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NextCloud-Ansible

Ansible deployment for Nextcloud software

Note: For the moment, the machine running the Ansible playbook is required to be a Debian system (for the make install command to succeed).

Supported Operating Systems (Hosts)

The following operating systems are supported for target hosts, which are defined in the inventory file:

  • CentOS

Installation & Set Up

Note: master is guaranteed to deploy successfully on the supported systems, while dev may be unstable.

  • Clone the repo.

  • Run make install to install Ansible and set up some dependencies.

    • At this moment, make install expects a Debian system. I'll extend it for other Unix systems later.
  • Create your files/secrets/secrets.yml file.

    • Run make encrypt-file to create the necessary variables. See secrets-example.yml for the variables that must be in this file.
      • You will be prompted to enter an encryption password.
      • Create the file following the syntax in secrets-example.yml.
    • This file can be edited by running make encrypt-file again.
  • Create a inventory file with your server's specifics. Use inventory-example as... an example.

    • Modify ansible_host to be the IP of your remote server.
    • Modify ansible_user to be the username of the user to use to SSH to the remote server. The ansible_ssh_pass value in files/secrets/<ansible_user>.yml should correspond to this user. See below for more info.
      • Note: The ansible_user should be unique per-host. At least, the same ansible_users must have the same SSH and sudo passwords if used on more than one host.
    • Modify the swap_size value to be appropriate for your system. Use the URL above the variable for assistance on deciding what size to use.
    • Repeat for however many servers you would like to deploy.
    • Set the public_key_file to the path corresponding to the public key you would like to use during the main playbook. A suggested default is listed in inventory-example.
    • Set the staging variable based on the description provided in inventory-example.
  • For each ansible_user in your inventory, create a files/secrets/<ansible_user>.yml file, replacing <ansible_user>.yml with the value of the variable, e.g. exampleuser.yml. For multiple hosts this can be tedious, but this ensures that each host can have separate SSH and root account passwords.

    • Reference files/secrets/user-example.yml for the necessary variables.
  • Modify the variables in files/vars.yml as appropriate for you. The defaults should be sufficient for most use cases.

    • Optionally, customize the certificate details under OpenSSL Config Options in files/vars.yml. The U.S. capital is left as the default for lack of anything else.
  • Optionally, create a .vault file in your home directory (~/.vault) and enter the encryption password you used in make encrypt-file. Ansible will prompt for you to enter this encryption password on every run of a playbook unless you create a ~/.vault file. If that file exists, Ansible will read that file and use its contents as the password to your Vault-encrypted files. You can decide whether you would like to take advantage of this.

  • After these set up steps, you can run the ssh and main playbooks via make, or you can individually call the commands make ssh and make run (in that order). See below for more information on those commands.

Usage

Best informal practice is to run each playbook twice. If no failures occurred the first time, you should have no changed tasks on the second run; tasks are built to be idempotent and should all return ok. If that is not the case, there is likely something wrong that needs investigating.

1. make ssh

You will be prompted for the SSH password and, optionally, the Ansible Vault password you supplied in make encrypt-file. This playbook will add the public keys located in the public_key_file file to the remote server to allow Ansible to run the main playbook without password-based authentication, which is a requirement.

Once your local public key is added to the inventory targets, you do not need to run this command again. All provisioning happens under make run.

Note: The playbook will fail if the public_key_file does not exist. You are expected to generate a key pair, if you do not have a public key to provide. Github has excellent documentation on how to create an SSH key pair.

2. make run

You will be prompted for your Ansible Vault password if you have not created a ~/.vault file. This will run the main playbook. Done!

Optional Setup

Generate ECDH parameters

  1. Nginx, if you elect to set up a Let's Encrypt certificate, will use Nginx's packaged ECDH parameters, which are fine. You do, however, have other options:
    • Generate parameters with our recommended settings by running by running make ecdh.
    • Or, move other pre-computed ECDH parameters to files/secrets/nginx/ecdhparam.pem.

Optional playbooks

make ping

Runs only the ping playbook. Useful if you just want to check whether a remote system is online. Will fail unless make ssh has already been run successfully once against the remote system, as it will expect that the user's public key is authorized on the target system.

Other Make Commands

make encrypt-file

Encrypts an entire file using Ansible Vault.

Usage: FILE=<path to file> make encrypt-file

Example: FILE=../test/file.yml make encrypt-file

FILE is the name of the file you would like to encrypt, e.g. files/secrets/secrets.yml. It will generate a file with a .encrypt extension in the same location as FILE.

Note: this command will target files/secrets/secrets.yml by default unless another file is specified with the FILE environment variable.

Notes

You can write your Ansible vault password to a ~/.vault file. If that file exists, Ansible will try to read a password from that file to decrypt the Vault-encrypted files. You still need to specify this password when encrypting a file with make encrypt-file. If you create this file, run chmod 600 ~/.vault so the file is only writeable AND readable by your account.

Ansible expects any file encrypted with Vault to be a YAML file containing YAML-formatted variables.

make ecdh

Generates 512-bit Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman parameters.

Usage: [FILE=somewhere/else] make ecdh

Will generate a file at files/secrets/nginx/ecdhparam.pem by default. You can change the file path by specifying a FILE environment variable.

Contributions

If you would like to contribute to this repo, fork the project and submit a pull request with your changes to dev. The playbook should successfully run on all of the supported operating systems.

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Ansible deployment of a Nextcloud server. (This mostly works, I need to return to this and polish it.)

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