This patch prevents multiple cron jobs from being created to run the
safe-search-maintenance script.
To reproduce this bug, perform the following:
- Install safe-search
- Perform an OpenWRT firmware upgrade (choose to preserve user settings)
- Install safe-search again
Signed-off-by: Gregory L. Dietsche <gregory.dietsche@cuw.edu>
The strongswan-libnttfft package should not select the strongswan
package, but should depend on it instead. Otherwise a circular
dependency is created.
Signed-off-by: Eneas U de Queiroz <cotequeiroz@gmail.com>
MacOS ignores Bonjour services for which TXT records are not returned. This changes forces umdns service to return a TXT record (`daemon=ksmbd`) for the ksmbd service. The exact content is unimportant and to the best of my knowledge nothing reads the `daemon` tag.
Symptoms of the problem (which are also debugging steps):
* Finder refuses to open the OpenWRT "computer" in the Network list.
* Discovery.app (Bonjour Browser) lists the _ssh._tcp service, but the submenu for it doesn't unfold and no address is shown.
* `dns-sd -L OpenWrt _smb._tcp` doesn't return any address.
Signed-off-by: Kirill Nikolaev <cyril7@gmail.com>
This is a security fix, affecting 2.0.0 through to 2.0.9. Mosquitto instances
could be remotely DoS'd by authenticated clients.
Release notes at: https://github.com/eclipse/mosquitto/blob/v2.0.10/ChangeLog.txt
CVE number has not yet been assigned.
Signed-off-by: Karl Palsson <karlp@etactica.com>
Prior to this commit, the acme service attempted to obtain certificates
once and then terminated, regardless of whether the certificate could be
obtained or not. This commit introduces a new uci option "retries" to
the "certificate" section. If this option is set to N, the acme service
will attempt to obtain the certificate up to N times before terminating.
There is a waiting pause between the retries to comply with the rate
limits of Let'sEncrypt.
The waiting pause is:
- 2 minutes for staging certificates
- 24 minutes for production certificates
The current "Failed Validation" rate limits of Let'sEncrypt are:
- staging: 60 per hour -> 1 failure every 1 minute in avg.
- production: 5 per hour -> 1 failure every 12 minutes in avg.
This means that we are within rate limits by a factor of two.
By default the option "retries" is set to "1", which means that acme
behaves as before by default. If the variable is set to "0", infinite
retries are performed.
This feature is helpful, when you already want to initiate the
certificate request, but you are still waiting for your dns server to be
configured, your network to appear or other conditions.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Mörlein <git@irrelefant.net>
Before this commit, issue_cert always returned 1 no matter if uacme
returned 1, 2, 3, ... With this commit, the return code of the uacme
binary is propagated. Therefore the caller of issue_cert can
differentiate between "no renew necessary" and "an error occurred".
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Mörlein <me@irrelefant.net>
With this commit, the run-acme script can be included into other scripts
by setting INLCUDE_ONLY=1.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Mörlein <me@irrelefant.net>
Derived from the ipsec initd script, with the following changes:
(1) various code improvements, corrections (get rid of left/right
updown scripts, since there's only one), etc;
(2) add reauth and fragmentation parameters;
(3) add x.509 certificate-based authentication;
and other minor changes.
Signed-off-by: Philip Prindeville <philipp@redfish-solutions.com>
netifyd supports a '-F' filter option in 'bpf' notation to filter
packets from its consideration.
Add support for a uci 'filter' option. eg. filter to exclude SSDP
multicasts from a particularly noisy device:
option filter 'not (udp and dst 239.255.255.250 and dst port 1900 and src 192.168.1.5)'
Signed-off-by: Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant <ldir@darbyshire-bryant.me.uk>
Even it's only cosmetic and should not affect the function of regular system,
fix the name of the IPKG_INSTROOT variable.
Typo was added long ago with 8400c9a6ec.
Signed-off-by: Sven Roederer <devel-sven@geroedel.de>
Since v1.4.1, Xray has introduced a new feature to transfer data via
browsers, which can disguise itself as a normal browser to cheat
network censorship.
For more details, see https://github.com/XTLS/Xray-core/pull/421.
Signed-off-by: Tianling Shen <cnsztl@immortalwrt.org>
If you shutdown ipsec service, and it doesn't clean up
/var/ipsec/ipsec.conf, then when you start swanctl service it
might see an incompatible file on startup. Remedy is to
remove unneeded files when shutting down the service. They
can always be regenerated when the service starts again.
Signed-off-by: Philip Prindeville <philipp@redfish-solutions.com>
This commit adds a number of fixes to the OpenVPN up/down hotplug command
wrapper which currently fails to actually invoke user defined up and down
commands for uci configurations not using external native configurations.
- Use the `--setenv` to pass the user configured `up` and `down` commands
as `user_up` and `user_down` environment variables respectively
- Instead of attempting to scrape the `up` and `down` settings from the
(possibly generated) native OpenVPN configuration in
`/etc/hotplug.d/openvpn/01-user`, read them from the respective
environment variables instead
- Fix parsing of native configuration values in `get_openvpn_option()`;
first try to parse a given setting as single quoted value, then as
double quoted and finally as non-quoted, potentially white-space
escaped one. This ensures that `up '/bin/foo'` is interpreted as
`/bin/foo` and not `'/bin/foo'`
Ref: https://forum.openwrt.org/t/openvpn-up-down-configuration-ignored/91126
Supersedes: #15121, #15284
Signed-off-by: Jo-Philipp Wich <jo@mein.io>
The `tmate` tool is a fork of `tmux` which allows remote access to a
device without setting up any port forwarding. This commits adds the
backend server which handles connections.
Signed-off-by: Paul Spooren <mail@aparcar.org>
These config files are only used by the ipsec interface to charon,
and shouldn't be part of the base package.
Signed-off-by: Philip Prindeville <philipp@redfish-solutions.com>
* rework the central iptables function to significantly
reduce the code complexity and the overall number of iptables calls
* check early and only once in the chain for ctstate NEW and
return otherwise (thanks @ldir-EDB0)
* made the whitelist ordering within the chain more flexible
Signed-off-by: Dirk Brenken <dev@brenken.org>
faster to compile.
A small selection of packages was tested going from:
Executed in 696.30 secs fish external
usr time 82.98 mins 395.00 micros 82.98 mins
sys time 9.02 mins 0.00 micros 9.02 mins
to:
Executed in 592.20 secs fish external
usr time 84.84 mins 361.00 micros 84.84 mins
sys time 8.85 mins 57.00 micros 8.85 mins
Tested by running make -j 12 and wiping staging/build_dir/target_x
Signed-off-by: Rosen Penev <rosenp@gmail.com>
Having scripts diddle user written config files seems potentially
dangerous. Plus there's really no downside to including some
empty files. Best to just make the includes be permanent.
Additional feature suggested by Luiz: if a -opkg version of the
config file was created unnecessarily, remove it as part of the
upgrade process since changes won't be happening to that file
as an artifact of the service starting. The include lines are
now permanent, which means that (1) additional configuration
synthesized by UCI won't be anywhere that opkg (or sysupgrade,
for that matter) cares about since it won't be persistent, and
(2) if changes are being made, then they're being done by a
person with an editor and they really should be distinguished.
Signed-off-by: Philip Prindeville <philipp@redfish-solutions.com>
It seems the command name output from netstat can be truncated in weird
ways, so let's get the binary name from /proc instead and use that for
matching which listener we have.
Fixes#15071.
Signed-off-by: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@toke.dk>
* fix another IPv4/IPv6 related iptables chain creation problem
* fix counter during ipset creation
* fix regex for debug counters
* fix ipset housekeeping for local sources
Signed-off-by: Dirk Brenken <dev@brenken.org>