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650 lines
28 KiB
Markdown
650 lines
28 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "November, 2017"
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date: 2017-11-02T09:37:54+02:00
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author: "Alan Orth"
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tags: ["Notes"]
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---
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## 2017-11-01
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- The CORE developers responded to say they are looking into their bot not respecting our robots.txt
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## 2017-11-02
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- Today there have been no hits by CORE and no alerts from Linode (coincidence?)
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```
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# grep -c "CORE" /var/log/nginx/access.log
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0
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```
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- Generate list of authors on CGSpace for Peter to go through and correct:
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```
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dspace=# \copy (select distinct text_value, count(*) as count from metadatavalue where metadata_field_id = (select metadata_field_id from metadatafieldregistry where element = 'contributor' and qualifier = 'author') AND resource_type_id = 2 group by text_value order by count desc) to /tmp/authors.csv with csv;
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COPY 54701
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```
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<!--more-->
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- Abenet asked if it would be possible to generate a report of items in Listing and Reports that had "International Fund for Agricultural Development" as the *only* investor
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- I opened a ticket with Atmire to ask if this was possible: https://tracker.atmire.com/tickets-cgiar-ilri/view-ticket?id=540
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- Work on making the thumbnails in the item view clickable
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- Basically, once you read the METS XML for an item it becomes easy to trace the structure to find the bitstream link
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```
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//mets:fileSec/mets:fileGrp[@USE='CONTENT']/mets:file/mets:FLocat[@LOCTYPE='URL']/@xlink:href
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```
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- METS XML is available for all items with this pattern: /metadata/handle/10568/95947/mets.xml
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- I whipped up a quick hack to print a clickable link with this URL on the thumbnail but it needs to check a few corner cases, like when there is a thumbnail but no content bitstream!
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- Help proof fifty-three CIAT records for Sisay: https://dspacetest.cgiar.org/handle/10568/95895
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- A handful of issues with `cg.place` using format like "Lima, PE" instead of "Lima, Peru"
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- Also, some dates like with completely invalid format like "2010- 06" and "2011-3-28"
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- I also collapsed some consecutive whitespace on a handful of fields
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## 2017-11-03
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- Atmire got back to us to say that they estimate it will take two days of labor to implement the change to Listings and Reports
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- I said I'd ask Abenet if she wants that feature
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## 2017-11-04
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- I finished looking through Sisay's CIAT records for the "Alianzas de Aprendizaje" data
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- I corrected about half of the authors to standardize them
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- Linode emailed this morning to say that the CPU usage was high again, this time at 6:14AM
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- It's the first time in a few days that this has happened
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- I had a look to see what was going on, but it isn't the CORE bot:
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```
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# awk '{print $1}' /var/log/nginx/access.log | sort -n | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
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306 68.180.229.31
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323 61.148.244.116
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414 66.249.66.91
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507 40.77.167.16
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618 157.55.39.161
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652 207.46.13.103
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666 157.55.39.254
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1173 104.196.152.243
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1737 66.249.66.90
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23101 138.201.52.218
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```
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- 138.201.52.218 is from some Hetzner server, and I see it making 40,000 requests yesterday too, but none before that:
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```
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# zgrep -c 138.201.52.218 /var/log/nginx/access.log*
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/var/log/nginx/access.log:24403
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.1:45958
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.2.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.3.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.4.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.5.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.6.gz:0
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```
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- It's clearly a bot as it's making tens of thousands of requests, but it's using a "normal" user agent:
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```
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Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/41.0.2227.0 Safari/537.36
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```
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- For now I don't know what this user is!
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## 2017-11-05
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- Peter asked if I could fix the appearance of "International Livestock Research Institute" in the author lookup during item submission
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- It looks to be just an issue with the user interface expecting authors to have both a first and last name:
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![Author lookup](/cgspace-notes/2017/11/author-lookup.png)
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![Add author](/cgspace-notes/2017/11/add-author.png)
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- But in the database the authors are correct (none with weird `, /` characters):
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```
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dspace=# select distinct text_value, authority, confidence from metadatavalue value where resource_type_id=2 and metadata_field_id=3 and text_value like 'International Livestock Research Institute%';
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text_value | authority | confidence
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--------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------
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International Livestock Research Institute | 8f3865dc-d056-4aec-90b7-77f49ab4735c | 0
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International Livestock Research Institute | f4db1627-47cd-4699-b394-bab7eba6dadc | 0
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International Livestock Research Institute | | -1
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International Livestock Research Institute | 8f3865dc-d056-4aec-90b7-77f49ab4735c | 600
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International Livestock Research Institute | f4db1627-47cd-4699-b394-bab7eba6dadc | -1
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International Livestock Research Institute | | 600
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International Livestock Research Institute | 8f3865dc-d056-4aec-90b7-77f49ab4735c | -1
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International Livestock Research Institute | 8f3865dc-d056-4aec-90b7-77f49ab4735c | 500
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(8 rows)
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```
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- So I'm not sure if this is just a graphical glitch or if editors have to edit this metadata field prior to approval
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- Looking at monitoring Tomcat's JVM heap with Prometheus, it looks like we need to use JMX + [jmx_exporter](https://github.com/prometheus/jmx_exporter)
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- This guide shows how to [enable JMX in Tomcat](https://geekflare.com/enable-jmx-tomcat-to-monitor-administer/) by modifying `CATALINA_OPTS`
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- I was able to successfully connect to my local Tomcat with jconsole!
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## 2017-11-07
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- CGSpace when down and up a few times this morning, first around 3AM, then around 7
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- Tsega had to restart Tomcat 7 to fix it temporarily
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- I will start by looking at bot usage (access.log.1 includes usage until 6AM today):
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```
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# cat /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | awk '{print $1}' | sort -n | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
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619 65.49.68.184
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840 65.49.68.199
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924 66.249.66.91
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1131 68.180.229.254
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1583 66.249.66.90
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1953 207.46.13.103
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1999 207.46.13.80
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2021 157.55.39.161
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2034 207.46.13.36
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4681 104.196.152.243
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```
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- 104.196.152.243 seems to be a top scraper for a few weeks now:
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```
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# zgrep -c 104.196.152.243 /var/log/nginx/access.log*
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/var/log/nginx/access.log:336
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.1:4681
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.2.gz:3531
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.3.gz:3532
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.4.gz:5786
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.5.gz:8542
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.6.gz:6988
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.7.gz:7517
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.8.gz:7211
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.9.gz:2763
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```
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- This user is responsible for hundreds and sometimes thousands of Tomcat sessions:
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```
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$ grep 104.196.152.243 dspace.log.2017-11-07 | grep -o -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}' | sort -n | uniq | wc -l
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954
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$ grep 104.196.152.243 dspace.log.2017-11-03 | grep -o -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}' | sort -n | uniq | wc -l
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6199
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$ grep 104.196.152.243 dspace.log.2017-11-01 | grep -o -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}' | sort -n | uniq | wc -l
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7051
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```
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- The worst thing is that this user never specifies a user agent string so we can't lump it in with the other bots using the Tomcat Session Crawler Manager Valve
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- They don't request dynamic URLs like "/discover" but they seem to be fetching handles from XMLUI instead of REST (and some with `//handle`, note the regex below):
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```
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# grep -c 104.196.152.243 /var/log/nginx/access.log.1
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4681
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# grep 104.196.152.243 /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c -P 'GET //?handle'
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4618
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```
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- I just realized that `ciat.cgiar.org` points to 104.196.152.243, so I should contact Leroy from CIAT to see if we can change their scraping behavior
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- The next IP (207.46.13.36) seem to be Microsoft's bingbot, but all its requests specify the "bingbot" user agent and there are no requests for dynamic URLs that are forbidden, like "/discover":
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```
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$ grep -c 207.46.13.36 /var/log/nginx/access.log.1
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2034
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# grep 207.46.13.36 /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c "GET /discover"
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0
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```
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- The next IP (157.55.39.161) also seems to be bingbot, and none of its requests are for URLs forbidden by robots.txt either:
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```
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# grep 157.55.39.161 /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c "GET /discover"
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0
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```
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- The next few seem to be bingbot as well, and they declare a proper user agent and do not request dynamic URLs like "/discover":
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```
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# grep -c -E '207.46.13.[0-9]{2,3}' /var/log/nginx/access.log.1
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5997
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# grep -E '207.46.13.[0-9]{2,3}' /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c "bingbot"
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5988
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# grep -E '207.46.13.[0-9]{2,3}' /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c "GET /discover"
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0
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```
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- The next few seem to be Googlebot, and they declare a proper user agent and do not request dynamic URLs like "/discover":
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```
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# grep -c -E '66.249.66.[0-9]{2,3}' /var/log/nginx/access.log.1
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3048
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# grep -E '66.249.66.[0-9]{2,3}' /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c Google
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3048
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# grep -E '66.249.66.[0-9]{2,3}' /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c "GET /discover"
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0
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```
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- The next seems to be Yahoo, which declares a proper user agent and does not request dynamic URLs like "/discover":
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```
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# grep -c 68.180.229.254 /var/log/nginx/access.log.1
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1131
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# grep 68.180.229.254 /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c "GET /discover"
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0
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```
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- The last of the top ten IPs seems to be some bot with a weird user agent, but they are not behaving too well:
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```
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# grep -c -E '65.49.68.[0-9]{3}' /var/log/nginx/access.log.1
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2950
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# grep -E '65.49.68.[0-9]{3}' /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -c "GET /discover"
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330
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```
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- Their user agents vary, ie:
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- `Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/61.0.3163.100 Safari/537.36`
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- `Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.11 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/23.0.1271.97 Safari/537.11`
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- `Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; Trident/7.0; SLCC2; .NET CLR 2.0.50727; .NET CLR 3.5.30729; .NET CLR 3.0.30729; Media Center PC 6.0; .NET4.0C; .NET4.0E)`
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- I'll just keep an eye on that one for now, as it only made a few hundred requests to dynamic discovery URLs
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- While it's not in the top ten, Baidu is one bot that seems to not give a fuck:
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```
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# cat /var/log/nginx/access.log /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep "7/Nov/2017" | grep -c Baiduspider
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8912
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# cat /var/log/nginx/access.log /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep "7/Nov/2017" | grep Baiduspider | grep -c -E "GET /(browse|discover|search-filter)"
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2521
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```
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- According to their documentation their bot [respects `robots.txt`](http://www.baidu.com/search/robots_english.html), but I don't see this being the case
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- I think I will end up blocking Baidu as well...
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- Next is for me to look and see what was happening specifically at 3AM and 7AM when the server crashed
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- I should look in nginx access.log, rest.log, oai.log, and DSpace's dspace.log.2017-11-07
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- Here are the top IPs making requests to XMLUI from 2 to 8 AM:
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```
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# cat /var/log/nginx/access.log /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -E '07/Nov/2017:0[2-8]' | awk '{print $1}' | sort -n | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
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279 66.249.66.91
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373 65.49.68.199
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446 68.180.229.254
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470 104.196.152.243
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470 197.210.168.174
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598 207.46.13.103
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603 157.55.39.161
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637 207.46.13.80
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703 207.46.13.36
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724 66.249.66.90
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```
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- Of those, most are Google, Bing, Yahoo, etc, except 63.143.42.244 and 63.143.42.242 which are Uptime Robot
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- Here are the top IPs making requests to REST from 2 to 8 AM:
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```
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# cat /var/log/nginx/rest.log /var/log/nginx/rest.log.1 | grep -E '07/Nov/2017:0[2-8]' | awk '{print $1}' | sort -n | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
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8 207.241.229.237
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10 66.249.66.90
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16 104.196.152.243
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25 41.60.238.61
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26 157.55.39.161
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27 207.46.13.103
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27 207.46.13.80
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31 207.46.13.36
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1498 50.116.102.77
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```
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- The OAI requests during that same time period are nothing to worry about:
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```
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# cat /var/log/nginx/oai.log /var/log/nginx/oai.log.1 | grep -E '07/Nov/2017:0[2-8]' | awk '{print $1}' | sort -n | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
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1 66.249.66.92
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4 66.249.66.90
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6 68.180.229.254
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```
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- The top IPs from dspace.log during the 2–8 AM period:
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```
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$ grep -E '2017-11-07 0[2-8]' dspace.log.2017-11-07 | grep -o -E 'ip_addr=[0-9.]+' | sort -n | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
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143 ip_addr=213.55.99.121
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181 ip_addr=66.249.66.91
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223 ip_addr=157.55.39.161
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248 ip_addr=207.46.13.80
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251 ip_addr=207.46.13.103
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291 ip_addr=207.46.13.36
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297 ip_addr=197.210.168.174
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312 ip_addr=65.49.68.199
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462 ip_addr=104.196.152.243
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488 ip_addr=66.249.66.90
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```
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- These aren't actually very interesting, as the top few are Google, CIAT, Bingbot, and a few other unknown scrapers
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- The number of requests isn't even that high to be honest
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- As I was looking at these logs I noticed another heavy user (124.17.34.59) that was not active during this time period, but made many requests today alone:
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```
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# zgrep -c 124.17.34.59 /var/log/nginx/access.log*
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/var/log/nginx/access.log:22581
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.1:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.2.gz:14
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.3.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.4.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.5.gz:3
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.6.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.7.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.8.gz:0
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/var/log/nginx/access.log.9.gz:1
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```
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- The whois data shows the IP is from China, but the user agent doesn't really give any clues:
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```
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# grep 124.17.34.59 /var/log/nginx/access.log | awk -F'" ' '{print $3}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -h
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210 "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/61.0.3163.100 Safari/537.36"
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22610 "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 9.0; Windows NT 6.2; Win64; x64; Trident/7.0; LCTE)"
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```
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- A Google search for "LCTE bot" doesn't return anything interesting, but this [Stack Overflow discussion](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/42500881/what-is-lcte-in-user-agent) references the lack of information
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- So basically after a few hours of looking at the log files I am not closer to understanding what is going on!
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- I do know that we want to block Baidu, though, as it does not respect `robots.txt`
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- And as we speak Linode alerted that the outbound traffic rate is very high for the past two hours (about 12–14 hours)
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- At least for now it seems to be that new Chinese IP (124.17.34.59):
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```
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# grep -E "07/Nov/2017:1[234]:" /var/log/nginx/access.log | awk '{print $1}' | sort -n | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
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198 207.46.13.103
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203 207.46.13.80
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205 207.46.13.36
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218 157.55.39.161
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249 45.5.184.221
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258 45.5.187.130
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386 66.249.66.90
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410 197.210.168.174
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1896 104.196.152.243
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11005 124.17.34.59
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```
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- Seems 124.17.34.59 are really downloading all our PDFs, compared to the next top active IPs during this time!
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```
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# grep -E "07/Nov/2017:1[234]:" /var/log/nginx/access.log | grep 124.17.34.59 | grep -c pdf
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5948
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# grep -E "07/Nov/2017:1[234]:" /var/log/nginx/access.log | grep 104.196.152.243 | grep -c pdf
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0
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```
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- About CIAT, I think I need to encourage them to specify a user agent string for their requests, because they are not reuising their Tomcat session and they are creating thousands of sessions per day
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- All CIAT requests vs unique ones:
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```
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$ grep -Io -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=104.196.152.243' dspace.log.2017-11-07 | wc -l
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3506
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$ grep -Io -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=104.196.152.243' dspace.log.2017-11-07 | sort | uniq | wc -l
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3506
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```
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- I emailed CIAT about the session issue, user agent issue, and told them they should not scrape the HTML contents of communities, instead using the REST API
|
||
- About Baidu, I found a link to their [robots.txt tester tool](http://ziyuan.baidu.com/robots/)
|
||
- It seems like our robots.txt file is valid, and they claim to recognize that URLs like `/discover` should be forbidden (不允许, aka "not allowed"):
|
||
|
||
![Baidu robots.txt tester](/cgspace-notes/2017/11/baidu-robotstxt.png)
|
||
|
||
- But they literally just made this request today:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
180.76.15.136 - - [07/Nov/2017:06:25:11 +0000] "GET /discover?filtertype_0=crpsubject&filter_relational_operator_0=equals&filter_0=WATER%2C+LAND+AND+ECOSYSTEMS&filtertype=subject&filter_relational_operator=equals&filter=WATER+RESOURCES HTTP/1.1" 200 82265 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Baiduspider/2.0; +http://www.baidu.com/search/spider.html)"
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Along with another thousand or so requests to URLs that are forbidden in robots.txt today alone:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# grep -c Baiduspider /var/log/nginx/access.log
|
||
3806
|
||
# grep Baiduspider /var/log/nginx/access.log | grep -c -E "GET /(browse|discover|search-filter)"
|
||
1085
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- I will think about blocking their IPs but they have 164 of them!
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# grep "Baiduspider/2.0" /var/log/nginx/access.log | awk '{print $1}' | sort -n | uniq | wc -l
|
||
164
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
## 2017-11-08
|
||
|
||
- Linode sent several alerts last night about CPU usage and outbound traffic rate at 6:13PM
|
||
- Linode sent another alert about CPU usage in the morning at 6:12AM
|
||
- Jesus, the new Chinese IP (124.17.34.59) has downloaded 24,000 PDFs in the last 24 hours:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# cat /var/log/nginx/access.log /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep -E "0[78]/Nov/2017:" | grep 124.17.34.59 | grep -v pdf.jpg | grep -c pdf
|
||
24981
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- This is about 20,000 Tomcat sessions:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
$ cat dspace.log.2017-11-07 dspace.log.2017-11-08 | grep -Io -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=124.17.34.59' | sort | uniq | wc -l
|
||
20733
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- I'm getting really sick of this
|
||
- Sisay re-uploaded the CIAT records that I had already corrected earlier this week, erasing all my corrections
|
||
- I had to re-correct all the publishers, places, names, dates, etc and apply the changes on DSpace Test
|
||
- Run system updates on DSpace Test and reboot the server
|
||
- Magdalena had written to say that two of their Phase II project tags were missing on CGSpace, so I added them ([#346](https://github.com/ilri/DSpace/pull/346))
|
||
- I figured out a way to use nginx's map function to assign a "bot" user agent to misbehaving clients who don't define a user agent
|
||
- Most bots are automatically lumped into one generic session by [Tomcat's Crawler Session Manager Valve](https://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/config/valve.html#Crawler_Session_Manager_Valve) but this only works if their user agent matches a pre-defined regular expression like `.*[bB]ot.*`
|
||
- Some clients send thousands of requests without a user agent which ends up creating thousands of Tomcat sessions, wasting precious memory, CPU, and database resources in the process
|
||
- Basically, we modify the nginx config to add a mapping with a modified user agent `$ua`:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
map $remote_addr $ua {
|
||
# 2017-11-08 Random Chinese host grabbing 20,000 PDFs
|
||
124.17.34.59 'ChineseBot';
|
||
default $http_user_agent;
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- If the client's address matches then the user agent is set, otherwise the default `$http_user_agent` variable is used
|
||
- Then, in the server's `/` block we pass this header to Tomcat:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
proxy_pass http://tomcat_http;
|
||
proxy_set_header User-Agent $ua;
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Note to self: the `$ua` variable won't show up in nginx access logs because the default `combined` log format doesn't show it, so don't run around pulling your hair out wondering with the modified user agents aren't showing in the logs!
|
||
- If a client matching one of these IPs connects without a session, it will be assigned one by the Crawler Session Manager Valve
|
||
- You can verify by cross referencing nginx's `access.log` and DSpace's `dspace.log.2017-11-08`, for example
|
||
- I will deploy this on CGSpace later this week
|
||
- I am interested to check how this affects the number of sessions used by the CIAT and Chinese bots (see above on [2017-11-07](#2017-11-07) for example)
|
||
- I merged the clickable thumbnails code to `5_x-prod` ([#347](https://github.com/ilri/DSpace/pull/347)) and will deploy it later along with the new bot mapping stuff (and re-run the Asible `nginx` and `tomcat` tags)
|
||
- I was thinking about Baidu again and decided to see how many requests they have versus Google to URL paths that are explicitly forbidden in `robots.txt`:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# zgrep Baiduspider /var/log/nginx/access.log* | grep -c -E "GET /(browse|discover|search-filter)"
|
||
22229
|
||
# zgrep Googlebot /var/log/nginx/access.log* | grep -c -E "GET /(browse|discover|search-filter)"
|
||
0
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- It seems that they rarely even bother checking `robots.txt`, but Google does multiple times per day!
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# zgrep Baiduspider /var/log/nginx/access.log* | grep -c robots.txt
|
||
14
|
||
# zgrep Googlebot /var/log/nginx/access.log* | grep -c robots.txt
|
||
1134
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- I have been looking for a reason to ban Baidu and this is definitely a good one
|
||
- Disallowing `Baiduspider` in `robots.txt` probably won't work because this bot doesn't seem to respect the robot exclusion standard anyways!
|
||
- I will whip up something in nginx later
|
||
- Run system updates on CGSpace and reboot the server
|
||
- Re-deploy latest `5_x-prod` branch on CGSpace and DSpace Test (includes the clickable thumbnails, CCAFS phase II project tags, and updated news text)
|
||
|
||
## 2017-11-09
|
||
|
||
- Awesome, it seems my bot mapping stuff in nginx actually reduced the number of Tomcat sessions used by the CIAT scraper today, total requests and unique sessions:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# zcat -f -- /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 /var/log/nginx/access.log.2.gz | grep '09/Nov/2017' | grep -c 104.196.152.243
|
||
8956
|
||
$ grep 104.196.152.243 dspace.log.2017-11-09 | grep -o -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}' | sort -n | uniq | wc -l
|
||
223
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Versus the same stats for yesterday and the day before:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# zcat -f -- /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 /var/log/nginx/access.log.2.gz | grep '08/Nov/2017' | grep -c 104.196.152.243
|
||
10216
|
||
$ grep 104.196.152.243 dspace.log.2017-11-08 | grep -o -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}' | sort -n | uniq | wc -l
|
||
2592
|
||
# zcat -f -- /var/log/nginx/access.log.2.gz /var/log/nginx/access.log.3.gz | grep '07/Nov/2017' | grep -c 104.196.152.243
|
||
8120
|
||
$ grep 104.196.152.243 dspace.log.2017-11-07 | grep -o -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}' | sort -n | uniq | wc -l
|
||
3506
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- The number of sessions is over *ten times less*!
|
||
- This gets me thinking, I wonder if I can use something like nginx's rate limiter to automatically change the user agent of clients who make too many requests
|
||
- Perhaps using a combination of geo and map, like illustrated here: https://www.nginx.com/blog/rate-limiting-nginx/
|
||
|
||
## 2017-11-11
|
||
|
||
- I was looking at the Google index and noticed there are 4,090 search results for dspace.ilri.org but only seven for mahider.ilri.org
|
||
- Search with something like: inurl:dspace.ilri.org inurl:https
|
||
- I want to get rid of those legacy domains eventually!
|
||
|
||
## 2017-11-12
|
||
|
||
- Update the [Ansible infrastructure templates](https://github.com/ilri/rmg-ansible-public) to be a little more modular and flexible
|
||
- Looking at the top client IPs on CGSpace so far this morning, even though it's only been eight hours:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# cat /var/log/nginx/access.log /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 | grep "12/Nov/2017" | awk '{print $1}' | sort -n | uniq -c | sort -h | tail
|
||
243 5.83.120.111
|
||
335 40.77.167.103
|
||
424 66.249.66.91
|
||
529 207.46.13.36
|
||
554 40.77.167.129
|
||
604 207.46.13.53
|
||
754 104.196.152.243
|
||
883 66.249.66.90
|
||
1150 95.108.181.88
|
||
1381 5.9.6.51
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- 5.9.6.51 seems to be a Russian bot:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# grep 5.9.6.51 /var/log/nginx/access.log | tail -n 1
|
||
5.9.6.51 - - [12/Nov/2017:08:13:13 +0000] "GET /handle/10568/16515/recent-submissions HTTP/1.1" 200 5097 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MegaIndex.ru/2.0; +http://megaindex.com/crawler)"
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- What's amazing is that it seems to reuse its Java session across all requests:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
$ grep -c -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=5.9.6.51' /home/cgspace.cgiar.org/log/dspace.log.2017-11-12
|
||
1558
|
||
$ grep 5.9.6.51 /home/cgspace.cgiar.org/log/dspace.log.2017-11-12 | grep -o -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}' | sort -n | uniq | wc -l
|
||
1
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Bravo to MegaIndex.ru!
|
||
- The same cannot be said for 95.108.181.88, which appears to be YandexBot, even though Tomcat's Crawler Session Manager valve regex should match 'YandexBot':
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# grep 95.108.181.88 /var/log/nginx/access.log | tail -n 1
|
||
95.108.181.88 - - [12/Nov/2017:08:33:17 +0000] "GET /bitstream/handle/10568/57004/GenebankColombia_23Feb2015.pdf HTTP/1.1" 200 972019 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; YandexBot/3.0; +http://yandex.com/bots)"
|
||
$ grep -c -E 'session_id=[A-Z0-9]{32}:ip_addr=95.108.181.88' /home/cgspace.cgiar.org/log/dspace.log.2017-11-12
|
||
991
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Move some items and collections on CGSpace for Peter Ballantyne, running [`move_collections.sh`](https://gist.github.com/alanorth/e60b530ed4989df0c731afbb0c640515) with the following configuration:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
10947/6 10947/1 10568/83389
|
||
10947/34 10947/1 10568/83389
|
||
10947/2512 10947/1 10568/83389
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- I explored nginx rate limits as a way to aggressively throttle Baidu bot which doesn't seem to respect disallowed URLs in robots.txt
|
||
- There's an interesting [blog post from Nginx's team about rate limiting](https://www.nginx.com/blog/rate-limiting-nginx/) as well as a [clever use of mapping with rate limits](https://gist.github.com/arosenhagen/8aaf5d7f94171778c0e9)
|
||
- The solution [I came up with](https://github.com/ilri/rmg-ansible-public/commit/f0646991772660c505bea9c5ac586490e7c86156) uses tricks from both of those
|
||
- I deployed the limit on CGSpace and DSpace Test and it seems to work well:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
$ http --print h https://cgspace.cgiar.org/handle/10568/1 User-Agent:'Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Baiduspider/2.0; +http://www.baidu.com/search/spider.html)'
|
||
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
|
||
Connection: keep-alive
|
||
Content-Encoding: gzip
|
||
Content-Language: en-US
|
||
Content-Type: text/html;charset=utf-8
|
||
Date: Sun, 12 Nov 2017 16:30:19 GMT
|
||
Server: nginx
|
||
Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=15768000
|
||
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
|
||
Vary: Accept-Encoding
|
||
X-Cocoon-Version: 2.2.0
|
||
X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff
|
||
X-Frame-Options: SAMEORIGIN
|
||
X-XSS-Protection: 1; mode=block
|
||
$ http --print h https://cgspace.cgiar.org/handle/10568/1 User-Agent:'Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Baiduspider/2.0; +http://www.baidu.com/search/spider.html)'
|
||
HTTP/1.1 503 Service Temporarily Unavailable
|
||
Connection: keep-alive
|
||
Content-Length: 206
|
||
Content-Type: text/html
|
||
Date: Sun, 12 Nov 2017 16:30:21 GMT
|
||
Server: nginx
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- The first request works, second is denied with an HTTP 503!
|
||
- I need to remember to check the Munin graphs for PostgreSQL and JVM next week to see how this affects them
|
||
|
||
## 2017-11-13
|
||
|
||
- At the end of the day I checked the logs and it really looks like the Baidu rate limiting is working, HTTP 200 vs 503:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
# zcat -f -- /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 /var/log/nginx/access.log.2.gz | grep "13/Nov/2017" | grep "Baiduspider" | grep -c " 200 "
|
||
1132
|
||
# zcat -f -- /var/log/nginx/access.log.1 /var/log/nginx/access.log.2.gz | grep "13/Nov/2017" | grep "Baiduspider" | grep -c " 503 "
|
||
10105
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Helping Sisay proof 47 records for IITA: https://dspacetest.cgiar.org/handle/10568/97029
|
||
- From looking at the data in OpenRefine I found:
|
||
- Errors in `cg.authorship.types`
|
||
- Errors in `cg.coverage.country` (smart quote in "COTE D’IVOIRE", "HAWAII" is not a country)
|
||
- Whitespace issues in some `cg.contributor.affiliation`
|
||
- Whitespace issues in some `cg.identifier.doi` fields and most values are using HTTP instead of HTTPS
|
||
- Whitespace issues in some `dc.contributor.author` fields
|
||
- Issue with invalid `dc.date.issued` value "2011-3"
|
||
- Description fields are poorly copy–pasted
|
||
- Whitespace issues in `dc.description.sponsorship`
|
||
- Lots of inconsistency in `dc.format.extent` (mixed dash style, periods at the end of values)
|
||
- Whitespace errors in `dc.identifier.citation`
|
||
- Whitespace errors in `dc.subject`
|
||
- Whitespace errors in `dc.title`
|
||
- After uploading and looking at the data in DSpace Test I saw more errors with CRPs, subjects (one item had four copies of all of its subjects, another had a "." in it), affiliations, sponsors, etc.
|
||
- Atmire responded to the [ticket about ORCID stuff](https://tracker.atmire.com/tickets-cgiar-ilri/view-ticket?id=510) a few days ago, today I told them that I need to talk to Peter and the partners to see what we would like to do
|
||
|
||
## 2017-11-14
|
||
|
||
- Deploy some nginx configuration updates to CGSpace
|
||
- They had been waiting on a branch for a few months and I think I just forgot about them
|
||
- I have been running them on DSpace Test for a few days and haven't seen any issues there
|
||
- Started testing DSpace 6.2 and a few things have changed
|
||
- Now PostgreSQL needs `pgcrypto`:
|
||
|
||
```
|
||
$ psql dspace6
|
||
dspace6=# CREATE EXTENSION pgcrypto;
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
- Also, local settings are no longer in `build.properties`, they are now in `local.cfg`
|
||
- I'm not sure if we can use separate profiles like we did before with `mvn -Denv=blah` to use blah.properties
|
||
- It seems we need to use "system properties" to override settings, ie: `-Ddspace.dir=/Users/aorth/dspace7`
|
||
|
||
## 2017-11-15
|
||
|
||
- Send Adam Hunt an invite to the DSpace Developers network on Yammer
|
||
- He is the new head of communications at WLE, since Michael left
|
||
- Merge changes to item view's wording of link metadata ([#348](https://github.com/ilri/DSpace/pull/348))
|