========================== Administrating the service ========================== Installation (for development/testing) ====================================== Create and activate a virtualenv for the installation (here with virtualenvwrapper):: mkvirtualenv nsupdate workon nsupdate Clone the repo and cd into:: git clone git@github.com:nsupdate-info/nsupdate.info.git nsupdate cd nsupdate Then install the software with requirements to your virtual env:: pip install -e . Configuration ============= nsupdate.info Service --------------------- Use a local_settings.py (do not modify the nsupdate/settings/*.py files directly):: from nsupdate.settings.prod import * # override whatever you need to override here (read nsupdate/settings/*.py # to get an overview over what you might need to customize): SECRET_KEY='S3CR3T' Initialize the database ----------------------- To create and initialize the database, use:: python manage.py syncdb python manage.py migrate Start the development server ---------------------------- :: python manage.py runserver Nameserver ---------- Now as the server is running, you can log in using the database administrator account you created in the syncdb step and use "admin" from the menu to start Django's admin. You'll need to configure at least 1 nameserver / 1 zone to accept dynamic updates, see the "Domains" section in the "user" part of the manual. Installation (for production) ============================= You usually will use a production webserver like apache or nginx (not the builtin "runserver"). Please consult the webserver docs how to configure it and how to run django apps (wsgi apps) with it. As soon as you switch off DEBUG, Django won't serve static files any more, thus you need to arrange /static/ file serving by your web server. We assume here that you configured your web server to serve /static/ URL from /srv/nsupdate.info/htdocs/static/ directory. Django helps you to put all the static files into that directory, you just need to configure STATIC_ROOT for that:: STATIC_ROOT = '/srv/nsupdate.info/htdocs/static' And then, run this:: umask 0022 # make sure group and others keep r and x, but not w python manage.py collectstatic This will copy all the static files into STATIC_ROOT. Now, you must set DEBUG=False so it doesn't leak information from tracebacks to the outside world. Make sure your static files really work. Since version 1.6, Django has a nice deployment checklist (make sure stuff applies to the django version YOU use): https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.6/howto/deployment/checklist/ PostgreSQL ---------- For production usage and better scalability, you may rather want to use PostgreSQL than SQLite database. Django stores its sessions into the database, so if you get a lot of accesses, sqlite will run into "database is locked" issues. Here are some notes I made when installing it using ubuntu 12.04: First installing and preparing PostgreSQL:: apt-get install postgresql # I used 9.1 apt-get install libpq-dev # needed to install psycopg2 # within the virtual env: pip install psycopg2 sudo -u postgres createdb nsupdate sudo -u postgres createuser --no-createrole --no-superuser --no-createdb --pwprompt nsupdate # enter reallysecret password, twice sudo -u postgres psql -c 'GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE nsupdate TO nsupdate;' sudo vim /etc/postgresql/9.1/main/pg_hba.conf # by default, postgresql on ubuntu uses only "peer" authentication for unix sockets, add "md5" # (password hash) authentication, otherwise it might use your login user instead of the configured user: # local all all md5 To make nsupdate.info (Django) use PostgreSQL, put this into YOUR settings:: DATABASES = { 'default': { 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2', 'NAME': 'nsupdate', # database name 'USER': 'nsupdate', 'PASSWORD': 'reallysecret', 'HOST': '', # Empty for localhost through domain sockets or '127.0.0.1' for localhost through TCP. 'PORT': '' # Set to empty string for default. } } Now proceed with syncdb / migrate as shown above. Maintenance =========== Regular jobs ------------ You need to run some commands regularly, we show how to do that on Linux (or other POSIX OSes) using user cronjobs (use crontab -e to edit it). Make sure it runs as the same user as the nsupdate.info wsgi application:: DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=local_settings # reinitialize the test user: 50 2 * * * django-admin.py testuser # reset the fault counters: 55 2 * * * django-admin.py faults --flag-abuse=20 --reset-client # clear expired sessions from the database, use your correct settings module: 0 3 * * 1 django-admin.py clearsessions # clear outdated registrations: 0 3 * * 2 django-admin.py cleanupregistration Dealing with abuse ------------------ In the regular jobs example in the previous section, --flag-abuse=20 means that it'll set the abuse flag if the client fault counter is over 20 (and, for these cases, it'll also reset the fault counter back to 0). --reset-client additionally sets all client fault counters back to 0, so all counts are just "per day". So, if you run this daily, it means that more than 20 client faults per day are considered abuse (e.g. if someone runs a stupid cronjob to update the IP instead of a well-behaved update client). Hosts with the abuse flag set won't accept updates, but the user will be able to see the abuse flag (as ABUSE on the web interface and also their update client should show it somehow), fix the problem on the client side and reset the abuse flag via the web interface. If the problem was not really fixed, then it will set the abuse flag again the next day. This procedure should make sure that users of the service run sane and correctly working update clients while being able to fix issues on their own without needing help from service administration. For really bad cases of intentional or ongoing abuse, there is also a abuse_blocked flag that can only be set or reset manually by service administration (using django admin interface). While abuse_blocked is set, the service won't accept updates for this host. The user can see the ABUSE-BLOCKED status on the web interface, but can not change the flag. Database contents ----------------- Users who are in the "staff" group (like the one initially created when creating the database) can access the admin interface (see "Admin" in the same menu as "Logout"). But be careful, the Django admin lets you do all sorts of stuff, admins are allowed to shoot themselves. Only give Django admin access ("staff" group membership) to highly trusted admins of the service. Software updates / upgrades --------------------------- After upgrading the code, you'll usually need to run:: python manage.py migrate This fixes your database schema so it is compatible with the new code.