110 lines
2.5 KiB
Plaintext
110 lines
2.5 KiB
Plaintext
Spongy Server Installation
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==========================
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You gotta make a base directory with an `authtok` file,
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and a subdirectory for every server you want to connect to.
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BASE_DIRECTORY
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+-- slashnet
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| +-- handler
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| +-- config/
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| | +-- server
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| | +-- gecos
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| | +-- nick
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| +-- log/
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| | +-- 2015-01-29T19:56:27Z.log
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| | +-- 2015-01-29T20:01:15Z.log
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| | +-- 2015-01-29T20:41:40Z.log
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| | +-- 2015-01-29T20:41:48Z.log
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| | +-- 2015-01-29T20:41:56Z.log
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| | +-- 2015-01-29T20:42:44Z.log
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| +-- outq/
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+-- oftc
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+-- server3
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+-- server4
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`config` directory
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------------------
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The `config` directory in a server directory must have certain files:
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* `server` is a list of servers to try and connect to, in the form `hostname:port`
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* `gecos` is your "Real Name"
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* `nick` is a list of nicknames you'd like to use
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The lists are gone through starting with the first entry until one sticks.
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`outq` directory
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----------------
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The `outq` directory is monitored by spongy.
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When a new file shows up, its contents are spit out verbatim
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over the server connection.
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So if you want to send a message to a channel,
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do something like this:
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$ echo 'PRIVMSG #channel :hello world' > outq/$$.$(date +%s)
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Starting up
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-----------
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Pretty easy:
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$ cd BASE_DIRECTORY; /path/to/spongy
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Spongy will go off and connect to every configured server in BASE_DIRECTORY.
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Spongy CGI Configuration
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========================
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If you'd like to run `spongy.cgi`,
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that's fine,
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but you have to create a file
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called `spongy.basedir`
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in the same directory as the CGI.
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You can do it like this:
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$ echo '/home/neale/BASE_DIRECTORY' > spongy.basedir
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And then,
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in `BASE_DIRECTORY`,
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you need a file called `auth`
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with a sha256 checksum of the authorization token
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you want to use in the client.
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You can make it like this:
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$ printf 'my fabulous token' | sha256sum | cut -d\ -f1 > BASE_DIRECTORY
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Permissions
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-----------
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There are a lot of different ways to set up permissions.
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Here's what I suggest:
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make `spongy.cgi` setuid to you.
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$ chmod +s spongy.cgi
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If it's setuid,
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you don't need to make your config file
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(or any other files)
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readable by the user that
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runs the web server.
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Sadly,
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Apache has a whole bunch of weirdness in place
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which prevents setuid CGI from working
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without a lot of configuration twiddling.
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But it also has its own mechanism for running CGI
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as the user who owns it.
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So if you're using Apache,
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please send me a recipe for your solution,
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and I'll add it to the distribution :)
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