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427 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
427 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
For more than a decade I have run one or more servers to host a number of
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personal websites and web applications. Recently I decided it was time to
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rebuild the servers to address some issues and make improvements. The last time
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I did this was in 2016 when I switched the servers from [Ubuntu] to [FreeBSD].
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The outgoing servers were managed with [Ansible]. After being a Docker skeptic
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for a long time I have finally come around to it recently and decided to
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rebuild on [Docker]. This post aims to describe some of the choices made, and
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why I made them.
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_Before we start I'd like to take a moment to acknowledge this infrastructure
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is built to my values in a way that works for me. You might make different
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choices and that's ok. I hope you find this post interesting but not
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prescriptive._
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Before the rebuild this is what my infrastructure looked like:
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- FreeBSD 11 server in [DigitalOcean][DigitalOcean] (New York) hosting:
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- [PostgreSQL] 9
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- [nginx]
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- [Varnish]
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- 2 [Rails] apps
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- Static sites
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- Debian 9 server in DigitalOcean (New York) hosting:
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- Wizards [Mattermost] instance
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- FreeBSD 12 server in [Vultr][Vultr] (Sydney) hosting:
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- [rust.melbourne] Mattermost instance
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- PostgreSQL 11
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You'll note 3 servers, across 2 countries, and 2 hosting providers. Also the
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Rust Melbourne server was not managed by Ansible like the other two were.
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I had a number of goals in mind with the rebuild:
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- Move everything to Australia (where I live)
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- Consolidate onto one server
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- https enable all websites
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I set up my original infrastructure in the US because it was cheaper at the
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time and most traffic to the websites I host comes from the US. The Wizards
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Mattermost instance was added later. It's for a group of friends that are all
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in Australia. Being in the US made it quite slow at times, especially when
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sharing and viewing images.
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Another drawback to administering servers in the US from AU was that it makes
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the Ansible cycle time of "make a change, run it, fix it, repeat", excruciatingly
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slow. It had been on my to do list for a long time to move Wizards to Australia
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but I kept putting it off because I didn't want to deal with Ansible.
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While having a single server that does everything wouldn't be the
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recommended architecture for business systems, for personal hosting where the
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small chance of downtime isn't going to result in loss of income the simplicity
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won out, at least for now.
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This is what I ended up building. Each box is a Docker container running on the
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host machine:
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![Graph of services](/images/2019/services.svg)
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- `pkb` is <https://linkedlist.org>
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- `binary_trance` is <https://binarytrance.com>
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- `wizards` and `rust_melbourne` are [Mattermost] instances
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- The rest are software of the same name
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I haven't always been in favour of Docker but I think enough time has passed to
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show that it's probably here to stay. There are some really nice benefits to
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Docker managed services too. Such as, building locally and then shipping the image
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to production, and isolation from the host system (in the sense you can just
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nuke the container and rebuild it if needed).
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## Picking a Host OS
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Moving to Docker unfortunately ruled out FreeBSD as the host system. There is a
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[very old Docker port for FreeBSD][docker-freebsd] but my previous attempts at using it showed
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that it was not in a good enough state to use for hosting. That meant I
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needed to find a suitable Linux distro to act as the Docker host.
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Coming from FreeBSD I'm a fan of the stable base + up-to-date packages model.
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For me this ruled out Debian (stable) based systems, which I find often
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have out-of-date or missing packages -- especially in the latter stages of
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the release cycle. I did some research to see if there were any distros that
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used a BSD style model. Most I found were either abandoned or one person
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operations.
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I then recalled that as part of his [Sourcehut] work, [Drew DeVault was
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migrating][sr.ht-announce] things to [Alpine Linux]. I had played with Alpine
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in the past (before it became famous in the Docker world), and I consider Drew's
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use some evidence in its favour.
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Alpine describes itself as follows:
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> Alpine Linux is an independent, non-commercial, general purpose Linux
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> distribution designed for power users who appreciate security, simplicity and
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> resource efficiency.
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Now that's a value statement I can get behind! Other things I like about Alpine
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Linux:
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- It's small, only including the bare essentials:
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- It avoids bloat by using [musl-libc] (which is MIT licensed) and
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[busybox userland][busybox].
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- It has a 37Mb installation ISO intended for virtualised server
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installations.
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- It was likely to be (and ended up being) the base of my Docker images.
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- It enables a number of security features by default.
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- Releases are made every ~6 months and are supported for 2 years.
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Each release also has binary packages available in a stable channel that
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receives bug fixes and security updates for the lifetime of the release as well
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as a rolling edge channel that's always up-to-date.
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Note that Alpine Linux doesn't use [systemd], it uses [OpenRC]. This didn't
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factor into my decision at all. `systemd` has worked well for me on my Arch
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Linux systems. It may not be perfect but it does do a lot of things well. Benno
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Rice did a great talk at linux.conf.au 2019, titled, [The Tragedy of
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systemd][systemd-tragedy], that makes for interesting viewing on this topic.
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## Building Images
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So with the host OS selected I set about building Docker images for each of the
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services I needed to run. There are a lot of pre-built Docker images for
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software like nginx, and PostgreSQL available on [Docker Hub]. Often they also
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have an `alpine` variant that builds the image from an Alpine base image. I
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decided early on that these weren't really for me:
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- A lot of them build the package from source instead of just installing the
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Alpine package.
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- The Docker build was more complicated than I needed as it was trying to be
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a generic image that anyone could pull and use.
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- I wasn't a huge fan of pulling random Docker images from the Internet, even
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if they were official images.
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~~In the end I only need to trust one image from [Docker Hub]: The 5Mb [Alpine
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image][alpine-docker-image]. All of my images are built on top of this one
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image.~~
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**Update 2 Mar 2019:** I am no longer depending on any Docker Hub images. After
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the [Alpine Linux 3.9.1 release][alpine-3.9.1] I noticed the official Docker
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images had not been updated so I built my own. Turns out it's quite simple.
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Download the miniroot tarball from the Alpine website and then add it to a
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Docker image:
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```language-docker
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FROM scratch
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ENV ALPINE_ARCH x86_64
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ENV ALPINE_VERSION 3.9.1
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ADD alpine-minirootfs-${ALPINE_VERSION}-${ALPINE_ARCH}.tar.gz /
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CMD ["/bin/sh"]
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```
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An aspect of Docker that I don't really like is that inside the container you
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are root by default. When building my images I made a point of making the
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entrypoint processes run as a non-privileged user or configure the service drop
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down to a regular user after starting.
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Most services were fairly easy to Dockerise. For example here is my nginx
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`Dockerfile`:
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```language-docker
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FROM alpine:3.9
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RUN apk update && apk add --no-cache nginx
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COPY nginx.conf /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
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RUN mkdir -p /usr/share/www/ /run/nginx/ && \
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rm /etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf
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EXPOSE 80
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STOPSIGNAL SIGTERM
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ENTRYPOINT ["/usr/sbin/nginx", "-g", "daemon off;"]
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```
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I did not strive to make the images especially generic. They just need to work
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for me. However I did make a point not to bake any credentials into the images
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and instead used environment variables for things like that.
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## Let's Encrypt
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I've been avoiding [Let's Encrypt] up until now. Partly because the short expiry of the
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certificates seems easy to mishandle. Partly because of [certbot], the recommended
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client. By default `certbot` is interactive, prompting for answers when you run
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it the first time, it wants to be installed alongside the webserver so it can
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manipulate the configuration, it's over 30,000 lines of Python (excluding
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tests, and dependencies), the documentation suggests running magical
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`certbot-auto` scripts to install it... Too big and too magical for my liking.
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Despite my reservations I wanted to enable https on all my sites and I wanted
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to avoid paying for certificates. This meant I had to make Let's Encrypt work
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for me. I did some research and finally settled on [acme.sh]. It's
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written in POSIX shell and uses `curl` and `openssl` to do its bidding.
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To avoid the need for `acme.sh` to manipulate the webserver config I opted to
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use the DNS validation method (`certbot` can do this too). This requires a DNS
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provider that has an API so the client can dynamically manipulate the records.
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I looked through the large list of supported providers and settled on [LuaDNS].
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LuaDNS has a nice git based workflow where you define the DNS zones with small
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Lua scripts and the records are published when you push to the repo. They also
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have the requisite API for `acme.sh`. You can see my DNS repo at:
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<https://github.com/wezm/dns>
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Getting the [acme.sh] + [hitch] combo to play nice proved to be bit of a
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challenge. `acme.sh` needs to periodically renew certificates from Let's
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Encrypt, these then need to be formatted for `hitch` and `hitch` told about
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them. In the end I built the `hitch` image off my `acme.sh` image. This goes
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against the Docker ethos of one service per container but `acme.sh` doesn't run
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a daemon, it's periodically invoked by cron so this seemed reasonable.
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Docker and cron is also a challenge. I ended up solving that with a
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simple solution: use the host cron to `docker exec` `acme.sh` in the `hitch`
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container. Perhaps not "pure" Docker but a lot simpler than some of the options
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I saw.
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## Hosting
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I've been a happy [DigitalOcean] customer for 5 years but they don't have a
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data centre in Australia. [Vultr], which have a similar offering -- low cost,
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high performance servers and a well-designed admin interface -- do have a
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Sydney data centre. Other obvious options include AWS and GCP. I wanted to
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avoid these where possible as their server offerings are more expensive, and
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their platforms have a tendency to lock you in with platform specific features.
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Also in the case of Google, they are a massive [surveillance capitalist] that I
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don't trust at all. So Vultr were my host of choice for the new server.
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Having said that, the thing with building your own images is that you need to
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make them available to the Docker host somehow. For this I used an [Amazon
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Elastic Container Registry][ECR]. It's much cheaper than Docker Hub for private
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images and is just a standard container registry so I'm not locked in.
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## Orchestration
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Once all the services were Dockerised, there needed to be a way to run the
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containers, and make them aware of each other. A popular option for this is
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[Kubernetes] and for a larger, multi-server deployment it might be the right
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choice. For my single server operation I opted for [Docker Compose], which is,
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"a tool for defining and running multi-container Docker applications". With
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Compose you specify all the services in a YAML file and it takes care of
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running them all together.
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My Docker Compose file looks like this:
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```language-yaml
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version: '3'
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services:
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hitch:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/hitch
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command: ["--config", "/etc/hitch/hitch.conf", "-b", "[varnish]:6086"]
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volumes:
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- ./hitch/hitch.conf:/etc/hitch/hitch.conf:ro
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- ./private/hitch/dhparams.pem:/etc/hitch/dhparams.pem:ro
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- certs:/etc/hitch/cert.d:rw
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- acme:/etc/acme.sh:rw
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ports:
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- "443:443"
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env_file:
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- private/hitch/development.env
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depends_on:
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- varnish
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restart: unless-stopped
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varnish:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/varnish
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command: ["-F", "-a", ":80", "-a", ":6086,PROXY", "-p", "feature=+http2", "-f", "/etc/varnish/default.vcl", "-s", "malloc,256M"]
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volumes:
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- ./varnish/default.vcl:/etc/varnish/default.vcl:ro
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ports:
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- "80:80"
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depends_on:
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- nginx
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- pkb
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- binary_trance
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- wizards
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- rust_melbourne
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restart: unless-stopped
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nginx:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/nginx
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volumes:
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- ./nginx/conf.d:/etc/nginx/conf.d:ro
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- ./volumes/www:/usr/share/www:ro
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restart: unless-stopped
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pkb:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/pkb
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volumes:
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- pages:/home/pkb/pages:ro
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env_file:
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- private/pkb/development.env
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depends_on:
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- syncthing
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restart: unless-stopped
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binary_trance:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/binary_trance
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env_file:
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- private/binary_trance/development.env
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depends_on:
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- db
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restart: unless-stopped
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wizards:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/mattermost
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volumes:
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- ./private/wizards/config:/mattermost/config:rw
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- ./volumes/wizards/data:/mattermost/data:rw
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- ./volumes/wizards/logs:/mattermost/logs:rw
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- ./volumes/wizards/plugins:/mattermost/plugins:rw
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- ./volumes/wizards/client-plugins:/mattermost/client/plugins:rw
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- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
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depends_on:
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- db
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restart: unless-stopped
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rust_melbourne:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/mattermost
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volumes:
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- ./private/rust_melbourne/config:/mattermost/config:rw
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- ./volumes/rust_melbourne/data:/mattermost/data:rw
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- ./volumes/rust_melbourne/logs:/mattermost/logs:rw
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- ./volumes/rust_melbourne/plugins:/mattermost/plugins:rw
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- ./volumes/rust_melbourne/client-plugins:/mattermost/client/plugins:rw
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- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
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depends_on:
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- db
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restart: unless-stopped
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db:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/postgresql
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volumes:
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- postgresql:/var/lib/postgresql/data
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ports:
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- "127.0.0.1:5432:5432"
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env_file:
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- private/postgresql/development.env
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restart: unless-stopped
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syncthing:
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image: 791569612186.dkr.ecr.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/syncthing
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volumes:
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- syncthing:/var/lib/syncthing:rw
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- pages:/var/lib/syncthing/Sync:rw
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ports:
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- "127.0.0.1:8384:8384"
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- "22000:22000"
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- "21027:21027/udp"
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restart: unless-stopped
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volumes:
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postgresql:
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certs:
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acme:
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pages:
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syncthing:
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```
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Bringing all the services up is one command:
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docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f production.yml up -d
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The best bit is I can develop and test it all in isolation locally. Then when
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it's working, push to ECR and then run `docker-compose` on the server to bring
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in the changes. This is a huge improvement over my previous Ansible workflow
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and should make adding or removing new services in the future fairly painless.
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## Closing Thoughts
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The new server has been running issue free so far. All sites are now
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redirecting to their https variants with `Strict-Transport-Security` headers
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set and get an A grade on the [SSL Labs test]. The Wizards Mattermost is _much_
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faster now that it's in Australia too.
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There is one drawback to this move though: my sites are now slower for a lot of
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visitors. https adds some initial negotiation overhead and if you're reading
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this from outside Australia there's probably a bunch more latency than
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before.
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I did some testing with [WebPageTest] to get a feel for the impact of this.
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My sites are already quite compact. Firefox tells me this page and all
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resources is 171KB / 54KB transferred. So there's not a lot of slimming
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to be done there. One thing I did notice was the TLS negotiation was happening
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for each of the parallel connections the browser opened to load the site.
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Some research suggested HTTP/2 might help as it multiplexes requests on a
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single connection and only performs the TLS negotiation once. So I decided to
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live on the edge a little and enable [Varnish's experimental HTTP/2
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support][varnish-http2]. Retrieving the site over HTTP/2 did in fact reduce the
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TLS negotiations to one.
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Thanks for reading, I hope the bits didn't take too long to get from Australia
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to wherever you are. Happy computing!
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<div class="seperator"><hr class="left">✦<hr class="right"></div>
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Previous Post: [My Rust Powered linux.conf.au e-Paper Badge](/technical/2019/01/linux-conf-au-rust-epaper-badge/)
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Next Post: [A Coding Retreat and Getting Embedded Rust Running on a SensorTag](/technical/2019/03/sensortag-embedded-rust-coding-retreat/)
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[acme.sh]: https://github.com/Neilpang/acme.sh
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[Alpine Linux]: https://alpinelinux.org/
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[alpine-3.9.1]: https://alpinelinux.org/posts/Alpine-3.9.1-released.html
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[alpine-docker-image]: https://hub.docker.com/_/alpine
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[Ansible]: https://www.ansible.com/
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[busybox]: https://www.busybox.net/
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[certbot]: https://certbot.eff.org/
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[DigitalOcean]: https://m.do.co/c/0eb3d3d839ea
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[Docker Compose]: https://docs.docker.com/compose/overview/
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[Docker Hub]: https://hub.docker.com/
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[docker-freebsd]: https://www.freshports.org/sysutils/docker-freebsd/
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[Docker]: https://www.docker.com/
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[ECR]: https://aws.amazon.com/ecr/
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[FreeBSD]: https://www.freebsd.org/
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[hitch]: https://hitch-tls.org/
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[Kubernetes]: https://kubernetes.io/
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[Let's Encrypt]: https://letsencrypt.org/
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[LuaDNS]: https://luadns.com/
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[Mattermost]: https://mattermost.com/
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[musl-libc]: http://www.musl-libc.org/
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[nginx]: http://nginx.org/
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[OpenRC]: https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Project:OpenRC
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[PostgreSQL]: https://www.postgresql.org/
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[Rails]: https://rubyonrails.org/
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[rust.melbourne]: https://rust.melbourne/
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[Sourcehut]: https://sourcehut.org/
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[sr.ht-announce]: https://lists.sr.ht/~sircmpwn/sr.ht-announce/%3C20190117003837.GA6037%40homura.localdomain%3E
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[SSL Labs test]: https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/index.html
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[surveillance capitalist]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surveillance_capitalism
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[systemd-tragedy]: https://youtu.be/o_AIw9bGogo
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[systemd]: https://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/
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[Ubuntu]: https://www.ubuntu.com/
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[varnish-http2]: https://info.varnish-software.com/blog/varnish-cache-5-http2-support
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[Varnish]: https://varnish-cache.org/
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[Vultr]: https://www.vultr.com/?ref=7903263
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[WebPageTest]: https://www.webpagetest.org/
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