System Administration
Software
GRUB
Get grub to ignore bad devices and install properly:
blockdev --flushbufs /dev/sde && blockdev --flushbufs /dev/sda && grub-mkdevicemap -n
SSH
[[SSH]]
Wine
Dependencies: wine wine_gecko wine-mono winetricks
Wine is used to run Windows only executables on other operating systems. More information about Wine
You can have multiple Windows "installations" which are called prefixes. In fact it is suggested that you use a new prefix for each application you use.
~/.wine is the default wineprefix (a.k.a. "configuration directory" or "bottle"). You can change which prefix Wine uses by changing the WINEPREFIX environment variable (outside Wine). To do this, run the following in a terminal:
export WINEPREFIX=~/.wine-new wine winecfg
Alternatively, you can specify the wine prefix in each command, e.g.
WINEPREFIX=path_to_wineprefix wine winecfg
you can create a new 32 bit wineprefix using the WINEARCH environment variable(note: you can also export WINEARCH). In a terminal, type:
WINEARCH=win32 WINEPREFIX=~/.wine32bit winecfg
Do not use an existing directory for the new wineprefix: Wine must create it.
Once a 32 bit wineprefix is created, you no longer have to specify WINEARCH in the command line to use it, as the architecture of an existing wineprefix cannot be changed.
You can use wine64
instead of wine
to force 64bit.
There are three Direct3D backends for Wine. Which one you use depends on what features your card supports.
wined3d - The D3D backend included with Wine upstream. It is a translation layer that converts Direct3D calls to OpenGL and then sends them to your OpenGL GPU driver. Usable on all GPUs, but has the worst performance.
wined3d with CSMT - A multi threaded, more optimized version of wined3d. It has the same support as wined3d but is much faster. It still incurs a high CPU overhead but if your CPU is good it can help give you better FPS.
Gallium Nine - A native D3D9 implementation that skips the OpenGL translation entirely, requires less CPU overhead, but requires you use a GPU driver which has the GPU side support built in, which are all the Gallium mesa drivers (radeonsi, r600g, nouveau). Nouveau is the open source nVidia driver, but it lacks performance due to reclocking issues and it does not support the GTX10 series because they haven't released signed binaries to support it.
winecfg - > Drives > Autodetect - binds your home folder
Make AppDB reports, it helps the community!
How to install SVP on Arch Linux to play interpolated movies
Dependencies: qt5-3d, mpv-git(AUR), svp(AUR)
Pre-requisites(optional): proprietary GPU drivers already installed.
Download and install mpv-git from AUR
Set up mpv socket - cat > ~/.config/mpv/mpv.conf << EOF
input-ipc-server=/tmp/mpvsocket # Receives input from SVP
hr-seek-framedrop=no # Fixes audio desync
resume-playback=no # Not compatible with SVP
EOF
Note: There's currently a small bug in SVP causing video stuttering - go to SVP control panel > Utilities > Application settings; and play with the number of "threads" which are set to 0 by default. Setting it to 15 fixed the stuttering issues for me.
That's it, running movies through mpv while having SVP manager turned on will play them smoothly!
Additionally you can install SMplayer, because MPV alone has almost no GUI and relies heavily on CLI commands.
Dependencies: smplayer
Launch SMplayer > open Preferences > Advanced > Options for MPlayer/mpv and add this to Options --input-ipc-server=/tmp/mpvsocket
rsync
Packages: rsync
Needs to be installed on both computers.
Using rsync over SSH and custom port:
rsync -avz -e "ssh -p PORT" path/to/folder/or/file domain.com:/copy/to/folder
-z flag for compression, -r flag for recursive, but that is already implied with -a, which preserves file permissions and such. (-a equals -rlptgoD (no -H,-A,-X))
Use destructive syncing – “rsync --del” – This will delete any items on the destination that are not present on the source.
Virtualization
Hypervisors
Xen
QEMU
KVM
Hyper-V
Virtualization under QEMU/KVM
virt-manager - start the interface. Make sure to do so after you're already connected to the internet, else it might use the wrong interface and you'll have no internet connectivity on the VMs.
virt-manager --no-fork - virtmanager will let you type passwords in the terminal instead of openssh-askpass or something like that
Create a new Virtual Machine using an .ISO image and default settings.
Now you should have a working BIOS VM. To create a UEFI one make sure to check customize install and select UEFI for firmware when creating a new VM.
Bi-directional copy pasting and drag-n-dropping files to a Windows KVM is possible by simply installing spice-guest-tools on the KVM(default virt-manager setup uses Spice for display, so it works out of the box)
To enlarge .qcow2 image, use command qemu-img resize ubuntu-server.qcow2 +5G Remember it'll end up as unallocated space
Using LXC/LXD containers
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/LXD
Virtualization under VirtualBox
Packages: virtualbox linux-headers virtualbox-host-dkms
GPU Passthrough
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37D2bRsthfI
http://blog.wikichoon.com/2014/07/enabling-hyper-v-enlightenments-with-kvm.html
More stuff
Webserver in current folder
You can instantly create a webserver hosting contents of the folder you're currently in via python:
python -m http.server 8080
Tmux
Tmux is a terminal multiplexer, meaning you can SSH somewhere, run tmux there and disconnect without killing whatever you were running, or just have multiple terminal tabs without actually launching more terminals.
Full cheatsheet: http://hyperpolyglot.org/multiplexers
Tip: tmux running a session but list-sessions doesn't show it? This might help killall -s SIGUSR1 tmux
If you're running nested tmux sessions, explanation and tips how to do it efficiently. (CTRL+B twice to get into the second level session, thrice to get into third level etc)
Command to detach all other sessions(in case the window is small and other session is blocking resizing): attach -d
Basic usage:
tmux - start new tmux session
tmux ls - list active sessions
tmux a -t sessionName - attach to specific session
tmux kill-session -t sessionName - kill specific session
Inside of tmux:
CTRL+B d - detach session
CTRL+B % - split current pane vertically
CTRL+B " - split current pane horizontally
CTRL+B ARROW_KEY - move between panes
CTRL+B+ARROW_KEY - resize current pane
CTRL+B z - toggle current pane fullscreen state
CTRL+B x - kill current pane
CTRL+B c - create a new window
CTRL+B n - next window
CTRL+B p - previous window
Apache
Packages: apache php php-apache(why?) nghttp2
Sources:Arch wiki
Configuration files are located in the folder /etc/httpd/conf , the main configuration file is httpd.conf
sudo systemctl enable --now httpd - Enable and start the httpd service, you should now be able to access the Apache server via localhost:80
PHP7 >
in **httpd.conf**
comment **#LoadModule mpm_event_module modules/mod_mpm_event.so**
uncomment **LoadModule mpm_prefork_module modules/mod_mpm_prefork.so**
place **LoadModule php7_module modules/libphp7.so** at the end of the LoadModule list
and **Include conf/extra/php7_module.conf** at the end of the Include list
sudo systemctl restart httpd
Notes:
DocumentRoot in the config sets the folder for the website, default is /srv/http/
nginx + PHP
Packages: php nginx-mainline php-fpm openssl
systemctl enable --now php-fpm
sudo nano /etc/nginx/nginx.conf - Example config of the server blocks
server {
listen 0.0.0.0:80; # listen on IPv4
listen [::]:80 # listen on IPv6
server_name *.rys.pw rys.pw; #Redirect all port 80 requests to HTTPS(443)
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 0.0.0.0:443 ssl http2; #listen for TLS IPv4 connections and enable HTTP2
listen [::]:443 ssl http2; #listen for TLS IPv6 connections and enable HTTP2
server_name rys.pw;
root /usr/share/webapps/mediawiki;
index index.php;
location ~ \.php$ { # serve .php files via php-fpm
fastcgi_pass unix:/run/php-fpm/php-fpm.sock;
fastcgi_index index.php;
include fastcgi.conf;
}
location / {
index index.html index.htm index.php;
}
}
server { #forward traffic going to proxy.rys.pw to another server - useful if you need more servers running.
listen 0.0.0.0:443 ssl http2; #listen for TLS IPv4 connections and enable HTTP2
listen [::]:443 ssl http2; #listen for TLS IPv6 connections and enable HTTP2
server_name proxy.rys.pw;
location / {
proxy_pass http://10.0.0.10:443/;
proxy_redirect default;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto https;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Ssl on;
}
}
You can check if your config is valid via nginx -t, and then reload the server config via nginx -s reload, instead of restarting the daemon.
systemctl enable --now nginx - enable and start nginx
TLS(used to be SSL)
https://cipherli.st/
https://raymii.org/s/tutorials/Strong_SSL_Security_On_nginx.html
https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/analyze.html?d=rys.pw
https://securityheaders.io/?q=https%3A%2F%2Frys.pw%2F
https://observatory.mozilla.org/analyze.html?host=rys.pw
TLS 1.0 being deprecated 30th June 20181
All versions of nginx as of 1.4.4 rely on OpenSSL for input parameters to Diffie-Hellman (DH). Unfortunately, this means that Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman (DHE) will use OpenSSL's defaults, which include a 1024-bit key for the key-exchange.
cd /etc/ssl/certs && sudo openssl dhparam -out dhparam.pem 4096 - This takes time depending on your single core performance as it's not multithreated.(few mins on i7-4790K, 42~ mins on Raspberry Pi 3B) You can use 2048 but it's weaker, create the stronger file at a later date if you just want to get it running for now.
sudo nano /etc/nginx/nginx.conf - place these outside of the server blocks so it applies to all servers.
Hardening
ssl_dhparam /etc/ssl/certs/dhparam.pem;
ssl_protocols TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3; # Keep in mind this will break software that is way past it's end of life.
ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
ssl_ciphers "EECDH+AESGCM:EDH+AESGCM:AES256+EECDH:AES256+EDH";
ssl_ecdh_curve secp384r1; # Requires nginx >= 1.1.0
ssl_session_cache shared:SSL:10m;
ssl_session_tickets off; # Requires nginx >= 1.5.9
ssl_stapling on; # Requires nginx >= 1.3.7
ssl_stapling_verify on; # Requires nginx => 1.3.7
#resolver $DNS-IP-1 $DNS-IP-2 valid=300s; # I do not understand those so I disabled them
#resolver_timeout 5s;
#RESOLVERS: if you don't specify any, nginx will resolve HTTP upstream server hostnames when starting up, and will never attempt to re-resolve them. This is a problem if later the IP addresses of these upstream servers change. But if you define resolvers in nginx.conf, it will honor the TTL of DNS records, and re-resolve the hostnames periodically.
#Make sure you correctly respond to this or the issue is fixed before defining the resolver. http://blog.zorinaq.com/nginx-resolver-vulns/
add_header Strict-Transport-Security "max-age=63072000; includeSubdomains; preload"; # You can add your domain to Chromium's source code for automatic preloading https://hstspreload.org/?domain=rys.pw
add_header X-Frame-Options DENY;
add_header X-Content-Type-Options nosniff;
add_header X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block";
#add_header Content-Security-Policy "default-src 'self';"; # if you require no scripting.. likely not the case.
add_header Content-Security-Policy "default-src 'self'; script-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data:; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; font-src 'self' data:; child-src 'self'; connect-src 'self' https://apis.google.com; object-src 'none' ";
# READ THIS - http://lollyrock.com/articles/content-security-policy/
SSL certs - you'll need to use letsencrypt to get these
ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/rys.pw/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/rys.pw/privkey.pem;
Add a block that redirects all HTTP requests to HTTPS
server {
listen 80;
listen [::]:80;
server_name rys.pw;
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
Additionally use
listen 443 ssl http2;
listen [::]:443 ssl http2;
in every other server block to force TLS and support HTTP2 protocol.
MariaDB
Packages: mariadb
sudo mysql_install_db --user=mysql --basedir=/usr --datadir=/var/lib/mysql
sudo nano /etc/php/php.ini - uncomment extension=mysqli.so
sudo systemctl restart php-fpm
sudo systemctl enable --now mysqld
**sudo /usr/bin/mysql_secure_installation **
Backup:
mysqldump --single-transaction --flush-logs --master-data=2 --all-databases -u root -p | gzip > all_databases.sql.gz
Restore:
gunzip all_databases.sql.gz | mysql -u root -p
mysqldump --defaults-file=/path-to-file/SQLcreds.txt --all-databases > my_db.sql
nano SQLcreds.txt
[mysqldump]
user=mysqluser
password=secret
sudo chown root:root SQLcreds.txt
sudo chmod 700 SQLcreds.txt
PhpMyAdmin
Packages: phpmyadmin php-mcrypt
sudo nano /etc/nginx/nginx.conf - add a whole new server block for phpmyadmin
server {
listen 443 ssl http2;
listen [::]:443 ssl http2;
server_name phpmyadmin.localhost;
root /usr/share/webapps/phpMyAdmin;
index index.php;
location ~ \.php$ {
try_files $uri =404;
fastcgi_pass unix:/run/php-fpm/php-fpm.sock;
fastcgi_index index.php;
include fastcgi.conf;
}
}
Murmur
Packages: murmur
Port: TCP/UDP 64738
Config: /etc/murmur.ini
Setting valid TLS(SSL) certificate:
uncomment and set these two lines in the config
sslCert=/etc/letsencrypt/live/rys.pw/fullchain.pem
sslKey=/etc/letsencrypt/live/rys.pw/privkey.pem
Let's Encrypt
Packages: certbot certbot-apache/certbot-nginx
https://letsencrypt.org/getting-started/
sudo systemctl stop nginx - Stop your webserver. In case of apache you want to stop httpd
sudo certbot certonly --standalone -d rys.pw -d www.rys.pw -d phpmyadmin.rys.pw -d tickets.rys.pw -d pihole.rys.pw -d mumble.rys.pw -d esp8266.rys.pw -d cloud.rys.pw -d paste.rys.pw --email email@example.com --rsa-key-size 4096 --agree-tos
sudo systemctl start nginx
To non-interactively renew all of your certificates, run **certbot renew --rsa-key-size 4096 **.
Postfix
?Final setup - TODO - postfix+dovecot+roundcube+postfixadmin?
Order of importance of records:
SPF > DKIM > DMARC
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/postfix
Packages: postfix #dovecot roundcubemail postfixadmin php-imap
First set up DNS records. I will be using rys.pw, so I set MX record of @ pointed to rys.pw, which is in turn pointed at my VPS.
systemctl enable --now postfix
This will likely land in your spam folder. echo "Message" | mailx -s "important mail" yourmail@gmail.com
Edit /etc/postfix/main.cf
myhostname = rys.pw
postfix reload
Now you should be able to resend the test email and see it came from your domain.
Edit /etc/postfix/aliases
root: c0rn3j
change to your user account, reading email as root is bad
postalias /etc/postfix/aliases
For later changes run newaliases
Now you should be able to read mail coming from the internet(only for users that exist on the system) and the services on the box.
less /var/mail/c0rn3j
Access point (WIP)
Packages: hostapd dnsmasq
https://w1.fi/cgit/hostap/plain/hostapd/hostapd.conf
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Hostapd
https://frillip.com/using-your-raspberry-pi-3-as-a-wifi-access-point-with-hostapd/
sudo nano /etc/hostapd/hostapd.conf
ssid=myWifi # SSID of the network
wpa_passphrase=MySuperSecurewifi123 # password for the network
interface=wlan0 # Interface it'll run on
auth_algs=1 # 1=wpa, 2=wep, 3=both
channel=6 # Channel it'll broadcast on
driver=nl80211
hw_mode=g # 2.4GHz, 'a' for 5GHz
rsn_pairwise=CCMP
wpa=2 # WPA2 only
wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
#In addition to these, RPi3 seems to require those
ieee80211n=1 # nothing would work without this
#wmm_enabled=1 # QoS support
#ht_capab=[HT40][SHORT-GI-20][DSSS_CCK-40] #I did not actually need this
sudo nano /etc/sysctl.conf # is this an outdated way to set ipv4 forward on a systemd distro?
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1
sudo sysctl -p
sudo iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i eth0 -o wlan0 -m state --state RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -i wlan0 -o eth0 -j ACCEPT
sudo sh -c "iptables-save > /etc/iptables.rules"
sudo iptables-restore /etc/iptables.rules # This needs to be executed after boot
sudo nano /ect/dnsmasq
port = 0
sudo ip link set wlan0 up
sudo ip addr add 192.168.2.1/24 broadcast 192.168.2.255 dev wlan0
sudo ip route add default via 192.168.0.1
Samba(file sharing)
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/samba
Packages: samba
sudo cp /etc/samba/smb.conf.default /etc/samba/smb.conf - copy the default config file to the default config path
sudo systemctl enable --now smb
sudo nano /etc/samba/smb.conf
workgroup = WORKGROUP #change to WORKGROUP so it's the same as default windows WG.
valid users = %S # - add this to [homes] to allow users login to their home directories(?)
Example block
[dolphin]
comment = dolphin ISOs
path = /mnt/3tbRED/DOLPHIN ISOs # SAMBA DOESN'T NEED ESCAPE SEQUENCES FOR SPACES AND SUCH
read only = yes
valid users = c0rn3j
Samba requires a Linux user account - you may use an existing user account or create a new one.
Although the user name is shared with Linux system, Samba uses a password separate from that of the Linux user accounts.
sudo smbpasswd -a c0rn3j - change samba password of the user
testparm -s - will show you the current config
sudo smbstatus - list connections to the shares on the server
sudo systemctl restart smb - restart samba service to apply new config
Now on the client side...
smbclient -L //192.168.1.10 -U% - list public shares on a server
sudo mount //192.168.1.10/homes /mnt/dolphin/ -o user=c0rn3j - example: Mount the home of user c0rn3j to /mnt/dolphin/
Mounting every time is tedious though, let's add an entry to fstab to mount it on boot. First we'll need to store the credentials safely though.
sudo nano /mnt/credentials
username=c0rn3j
password=supersafepassword
sudo chmod 600 /mnt/credentials - secure it so it's not readable by anyone but root or owner.
sudo nano /etc/fstab - and add this line at the bottom
//192.168.1.10/dolphin /mnt/dolphin cifs auto,x-systemd.automount,_netdev,credentials=/mnt/credentials 0 0
mount -v - list all mountpoints
mount -t cifs - list mountpoints by fs
GPG Encryption
-c specifies to encrypt symmetrically(symmetrical is harder to crack than asymmetrical), defaults to AES-128 which should be secure enough for now and the near future. AES-256 seems to be noted as 30-40% slower, so if you don't mind taking that performance hit feel free to use that instead(but I do suggest reading why you'd want to do that first as AES-128 is possibly enough for you).
Encryption with a password and AES-256:
gpg --batch --cipher-algo AES256 --passphrase password -c file
Decryption with a password:
gpg --batch --passphrase password -o file -d file.gpg
If you are not going to be using an automatic script for encryption/decryption, you can simply omit --passphrase password and you will be asked to enter it manually.
The above example is not secure because any user can execute ps aux and see the whole command, including the password.
Now let's do it better!
nano password.txt - write your super secret password there
sudo chown root:root password.txt
sudo chmod 700 password.txt
Encryption with a password in a restricted file:
sudo gpg --batch --passphrase-file password.txt -c file
Decryption with a password in a restricted file:
sudo gpg --batch --passphrase-file password.txt -o file -d file.gpg
LUKS
Check if your password is correct and list slots:
cryptsetup luksOpen --test-passphrase --verbose /dev/sda
Add a key file for automatic unlocking via /etc/crypttab:
cryptsetup luksAddKey /dev/nvme1n1p1 /etc/adatapass
Ansible
Encrypt a file:
ansible-vault encrypt --vault-id C0rn3j/configs@~/C0rn3j_configs-vaultpass.txt id_ed25519
Encrypt a string for use in playbooks/templates:
ansible-vault encrypt_string --vault-id C0rn3j/configs@~/C0rn3j_configs-vaultpass.txt 'supersecretpassword' --name 'bree_matomo_db_password'