disable menu footer
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-nd Disable dates and filesizes in menus
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-nc Disable file content detection
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-no Disable charset conversion for output
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-nq Disable HTTP-style query strings (?query)
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-ns Disable logging to syslog
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-na Disable autogenerated caps.txt
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-nm Disable shared memory use (for debugging)
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-nr Disable root user checking (for debugging)
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-np Disable HAproxy proxy protocol
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-d Debug to syslog (not for production use)
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-v Display version number and build date
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-b Display the BSD license
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-? Display this help
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Setting up a gopher site
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========================
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After succesfully installing Gophernicus (see INSTALL) you need to set
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up the gopher root directory. By default Gophernicus serves documents
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from /var/gopher so start by creating that directory and making sure
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it's world-readable. Then, simply add files and directories under your
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root, fire up a gopher browser (Firefox with the OverbiteFF extension,
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Lynx) and open up this URL:
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gopher://<HOSTNAME>/ (where <HOSTNAME> is your server hostname)
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That's it, your first gopher site is now up and running. If the links
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on the root menu don't work make sure you are using the -h <HOSTNAME>
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parameter in your configuration (with a valid resolveable hostname
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instead of <HOSTNAME> - see INSTALL).
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Security
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========
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Gophernicus has been written with high security in mind. There should
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be no buffer overflows or memory allocation problems so it should be
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safe to run a publicly available gopher server with Gophernicus.
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However, the security settings (which are non-changeable) are so strict
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that you need to keep one thing in mind. Gophernicus will only serve
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world-readable content. Being readable by the server process is not
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enough, all files and directories MUST be world-readable or they are
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simply hidden from all listings and denied if a client asks for them.
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Gophermaps
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==========
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By default all gopher menus are automatically generated from the
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content of the directory being viewed. If you want to have
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informational text along with the files, or if you want to completely
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replace the generated menu with your own you need to take a look at
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gophermaps. See the file README.gophermap for more information.
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Gophertags
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==========
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A gophertag file can be used to virtually rename a directory. Let's
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assume that you have a directory called "foo" somewhere - it will
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be listed as "foo" in all automatically generated menus. Now if you
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create a file foo/gophertag and put the text "bar" into it the menus
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will show "bar" but the links will still point to "foo". This is
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useful for creating descriptive names for directories without
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littering the file system with spaces and weird characters.
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Personal gopherspaces
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=====================
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Gophernicus supports users personal gopherspaces. If a user has
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world-readable directory called public_gopher/ under his home, a
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request for gopher://<HOSTNAME>/1/~user/ will serve documents from
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that directory.
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Virtual hosting
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===============
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Gophernicus supports virtual hosting, or serving more than one logical
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domain using the same IP address. Since gopher (RFC1436) doesn't
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support virtual hosting this requires some clever (but mostly invisble)
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hacks.
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To enable virtual hosting create one or more directories under your
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gopher root which are named after your domain names. The primary vhost
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directory (set with the -h <HOSTNAME> option) must exist or virtual
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hosting will be disabled. Then simply add content to the hostname
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directories and you're up and running.
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Almost.
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To make gopher clients work properly with virtual hosting, create a
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root gophermap for each of your domains and include the "%" type
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character to create a list of all available virtual hosts (see
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README.gophermap). The generated virtual host links will be created so
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that standard gopher clients will find the correct domain even when
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they don't specifically tell the server which host they're trying to
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reach.
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CGI support
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===========
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Gophernicus supports most parts of the CGI/1.1 standard. Most standard
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CGI variables are set, and some non-standard ones are added.
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By default all scripts and binaries under any directory called
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/cgi-bin/ are executed as CGI scripts (this includes cgi-bin
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directories under users personal gopherspaces). Also, if a gophermap
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is marked executable it is also processed as an CGI script.
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As with regular files, CGI scripts must be world-executable (and
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readable) or they will be ignored. Make sure your CGI script is safe
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with ANY user input as poorly coded CGI scripts are the number #1
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security problem with publicly open *nix servers.
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Output filtering and PHP support
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================================
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In addition to CGI scripts Gophernicus supports output filtering
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scripts. By default output filtering is turned off, but you can turn
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it on by using the -f <FILTERDIR> option, creating that directory
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and creating one or more scripts in there named by either the file
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suffix, or by the gopher filetype char.
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If a file is to be served out which matches either the file suffix
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script, or the filetype script then instead of simply sending the
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file to client the output filter script is executed with the
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original file as the first parameter and the output of the script
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is then sent to client.
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For PHP support install the CLI version of the PHP interpreter and
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then symlink (or copy) that binary to the directory specified with
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-f option using the destination name "php".
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$ ln -s /usr/bin/php5-cli /usr/lib/gophernicus/filters/php
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After that all files with the php suffix will be "filtered" through
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the PHP command line interpreter. In other words, PHP starts working.
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And don't use the CGI version of PHP as it outputs HTTP headers the
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gopher protocol doesn't have.
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Charset support and conversions
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===============================
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Gophernicus supports three charsets: US-ASCII, ISO-8859-1 and UTF-8.
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All textual input is internally upconverted to UTF-8 and then
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downconverted to whatever charset the client is asking for. The
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conversion is input autosensing which means that you don't have to
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specify your filesystem charset, or the charset of your text files -
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it's all detected automatically.
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With standard gopher clients this is a bit of a problem as your text
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files WILL be converted to 7-bit US-ASCII. This means that all 8-bit
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charaters WILL BE LOST. This decision was made because no gopher
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client that I tested was reliably cabable of decoding anything else
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than pure US-ASCII. If you want to disable the conversion use the
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"-no" option, or if you'd like to change the default output charset to
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something else than US-ASCII just use for example the "-o ISO-8859-1"
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option.
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Selector rewriting
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==================
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Selector rewriting lets you rewrite parts of the selector on the fly.
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Well, not parts, but really just the start of it. And the rewrite
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enging here is nothing like Apache's mod_rewrite as I was too lazy
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to integrate any regex libraries... So, all it does is rewrite a
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fixed string at the start of the selector to something else. This
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will let you move your directories around while making sure that
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existing deeplinks still work.
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Examples:
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-R "/~user=/~luser"
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-R "/old-dir=/new-dir"
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Session tracking and statistics
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===============================
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To enable virtual hosting with gopher (RFC1436) clients Gophernicus
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tracks users and their session. As a side effect of that session
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tracking, Gophernicus has simple throttling controls to keep nasty
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users from killing your precious 120MHz PPC 604e server from dying
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under the load. The throttling defaults are high enough that normal
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human users will never hit the limits, but it's possible (and mostly
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preferrable) that a badly behaving crawling agent will be throttled.
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The current sessions and other real-time status data can be viewed
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by opening the URL gopher://<HOSTNAME>/0/server-status . This status
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view has been modeled after the Apache server-status which means
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that it's possible to integrate Gophernicus into existing server
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monitoring systems. To ease up such integrations, Gophernicus
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supports HTTP requests of the server-status page using an URL like
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http://<HOSTNAME>:70/server-status?auto
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TLS/SSL and proxy support
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=========================
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As of version 2.3 Gophernicus supports the HAproxy proxy protocol
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version 1. This makes it possible to build a cluster of gopher servers
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and use HAproxy in front of them all handling client routing to different
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backend servers.
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More useful is putting Gophernicus behind Stunnel4 for TLS/SSL support
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and use the same proxy protocol to tell Gophernicus the correct remote IP
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address. The below sample stunnel configuration is all you need to
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TLS-enable your gopher server. Well, you'll need a certificate too and for
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that I recommend Let's Encrypt.
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In addition to configuring Stunnel for TLS you should add -T <TLS port>
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to Gophernicus options so that it knows which connetions are coming in
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encrypted and which are not. Using proper -T also makes it possible for
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CGI programs to use the $TLS environment variable to know whether the
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current request was encrypted or not.
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;
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; Gophernicus behind Stunnel4 for gopher over TLS
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;
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; User/group for stunnel daemon
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setuid = stunnel4
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setgid = stunnel4
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; PID file location
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pid = /var/run/stunnel4/gophernicus.pid
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; Log to file, not syslog
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output = /var/log/stunnel4/gophernicus.log
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syslog = no
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; Certificate in pem format is needed for TLS
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cert = /etc/ssl/private/gophernicus.pem
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; Enable TCP wrappers
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libwrap = yes
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service = in.gophernicus-tls
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; Gopher over TLS service
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[gophernicus]
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accept = :::7070
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connect = 127.0.0.1:70
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protocol = proxy
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