Automatically uses the best mirror for your location, see:
http://httpredir.debian.org/demo.html
Should be much better than any hardcoded default for most hosts.
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
For now I generated the certs manually, but in the future the play-
book should run the letsencrypt-auto client for us!
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
We need to actually check if HSTS was requested before setting the
header in the block handing PHP requests. We check in the main vhost
block, but nginx headers are only inherited if you don't set ANY
headers in child blocks (ie, headers set in parent blocks are cleared
if you set any new ones in the child).
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
This is really a per-site setting, so it doesn't make sense to have
a role default. Anyways, HSTS is kinda tricky and potentially dang-
erous, so unless a vhost explicitly sets it to "yes" we shouldn't
enable it.
Note: also switch from using a boolean to using a string; it is st-
ill declarative, but at least now I don't have to guess whether it
is being treated as a bool or not.
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
We actually need to use /var/log/munin for munin-node on Debian
too, as that's what is created by the package manager during
installation.
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
Note: I've only tested this on a Debian container, and you can't
set these sysctls on containers (the host controls them). To make
matters worse, there is no fact to make ansible skip this on hosts
that are running in containers. For now I will just skip it on
hosts that are "virtualization" servers... even though we actually
do have KVM running on Debian on real hardware. *sigh*
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
Needed in Ubuntu 15.04 where iptables-persistent is going away. I
have added translations of the current IPv4 and IPv6 iptables rules.
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
- Don't run the static files as templates
- Use a separate playbook for related tasks
- Use a template for security.sources.list
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
For security and predictability clients should only get a reponse
if they request a hostname we are actually hosting.
If TLS is in use then this will use a self-signed snakeoil cert for
an HTTPS-enabled blank, default vhost.
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
New hosts often fail due to not having an apt_mirror, because there
isn't one defined for their group and their host_vars haven't over-
ridden it.
We want new hosts to deploy successfully, so let's just use a default
apt_mirror if there isn't one defined. Rather have a slow mirror than
a failed deployment. And in any case, Linode can download from KENET's
mirror at 10MB/sec. ;)
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
I realized there was no need to do a full clone when I was working
in a Vagrant environment in a coffee shop with slow Internet. ;)
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
Instead of using dynamic hack to use the package manager for the
current host. We only have Ubuntu here anyways.
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
A template is better than ansible's `apt_repository` module because
we can idempotently control the contents of the file based on vari-
ables.
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
I was only setting it on the PHP block, which is for all dynamic
requests (ie pages from WordPress), but it should also be the same
for all static files not served from that block.
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
Include subdomains in the HTTP Strict Transport Security header,
and include the "preload" verb to inform Google we want to be pre-
loaded into the HSTS preload.
See: https://hstspreload.appspot.com/
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
Reduce memory allocation from 128 -> 72M because after a few days
of running it's only using 64 or so, so it's really just a waste of
memory.
Also, disable opcache for CLI. What the hell do you need opcaching
in the CLI invocation for? It only persists for one process!
Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>