egroupware_official/debian/egroupware-core.README.Debian

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2007-02-26 10:22:01 +01:00
eGroupWare for Debian
=====================
Table of Contents
-----------------
- General
- Security Advisory
- Preparation Steps for PostgreSQL
- Preparation Steps for MySQL
- LDAP Setup
General
-------
It is highly recommended that eGroupWare only be accessible through
SSL (https). This will protect the transmission of your users'
passwords and personal data. Users of Apache 1 can achieve that by
configuring eGroupWare only for Apache-SSL. For users of Apache 2, it
may be necessary to explicitly disable access to eGroupWare without
SSL, for example with the following configuration in the respective
virtual host definition:
<Directory /usr/share/egroupware>
Order deny,allow
Deny from all
</Directory>
The URL for the eGroupWare installation is of the form
<http(s)://yourhostname/egroupware/>. You can change this and some
other web-related settings in /etc/egroupware/apache.conf. But you
first need to do some setup, so read on ...
Please log in to the web-based eGroupWare setup tool after installing
or upgrading the eGroupWare packages. The URL is of the form
<http(s)://yourhostname/egroupware/setup/>. If this is your first
installation, you should first prepare the database management system
of your choice and optionally an LDAP server as outlined below. The
connection parameters for the database and optionally the LDAP server
must later be entered in the setup tool.
Also log in to the web-based setup tool before uninstalling eGroupWare
application packages to unregister those applications. The Debian
package management system cannot do that automatically. If you forget
that, you will have leftovers from the uninstalled applications in the
database. (If you forget, you can reinstall the package, unregister
the application, and remove it again.)
The eGroupWare Debian package does not clear out or drop the database
when the package is purged. You need to do that yourself.
Security Advisory
-----------------
eGroupWare stores the database password in plain text in
/var/lib/egroupware/header.inc.php. This file is readable by the user
www-data, which means that every user that can execute user-defined
scripts (PHP, CGI, etc.) running as the web server user www-data can
read this file and steal all your eGroupWare data. Therefore you
should do at least one of the following:
- Don't allow any untrusted users on your machine.
- Don't allow any untrusted users to run their own PHP, CGI, etc.
- Make sure all the user-defined content is run as a different user,
for example using suEXEC.
Alternatively, you may want to run eGroupWare as a separate user or in
a separate Apache instance altogether, but this is nontrivial to set
up and not supported by this package (yet). Suggestions are welcome.
Preparation Steps for PostgreSQL
--------------------------------
The PostgreSQL database system can be on a remote host, of course.
Substitute the appropriate IP addresses below.
Create a user and database for eGroupWare:
# su - postgres
$ createuser -A -D -P egroupware
[enter a password for the user when prompted]
$ createdb egroupware
You need to configure PostgreSQL to allow connections from the web
server. This is not allowed by default. Add a line like this to
/etc/postgresql/x.y/foo/pg_hba.conf (where "x.y" is the version number
such as "8.1", and "foo" is the name of the cluster instance such as
"main"), most simply before all other records:
host egroupware egroupware 127.0.0.1 255.255.255.255 md5
(This allows any OS user from 127.0.0.1 to connect to the PostgreSQL
database "egroupware" as PostgreSQL user "egroupware" if they can
supply a valid password.)
If you are using PostgreSQL 7.4, you need to allow TCP/IP access to the
database server by setting the parameter tcpip_socket to true in
postgresql.conf. In 8.0 and later, the parameter is called
listen_addresses and the default is sufficient.
After having made these changes, run
# /etc/init.d/postgresql-x.y reload
More information about PostgreSQL client authentication can be found
in the file
/usr/share/doc/postgresql-doc-x.y/html/client-authentication.html in
the package postgresql-doc-x.y.
Preparation Steps for MySQL
---------------------------
Set up a database for eGroupWare and grant user access:
$ mysql -u root
mysql> CREATE DATABASE egroupware;
mysql> GRANT ALL ON egroupware.* TO 'egroupware'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY "password";
If the MySQL server is on a remote host, substitute the name of the
host of the web server for localhost in the statement above.
Additionally, the option bind-address in /etc/mysql/my.cnf may need to
be changed to accept connections from remote hosts.
LDAP Setup
----------
To be able to store eGroupWare user or addressbook data in an LDAP
server (not required; you can use an SQL database):
1. Install the package egroupware-ldap on the machine hosting the LDAP
server (only OpenLDAP 2.x is supported), and follow the
instructions in its /usr/share/doc/egroupware-ldap/README.Debian.
This prepares the LDAP server for eGroupWare data.
2. Follow the instructions in
/usr/share/doc/egroupware-core/setup/README.ldap.gz once you are in
the domain configuration phase. This tells eGroupWare to use the
LDAP server.
-- Peter Eisentraut <petere@debian.org>, August 2006