0a246aaa8d | 4 years ago | |
---|---|---|
django_etebase | 4 years ago | |
etebase_server | 4 years ago | |
etesync_server | 5 years ago | |
example-configs/nginx-uwsgi | 4 years ago | |
myauth | 4 years ago | |
requirements.in | 4 years ago | |
templates | 4 years ago | |
.gitignore | 4 years ago | |
ChangeLog.md | 4 years ago | |
LICENSE | 4 years ago | |
README.md | 4 years ago | |
etebase-server.ini.example | 4 years ago | |
etesync-server.ini.example | 5 years ago | |
icon.svg | 4 years ago | |
manage.py | 4 years ago | |
requirements.txt | 4 years ago |
README.md
Etebase - Encrypt Everything
A skeleton app for running your own Etebase (EteSync 2.0) server.
Installation
From source
Before installing the Etebase server make sure you install virtualenv
(for Python 3):
- Arch Linux:
pacman -S python-virtualenv
- Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install python3-virtualenv
- Mac/Windows/Other Linux: install virtualenv or just skip the instructions mentioning virtualenv.
Then just clone the git repo and set up this app:
git clone https://github.com/etesync/server.git etebase
cd etebase
git checkout etebase
# Set up the environment and deps
virtualenv -p python3 venv # If doesn't work, try: virtualenv3 venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
Configuration
If you are familiar with Django you can just edit the settings file
according to the Django deployment checklist.
If you are not, we also provide a simple configuration file for easy deployment which you can use.
To use the easy configuration file rename it to etebase-server.ini
and place it either at the root of this repository or in /etc/etebase-server
.
There is also a wikipage detailing this basic setup.
Some particular settings that should be edited are:
ALLOWED_HOSTS
-- this is the list of host/domain names or addresses on which the app will be servedDEBUG
-- handy for debugging, set toFalse
for productionSECRET_KEY
-- an ephemeral secret used for various cryptographic signing and token generation purposes. See below for how default configuration ofSECRET_KEY
works for this project.
Now you can initialise our django app.
./manage.py migrate
And you are done! You can now run the debug server just to see everything works as expected by running:
./manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000
Using the debug server in production is not recommended, so please read the following section for a proper deployment.
Production deployment
There are more details about a proper production setup using Daphne and Nginx in the wiki.
Etebase is based on Django so you should refer to one of the following
The webserver should also be configured to serve Etebase using TLS. A guide for doing so can be found in the wiki as well.
Usage
Create yourself an admin user:
./manage.py createsuperuser
At this stage you need to create accounts to be used with the EteSync apps. To do that, please go to:
www.your-etesync-install.com/admin
and create a new user to be used with the service. Do not set
a password for the user, as Etebase uses a zero-knowledge proof for authentication.
After this user has been created, you can use any of the EteSync apps to signup (or login) with the same username and email in order to set up the account. The password used at that point will be used to setup the account. Don't forget to set your custom server address under "Advanced".
SECRET_KEY
and secret.txt
The default configuration creates a file “secret.txt
” in the project’s
base directory, which is used as the value of the Django SECRET_KEY
setting. You can revoke this key by deleting the secret.txt
file and the
next time the app is run, a new one will be generated. Make sure you keep
the secret.txt
file secret (don’t accidentally commit it to version
control, exclude it from your backups, etc.). If you want to change to a
more secure system for storing secrets, edit etesync_server/settings.py
and implement your own method for setting SECRET_KEY
(remove the line
where it uses the get_secret_from_file
function). Read the Django docs
for more information about the SECRET_KEY
and its uses.
Updating
First, run git pull --rebase
to update this repository.
Then, inside the virtualenv:
- Run
pip install -U -r requirements.txt
to update the dependencies. - Run
python manage.py migrate
to perform database migrations.
You can now restart the server.
Supporting Etebase
Please consider registering an account even if you self-host in order to support the development of Etebase, or visit the contribution for more information on how to support the service.