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02ba2a05c3
Improve docs on server configuration to explain --listen options.
201 lines
8.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
201 lines
8.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
=========================
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How To Configure A Server
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=========================
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Many Tahoe-LAFS nodes run as "servers", meaning they provide services for
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other machines (i.e. "clients"). The two most important kinds are the
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Introducer, and Storage Servers.
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To be useful, servers must be reachable by clients. Tahoe servers can listen
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on TCP ports, and advertise their "location" (hostname and TCP port number)
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so clients can connect to them. They can also listen on Tor "onion services"
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and I2P ports.
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Storage servers advertise their location by announcing it to the Introducer,
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which then broadcasts the location to all clients. So once the location is
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determined, you don't need to do anything special to deliver it.
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The Introducer itself has a location, which must be manually delivered to all
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storage servers and clients. You might email it to the new members of your
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grid. This location (along with other important cryptographic identifiers) is
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written into a file named ``private/introducer.furl`` in the Introducer's
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base directory, and should be provided as the ``--introducer=`` argument to
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``tahoe create-client`` or ``tahoe create-node``.
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The first step when setting up a server is to figure out how clients will
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reach it. Then you need to configure the server to listen on some ports, and
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then configure the location properly.
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Manual Configuration
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====================
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Each server has two settings in their ``tahoe.cfg`` file: ``tub.port``, and
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``tub.location``. The "port" controls what the server node listens to: this
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is generally a TCP port.
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The "location" controls what is advertised to the outside world. This is a
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"foolscap connection hint", and it includes both the type of the connection
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(tcp, tor, or i2p) and the connection details (hostname/address, port
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number). Various proxies, port-forwardings, and privacy networks might be
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involved, so it's not uncommon for ``tub.port`` and ``tub.location`` to look
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different.
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You can directly control the ``tub.port`` and ``tub.location`` configuration
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settings by providing ``--port=`` and ``--location=`` when running ``tahoe
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create-node``.
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Automatic Configuration
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=======================
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Instead of providing ``--port=/--location=``, you can use ``--listen=``.
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Servers can listen on TCP, Tor, I2P, a combination of those, or none at all.
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The ``--listen=`` argument controls which kinds of listeners the new server
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will use.
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``--listen=none`` means the server should not listen at all. This doesn't
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make sense for a server, but is appropriate for a client-only node. The
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``tahoe create-client`` command automatically includes ``--listen=none``.
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``--listen=tcp`` is the default, and turns on a standard TCP listening port.
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Using ``--listen=tcp`` requires a ``--hostname=`` argument too, which will be
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incorporated into the node's advertised location. We've found that computers
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cannot reliably determine their externally-reachable hostname, so rather than
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having the server make a guess (or scanning its interfaces for IP addresses
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that might or might not be appropriate), node creation requires the user to
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provide the hostname.
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``--listen=tor`` will talk to a local Tor daemon and create a new "onion
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server" address (which look like ``alzrgrdvxct6c63z.onion``). Likewise
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``--listen=i2p`` will talk to a local I2P daemon and create a new server
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address. See :doc:`anonymity-configuration` for details.
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You could listen on all three by using ``--listen=tcp,tor,i2p``.
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Deployment Scenarios
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====================
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The following are some suggested scenarios for configuring servers using
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various network transports. These examples do not include specifying an
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introducer FURL which normally you would want when provisioning storage
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nodes. For these and other configuration details please refer to
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:doc:`configuration`.
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#. `Server has a public DNS name`_
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#. `Server has a public IPv4/IPv6 address`_
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#. `Server is behind a firewall with port forwarding`_
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#. `Using I2P/Tor to Avoid Port-Forwarding`_
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Server has a public DNS name
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----------------------------
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The simplest case is where your server host is directly connected to the
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internet, without a firewall or NAT box in the way. Most VPS (Virtual Private
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Server) and colocated servers are like this, although some providers block
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many inbound ports by default.
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For these servers, all you need to know is the external hostname. The system
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administrator will tell you this. The main requirement is that this hostname
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can be looked up in DNS, and it will map to an IPv4 or IPv6 address which
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will reach the machine.
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If your hostname is ``example.net``, then you'll create the introducer like
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this::
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tahoe create-introducer --hostname example.com ~/introducer
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or a storage server like::
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tahoe create-node --hostname=example.net
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These will allocate a TCP port (e.g. 12345), assign ``tub.port`` to be
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``tcp:12345``, and ``tub.location`` will be ``tcp:example.com:12345``.
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Ideally this should work for IPv6-capable hosts too (where the DNS name
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provides an "AAAA" record, or both "A" and "AAAA"). However Tahoe-LAFS
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support for IPv6 is new, and may still have problems. Please see ticket
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`#867`_ for details.
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.. _#867: https://tahoe-lafs.org/trac/tahoe-lafs/ticket/867
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Server has a public IPv4/IPv6 address
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-------------------------------------
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If the host has a routeable (public) IPv4 address (e.g. ``203.0.113.1``), but
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no DNS name, you will need to choose a TCP port (e.g. ``3457``), and use the
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following::
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tahoe create-node --port=tcp:3457 --location=tcp:203.0.113.1:3457
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``--port`` is an "endpoint specification string" that controls which local
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port the node listens on. ``--location`` is the "connection hint" that it
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advertises to others, and describes the outbound connections that those
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clients will make, so it needs to work from their location on the network.
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Tahoe-LAFS nodes listen on all interfaces by default. When the host is
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multi-homed, you might want to make the listening port bind to just one
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specific interface by adding a ``interface=`` option to the ``--port=``
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argument::
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tahoe create-node --port=tcp:3457:interface=203.0.113.1 --location=tcp:203.0.113.1:3457
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If the host's public address is IPv6 instead of IPv4, use square brackets to
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wrap the address, and change the endpoint type to ``tcp6``::
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tahoe create-node --port=tcp6:3457 --location=tcp:[2001:db8::1]:3457
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You can use ``interface=`` to bind to a specific IPv6 interface too, however
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you must backslash-escape the colons, because otherwise they are interpreted
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as delimiters by the Twisted "endpoint" specification language. The
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``--location=`` argument does not need colons to be escaped, because they are
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wrapped by the square brackets::
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tahoe create-node --port=tcp6:3457:interface=2001\:db8\:\:1 --location=tcp:[2001:db8::1]:3457
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For IPv6-only hosts with AAAA DNS records, if the simple ``--hostname=``
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configuration does not work, they can be told to listen specifically on an
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IPv6-enabled port with this::
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tahoe create-node --port=tcp6:3457 --location=tcp:example.net:3457
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Server is behind a firewall with port forwarding
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------------------------------------------------
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To configure a storage node behind a firewall with port forwarding you will
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need to know:
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* public IPv4 address of the router
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* the TCP port that is available from outside your network
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* the TCP port that is the forwarding destination
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* internal IPv4 address of the storage node (the storage node itself is
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unaware of this address, and it is not used during ``tahoe create-node``,
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but the firewall must be configured to send connections to this)
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The internal and external TCP port numbers could be the same or different
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depending on how the port forwarding is configured. If it is mapping ports
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1-to-1, and the public IPv4 address of the firewall is 203.0.113.1 (and
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perhaps the internal IPv4 address of the storage node is 192.168.1.5), then
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use a CLI command like this::
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tahoe create-node --port=tcp:3457 --location=tcp:203.0.113.1:3457
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If however the firewall/NAT-box forwards external port *6656* to internal
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port 3457, then do this::
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tahoe create-node --port=tcp:3457 --location=tcp:203.0.113.1:6656
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Using I2P/Tor to Avoid Port-Forwarding
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--------------------------------------
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I2P and Tor onion services, among other great properties, also provide NAT
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penetration without port-forwarding, hostnames, or IP addresses. So setting
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up a server that listens only on Tor is simple::
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tahoe create-node --listen=tor
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For more information about using Tahoe-LAFS with I2p and Tor see
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:doc:`anonymity-configuration`
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